Integration Testing
Integration testing (sometimes called Integration and Testing, abbreviated I&T) is the phase of software
testing in which individual software modules are combined and tested as a group. It follows unit testing and precedes system
testing.
Integration testing takes as its input modules that have been unit tested, groups them in larger aggregates, applies tests defined in an
integration test plan to those aggregates, and delivers as its output the integrated system ready for system testing.
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The purpose of integration testing is to verify functional, performance and reliability requirements placed on major design items. These
"design items", i.e. assemblages (or groups of units), are exercised through their interfaces using black box testing, success and error cases being
simulated via appropriate parameter and data inputs. Simulated usage of shared data areas and inter-process communication is tested and individual subsystems
are exercised through their input interface. Test cases are constructed to test that all components within assemblages interact correctly, for example
across procedure calls or process activations, and this is done after testing individual modules, i.e. unit testing.
The overall idea is a "building block" approach, in which verified assemblages are added to a verified base which is then used to support the
integration testing of further assemblages.
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