1. test

test

The test npm package

CI

This is a user-land port of node:test,
the experimental test runner introduced in Node.js 18. This module makes it
available in Node.js 14 and later.

Minimal dependencies, with full test suite.

Differences from the core implementation:

  • Doesn't hide its own stack frames.
  • Some features require the use of --experimental-abortcontroller CLI flag to
    work on Node.js v14.x. It's recommended to pass
    NODE_OPTIONS='--experimental-abortcontroller --no-warnings' in your env if
    you are testing on v14.x.

Docs

Test runner

Stability: 1 - Experimental

The node:test module facilitates the creation of JavaScript tests.
To access it:

 import test from 'test'
 const test = require('test')

Tests created via the test module consist of a single function that is
processed in one of three ways:

  1. A synchronous function that is considered failing if it throws an exception,
    and is considered passing otherwise.
  2. A function that returns a Promise that is considered failing if the
    Promise rejects, and is considered passing if the Promise resolves.
  3. A function that receives a callback function. If the callback receives any
    truthy value as its first argument, the test is considered failing. If a
    falsy value is passed as the first argument to the callback, the test is
    considered passing. If the test function receives a callback function and
    also returns a Promise, the test will fail.

The following example illustrates how tests are written using the
test module.

 test('synchronous passing test', t => {
  // This test passes because it does not throw an exception.
  assert.strictEqual(1, 1)
})

test('synchronous failing test', t => {
  // This test fails because it throws an exception.
  assert.strictEqual(1, 2)
})

test('asynchronous passing test', async t => {
  // This test passes because the Promise returned by the async
  // function is not rejected.
  assert.strictEqual(1, 1)
})

test('asynchronous failing test', async t => {
  // This test fails because the Promise returned by the async
  // function is rejected.
  assert.strictEqual(1, 2)
})

test('failing test using Promises', t => {
  // Promises can be used directly as well.
  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    setImmediate(() => {
      reject(new Error('this will cause the test to fail'))
    })
  })
})

test('callback passing test', (t, done) => {
  // done() is the callback function. When the setImmediate() runs, it invokes
  // done() with no arguments.
  setImmediate(done)
})

test('callback failing test', (t, done) => {
  // When the setImmediate() runs, done() is invoked with an Error object and
  // the test fails.
  setImmediate(() => {
    done(new Error('callback failure'))
  })
})

If any tests fail, the process exit code is set to 1.

Subtests

The test context's test() method allows subtests to be created. This method
behaves identically to the top level test() function. The following example
demonstrates the creation of a top level test with two subtests.

 test('top level test', async t => {
  await t.test('subtest 1', t => {
    assert.strictEqual(1, 1)
  })

  await t.test('subtest 2', t => {
    assert.strictEqual(2, 2)
  })
})

In this example, await is used to ensure that both subtests have completed.
This is necessary because parent tests do not wait for their subtests to
complete. Any subtests that are still outstanding when their parent finishes
are cancelled and treated as failures. Any subtest failures cause the parent
test to fail.

Skipping tests

Individual tests can be skipped by passing the skip option to the test, or by
calling the test context's skip() method as shown in the
following example.

 // The skip option is used, but no message is provided.
test('skip option', { skip: true }, t => {
  // This code is never executed.
})

// The skip option is used, and a message is provided.
test('skip option with message', { skip: 'this is skipped' }, t => {
  // This code is never executed.
})

test('skip() method', t => {
  // Make sure to return here as well if the test contains additional logic.
  t.skip()
})

test('skip() method with message', t => {
  // Make sure to return here as well if the test contains additional logic.
  t.skip('this is skipped')
})

describe/it syntax

Running tests can also be done using describe to declare a suite
and it to declare a test.
A suite is used to organize and group related tests together.
it is an alias for test, except there is no test context passed,
since nesting is done using suites.

 describe('A thing', () => {
  it('should work', () => {
    assert.strictEqual(1, 1);
  });

  it('should be ok', () => {
    assert.strictEqual(2, 2);
  });

  describe('a nested thing', () => {
    it('should work', () => {
      assert.strictEqual(3, 3);
    });
  });
});

describe and it are imported from the test module.

 import { describe, it } from 'test';
 const { describe, it } = require('test');

only tests

If node--test is started with the --test-only command-line option, it is
possible to skip all top level tests except for a selected subset by passing
the only option to the tests that should be run. When a test with the only
option set is run, all subtests are also run. The test context's runOnly()
method can be used to implement the same behavior at the subtest level.

