Don't get confused with Black box and white box testing, they are testing techniques
Testing Levels • Unit Testing • Component Testing • Integration Testing • System Testing • Acceptance Testing • Alpha Testing • Beta Testing
Functional Testing Non Functional • Installation • Compatibility • Development • Performance • Usability • Security • Sanity • Accessibility • Smoke • Internationalization / Localization • Regression • Destructive • Recovery • Automated • User Acceptance
Unit
testing –
Testing of individual software components or modules. Typically done by the
programmer and not by testers, as it requires detailed knowledge of the
internal program design and code. may require developing test driver modules or
test harnesses.
Incremental
integration testing –
Bottom up approach for testing i.e continuous testing of an application as new
functionality is added; Application functionality and modules should be
independent enough to test separately. done by programmers or by testers.
Integration
testing –
Testing of integrated modules to verify combined functionality after
integration. Modules are typically code modules, individual applications,
client and server applications on a network, etc. This type of testing is
especially relevant to client/server and distributed systems.
Functional
testing –
This type of testing ignores the internal parts and focus on the output is as
per requirement or not. Black-box type testing geared to functional
requirements of an application.
System
testing –
Entire system is tested as per the requirements. Black-box type testing that is
based on overall requirements specifications, covers all combined parts of a
system.
End-to-end
testing –
Similar to system testing, involves testing of a complete application
environment in a situation that mimics real-world use, such as interacting with
a database, using network communications, or interacting with other hardware,
applications, or systems if appropriate.
Sanity
testing -
Testing to determine if a new software version is performing well enough to
accept it for a major testing effort. If application is crashing for initial
use then system is not stable enough for further testing and build or
application is assigned to fix.
Regression
testing –
Testing the application as a whole for the modification in any module or
functionality. Difficult to cover all the system in regression testing so
typically automation tools are used for these testing types.
Acceptance
testing -Normally
this type of testing is done to verify if system meets the customer specified
requirements. User or customer do this testing to determine whether to accept
application.
Load
testing – Its
a performance testing to check system behavior under load. Testing an
application under heavy loads, such as testing of a web site under a range of
loads to determine at what point the system’s response time degrades or fails.
Stress
testing –
System is stressed beyond its specifications to check how and when it fails.
Performed under heavy load like putting large number beyond storage capacity,
complex database queries, continuous input to system or database load.
Performance
testing –
Term often used interchangeably with ‘stress’ and ‘load’ testing. To check
whether system meets performance requirements. Used different performance and
load tools to do this.
Usability
testing –
User-friendliness check. Application flow is tested, Can new user understand
the application easily, Proper help documented whenever user stuck at any
point. Basically system navigation is checked in this testing.
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Install/uninstall
testing -
Tested for full, partial, or upgrade install/uninstall processes on different
operating systems under different hardware, software environment.
Recovery
testing –
Testing how well a system recovers from crashes, hardware failures, or other
catastrophic problems.
Security
testing – Can
system be penetrated by any hacking way. Testing how well the system protects
against unauthorized internal or external access. Checked if system, database
is safe from external attacks.
Compatibility
testing –
Testing how well software performs in a particular hardware/software/operating
system/network environment and different combination s of above.
Comparison
testing –
Comparison of product strengths and weaknesses with previous versions or other
similar products.
Alpha
testing – In
house virtual user environment can be created for this type of testing. Testing
is done at the end of development. Still minor design changes may be made as a
result of such testing.
Beta
testing –
Testing typically done by end-users or others. Final testing before releasing
application for commercial purpose.