Sauce Labs is acquiring AutonomIQ, a provider of a scriptless test automation platform based on machine learning (ML) algorithms.
Matt Wyman, chief product officer for Sauce Labs, said the acquisition of AutonomIQ will play a critical role in enabling Sauce Labs to push testing further left toward developers and, ultimately, “citizen testers” that are becoming part of the DevOps testing tool chain.
The acquisition of AutonomIQ comes on the heels of the company announcing its intent to acquire API Fortress, an application programming interface (API) testing platform provider. Terms of neither acquisition were disclosed.
Wyman said the rise of DevOps coupled with an increase in the volume of applications being developed using low-code tools are the primary drivers of a need to shift testing further left. As more citizen developers are building applications, they require access to a testing platform that doesn’t require them to know how to write scripts to test applications, said Wyman.
The AutonomIQ platform employs machine learning to understand, for example, natural language descriptions of test cases or captured mouse clicks. It then generates synthetic data and test cases that can self-heal when an application changes, said Wyman.
That approach to testing is more feasible in software-as-a-service (SaaS) environments, where a custom application based on a platform such as Salesforce, ServiceNow, Workday, Oracle or SAP doesn’t tend to change as radically as an application being built from the ground up, Wyman said. Those classes of applications will still require either developers or a dedicated team of testers to build tests using scripts, said Wyman.
In fact, Wyman said testing those applications is becoming more challenging in the age of microservices. The API Fortress acquisition addresses that issue, because microservices are dependent on APIs to communicate with other microservices, said Wyman. In general, Wyman said Sauce Labs is now moving beyond being focusing only on functional testing of user interfaces.
It remains to be seen how quickly testing will move to the left. Developers are being held more accountable for the quality of their applications, so testing integration within the application development process has increased. This has led to application testing becoming more tightly integrated with continuous integration/continuous delivery (CI/CD) platforms. Less clear is to what degree those efforts might have reduced the burdens of a dedicated application testing team that typically evaluates applications after they have been constructed.
Exactly where and how citizen testers are being incorporated into those processes is also unclear. In theory, citizen testers can bring more business process expertise to the testing process. Getting individuals with that level of expertise to make time to participate in application testing while an application is being built can be a challenge.
Regardless of approach, however, it is already apparent that machine learning algorithms, along with other forms of artificial intelligence (AI), will play a much larger role in application testing in the coming months and years.