 // Assume node--test is run with the --test-only command-line option.
// The 'only' option is set, so this test is run.
test('this test is run', { only: true }, async t => {
  // Within this test, all subtests are run by default.
  await t.test('running subtest')

  // The test context can be updated to run subtests with the 'only' option.
  t.runOnly(true)
  await t.test('this subtest is now skipped')
  await t.test('this subtest is run', { only: true })

  // Switch the context back to execute all tests.
  t.runOnly(false)
  await t.test('this subtest is now run')

  // Explicitly do not run these tests.
  await t.test('skipped subtest 3', { only: false })
  await t.test('skipped subtest 4', { skip: true })
})

// The 'only' option is not set, so this test is skipped.
test('this test is not run', () => {
  // This code is not run.
  throw new Error('fail')
})

Filtering tests by name

The [--test-name-pattern][] command-line option can be used to only run tests
whose name matches the provided pattern. Test name patterns are interpreted as
JavaScript regular expressions. The --test-name-pattern option can be
specified multiple times in order to run nested tests. For each test that is
executed, any corresponding test hooks, such as beforeEach(), are also
run.

Given the following test file, starting Node.js with the
--test-name-pattern="test [1-3]" option would cause the test runner to execute
test 1, test 2, and test 3. If test 1 did not match the test name
pattern, then its subtests would not execute, despite matching the pattern. The
same set of tests could also be executed by passing --test-name-pattern
multiple times (e.g. --test-name-pattern="test 1",
--test-name-pattern="test 2", etc.).

 test('test 1', async (t) => {
  await t.test('test 2');
  await t.test('test 3');
});
test('Test 4', async (t) => {
  await t.test('Test 5');
  await t.test('test 6');
});

Test name patterns can also be specified using regular expression literals. This
allows regular expression flags to be used. In the previous example, starting
Node.js with --test-name-pattern="/test [4-5]/i" would match Test 4 and
Test 5 because the pattern is case-insensitive.

Test name patterns do not change the set of files that the test runner executes.

Extraneous asynchronous activity

Once a test function finishes executing, the results are reported as quickly
as possible while maintaining the order of the tests. However, it is possible
for the test function to generate asynchronous activity that outlives the test
itself. The test runner handles this type of activity, but does not delay the
reporting of test results in order to accommodate it.

In the following example, a test completes with two setImmediate()
operations still outstanding. The first setImmediate() attempts to create a
new subtest. Because the parent test has already finished and output its
results, the new subtest is immediately marked as failed, and reported later
to the {TestsStream}.

The second setImmediate() creates an uncaughtException event.
uncaughtException and unhandledRejection events originating from a completed
test are marked as failed by the test module and reported as diagnostic
warnings at the top level by the {TestsStream}.

 test('a test that creates asynchronous activity', t => {
  setImmediate(() => {
    t.test('subtest that is created too late', t => {
      throw new Error('error1')
    })
  })

  setImmediate(() => {
    throw new Error('error2')
  })

  // The test finishes after this line.
})

Running tests from the command line

The Node.js test runner can be invoked from the command line:

 node--test

By default, Node.js will recursively search the current directory for
JavaScript source files matching a specific naming convention. Matching files
are executed as test files. More information on the expected test file naming
convention and behavior can be found in the test runner execution model
section.

