Top 7 problems of automation testing
There are lots of problems occurring in every test automation processes. It is much more challenging when you encounter them without preparations, so having some idea of the type of problem would help you deal with them. This blog post brings out some of the commonest problems described in details.
1. Unrealistic expectations
Most people in our industry believe new technical solutions will save the day. Testing tools are no exception. There is a tendency to be optimistic about what can be achieved with a new tool. Indeed, we cannot deny that tools nowadays can solve almost every problem we are currently facing in test automation. However, the effect of optimism also leads to unrealistic expectations. If management expectations are unrealistic, then no matter how well the tool is implemented from a technical point of view, it will not meet expectations.
2. Poor testing practices
Automation is not always a good idea if testing practices are poor, with poorly organized tests, inconsistent documentation, and tests that are not very good at finding defects. The first and the most important to mention is, improving the effectiveness of testing.
3. Expectations that automated tests will find new defects
A test is most likely find defects the first time it is run. If a test already ran and passed, re-running the same test case a thousand times still cannot yield any differences, unless the test is exercising code that has been changed or could be affected by a change made in a different part of the software, or is being run in a different environment.
Testing tools are useful things, but they are not those things that can find a large number of new defects. Or more correctly, they are regression testing tools. Their use is in repeating tests that have already run. Therefore, tests that do not find any defects are not worthless, even though good test design should be directed at trying to find defects.
4. False sense of security
Just because the test suites do not find any defects, doesn’t mean there is no defect in the software. This is very crucial because if the tests contain defect themselves, they will bring incorrect outcomes. The automation test will simply preserve those defective results indefinitely.
5. Maintenance of automated tests
Every time when the software is changed or updated, your tests must be updated either so that they could re-run successfully. Test maintenance has been the death of many test automation initiatives. When it takes more effort to update the tests than it would take to re-run them manually, test automation will be abandoned. Your test automation initiative should not fall victim to high maintenance costs.
6. Technical problems
Most popular testing tools are large and complex that require detailed technical knowledge. In addition to technical problems with the tool themselves, you may experience technical problems with the software you are trying to test. If the software is not designed and built with testability in mind, it can be very difficult to test, either manually or automatically. Trying to use tools to test such software is an added complication which can only make test automation even more difficult.
Nonetheless, as for tests automation, Katalon Studio is a great and free tool. The test automation framework provided within Katalon Studio was developed with the keyword-driven approach as the primary test authoring method with data-driven functionality for test execution.
Read more Top 3 API Testing Tool Comparison: SoapUI vs Postman, Katalon Studio
7. Organizational problems
Test automation needs to be supported by management and implemented into the culture of your organization. Time must be allocated for choosing tools, for training, for experimenting and learning what works best. Test automation is an infrastructure issue, not just a project issue. In larger organizations, test automation can rarely be justified on the basis of a single project. Standards are needed to ensure consistent ways of using the tools throughout the organization. Otherwise, every group may develop different approaches to test automation, making it difficult to transfer or share automated tests and testers between groups.
More resources:
- 8 Steps to Switch From Manual To Automation Testing at a Small Company
- Software Test Automation Engineer Salary and Career Overview in 2019
Original source https://testautomationresources.com/software-testing-basics/problems-test-automation/
I would add to this "Just because the test suites do not find any defects, doesn’t mean there is no defect in the software. "
Automated tests don’t find usage bugs. Automated tests can’t tell if the software workflow makes sense. They can’t anticipate choices the user will make. They can’t tell if the interface makes any sense to a human.
And they are terrible when the system under test is unstable. What good are automated tests where the underlying code keeps shifting or when you can’t even install the system under test.
Automation has its place, but it is not a panacea. It is a tool like any other tool. Not the only tool or the best tool for the task
Another issue with automation is that your expert test automation engineers - THINK LIKE ENGINEERS. I have seen so many bugs missed because “the specification says this acts as expected” - when in reality … yes the software works just as the specification stated AND THE SPECIFICATION IS THE BUG!!
Also, software engineers in test tend to think more atomic. They think about modules and subsystems and often miss the big picture bugs.