Thanks John. I don't have that much time right now but, at least, I know
what I have to do :)

2009/4/2 John Resig <[email protected]>

>
> Yep, that's precisely it. We have a couple PHP scripts which can be
> made to spit back different things (XML, HTML, text) and add various
> delays to simulate network traffic. We don't include cross-domain
> tests but that's mostly because we'd rather not rely on the quality of
> someone else's server/network connection when running the tests.
>
> --John
>
>
>
> On Thu, Apr 2, 2009 at 2:46 PM, Julian Aubourg <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> > Hi all,
> > I'm turning to you once more for a problem I think you can help me with.
> > So far, for my jsonp plugin (for those who don't know of
> > it: http://code.google.com/p/jquery-jsonp/), I just made a simple test
> page
> > using the YouTube data API. I have the plugin working in production so I
> > know it's solid but, unfortunately, the site I use it on doesn't cover
> the
> > whole feature set.
> > So, I'd like to have unit tests for $.jsonp() and was curious as to how
> you
> > would construct such tests. The main issue I have is that it involves
> > network traffic. How were the $.ajax unit tests constructed? Is there
> some
> > sort of server-side code to test timeouts or programmatic aborts?
> > Any hint is welcome :)
> > -- Julian
> > >
> >
>
> >
>

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