Alternatively, one or more paths can be provided as the final argument(s) to
the Node.js command, as shown below.

 node--test test1.js test2.mjs custom_test_dir/
node--test test1.js test2.mjs custom_test_dir/

In this example, the test runner will execute the files test1.js and
test2.mjs. The test runner will also recursively search the
custom_test_dir/ directory for test files to execute.

Test runner execution model

When searching for test files to execute, the test runner behaves as follows:

  • Any files explicitly provided by the user are executed.
  • If the user did not explicitly specify any paths, the current working
    directory is recursively searched for files as specified in the following
    steps.
  • node_modules directories are skipped unless explicitly provided by the
    user.
  • If a directory named test is encountered, the test runner will search it
    recursively for all all .js, .cjs, and .mjs files. All of these files
    are treated as test files, and do not need to match the specific naming
    convention detailed below. This is to accommodate projects that place all of
    their tests in a single test directory.
  • In all other directories, .js, .cjs, and .mjs files matching the
    following patterns are treated as test files:
    • ^test$ - Files whose basename is the string 'test'. Examples:
      test.js, test.cjs, test.mjs.
    • ^test-.+ - Files whose basename starts with the string 'test-'
      followed by one or more characters. Examples: test-example.js,
      test-another-example.mjs.
    • .+[\.\-\_]test$ - Files whose basename ends with .test, -test, or
      _test, preceded by one or more characters. Examples: example.test.js,
      example-test.cjs, example_test.mjs.
    • Other file types understood by Node.js such as .node and .json are not
      automatically executed by the test runner, but are supported if explicitly
      provided on the command line.

Each matching test file is executed in a separate child process. If the child
process finishes with an exit code of 0, the test is considered passing.
Otherwise, the test is considered to be a failure. Test files must be
executable by Node.js, but are not required to use the node:test module
internally.

Mocking

The node:test module supports mocking during testing via a top-level mock
object. The following example creates a spy on a function that adds two numbers
together. The spy is then used to assert that the function was called as
expected.

 import assert from 'node:assert';
import { mock, test } from 'test';
test('spies on a function', () => {
  const sum = mock.fn((a, b) => {
    return a + b;
  });
  assert.strictEqual(sum.mock.calls.length, 0);
  assert.strictEqual(sum(3, 4), 7);
  assert.strictEqual(sum.mock.calls.length, 1);
  const call = sum.mock.calls[0];
  assert.deepStrictEqual(call.arguments, [3, 4]);
  assert.strictEqual(call.result, 7);
  assert.strictEqual(call.error, undefined);
  // Reset the globally tracked mocks.
  mock.reset();
});
 'use strict';
const assert = require('node:assert');
const { mock, test } = require('test');
test('spies on a function', () => {
  const sum = mock.fn((a, b) => {
    return a + b;
  });
  assert.strictEqual(sum.mock.calls.length, 0);
  assert.strictEqual(sum(3, 4), 7);
  assert.strictEqual(sum.mock.calls.length, 1);
  const call = sum.mock.calls[0];
  assert.deepStrictEqual(call.arguments, [3, 4]);
  assert.strictEqual(call.result, 7);
  assert.strictEqual(call.error, undefined);
  // Reset the globally tracked mocks.
  mock.reset();
});

The same mocking functionality is also exposed on the TestContext object
of each test. The following example creates a spy on an object method using the
API exposed on the TestContext. The benefit of mocking via the test context is
that the test runner will automatically restore all mocked functionality once
the test finishes.

 test('spies on an object method', (t) => {
  const number = {
    value: 5,
    add(a) {
      return this.value + a;
    },
  };
  t.mock.method(number, 'add');
  assert.strictEqual(number.add.mock.calls.length, 0);
  assert.strictEqual(number.add(3), 8);
  assert.strictEqual(number.add.mock.calls.length, 1);
  const call = number.add.mock.calls[0];
  assert.deepStrictEqual(call.arguments, [3]);
  assert.strictEqual(call.result, 8);
  assert.strictEqual(call.target, undefined);
  assert.strictEqual(call.this, number);
});

Test reporters

The node:test module supports passing [--test-reporter][]
flags for the test runner to use a specific reporter.

