🌠 Touca is GitHub for your test results.
Touca server gives shared access to your test results for an up-to-date understanding of how new versions of your software behave and perform across a variety of input scenarios.
We help you collaborate with your team members in inspecting and interpreting new differences, communicate your investigation results by leaving notes and comments, and take action as a team by approving differences or claiming responsibility for them.
We give you confidence that your software works as you expect and to help you build better software, faster.
If you like what we are building, give us a ⭐️ on GitHub.
🌠 Touca shows you how your software evolves over time.
For most engineering teams software testing is reduced to a green check mark; a mandatory step of the software release cycle that feels too mechanical for developers to own. For most businesses, testing is an afterthought.
Touca makes testing an ever-present part of the development stage. It shows how your software changes in behavior and performance over time. It reports mishandled corner cases, identifies flaky tests, and flags slowdowns to give you insights that go beyond a green check mark.
🌠 Touca is a shift-left testing solution for developers.
Software test automation tools are designed for use by QA engineers. They provide a UX that is foreign to developers. They are hard to maintain and introduce long feedback cycles that hinder developer productivity.
Use our CLI to check your workflow for regressions as you perform refactoring and rewrites. Integrate with your CI to get feedback on each code change or pull request. Or use our self-hosted test runner to test your complex data-intensive workflows on a dedicated server.
🌠 Touca provides the test infrastructure you don't need to build.
Touca SDKs help developers write high-level tests to find regressions in complex workflows by tracking changes in how your software handles various inputs.
💡 Every software has unique characteristics and requirements. But the custom tooling and test infrastructure that teams build in-house are often very similar and always more expensive and difficult to get right than you think.