The following built-reporters are supported:

  • tap
    The tap reporter is the default reporter used by the test runner. It outputs
    the test results in the TAP format.

  • spec
    The spec reporter outputs the test results in a human-readable format.

  • dot
    The dot reporter outputs the test results in a compact format,
    where each passing test is represented by a .,
    and each failing test is represented by a X.

Custom reporters

[--test-reporter][] can be used to specify a path to custom reporter.
a custom reporter is a module that exports a value
accepted by [stream.compose][].
Reporters should transform events emitted by a {TestsStream}

Example of a custom reporter using {stream.Transform}:

 import { Transform } from 'node:stream';
const customReporter = new Transform({
  writableObjectMode: true,
  transform(event, encoding, callback) {
    switch (event.type) {
      case 'test:start':
        callback(null, `test ${event.data.name} started`);
        break;
      case 'test:pass':
        callback(null, `test ${event.data.name} passed`);
        break;
      case 'test:fail':
        callback(null, `test ${event.data.name} failed`);
        break;
      case 'test:plan':
        callback(null, 'test plan');
        break;
      case 'test:diagnostic':
        callback(null, event.data.message);
        break;
    }
  },
});
export default customReporter;
 const { Transform } = require('node:stream');
const customReporter = new Transform({
  writableObjectMode: true,
  transform(event, encoding, callback) {
    switch (event.type) {
      case 'test:start':
        callback(null, `test ${event.data.name} started`);
        break;
      case 'test:pass':
        callback(null, `test ${event.data.name} passed`);
        break;
      case 'test:fail':
        callback(null, `test ${event.data.name} failed`);
        break;
      case 'test:plan':
        callback(null, 'test plan');
        break;
      case 'test:diagnostic':
        callback(null, event.data.message);
        break;
    }
  },
});
module.exports = customReporter;

Example of a custom reporter using a generator function:

 export default async function * customReporter(source) {
  for await (const event of source) {
    switch (event.type) {
      case 'test:start':
        yield `test ${event.data.name} started\n`;
        break;
      case 'test:pass':
        yield `test ${event.data.name} passed\n`;
        break;
      case 'test:fail':
        yield `test ${event.data.name} failed\n`;
        break;
      case 'test:plan':
        yield 'test plan';
        break;
      case 'test:diagnostic':
        yield `${event.data.message}\n`;
        break;
    }
  }
}
 module.exports = async function * customReporter(source) {
  for await (const event of source) {
    switch (event.type) {
      case 'test:start':
        yield `test ${event.data.name} started\n`;
        break;
      case 'test:pass':
        yield `test ${event.data.name} passed\n`;
        break;
      case 'test:fail':
        yield `test ${event.data.name} failed\n`;
        break;
      case 'test:plan':
        yield 'test plan\n';
        break;
      case 'test:diagnostic':
        yield `${event.data.message}\n`;
        break;
    }
  }
};

The value provided to --test-reporter should be a string like one used in an
import() in JavaScript code, or a value provided for [--import][].

Multiple reporters

The [--test-reporter][] flag can be specified multiple times to report test
results in several formats. In this situation
it is required to specify a destination for each reporter
using [--test-reporter-destination][].
Destination can be stdout, stderr, or a file path.
Reporters and destinations are paired according
to the order they were specified.

In the following example, the spec reporter will output to stdout,
and the dot reporter will output to file.txt:

 node --test-reporter=spec --test-reporter=dot --test-reporter-destination=stdout --test-reporter-destination=file.txt

When a single reporter is specified, the destination will default to stdout,
unless a destination is explicitly provided.

run([options])

  • options {Object} Configuration options for running tests. The following
    properties are supported:

    • concurrency {number|boolean} If a number is provided,
      then that many files would run in parallel.
      If true, it would run os.availableParallelism() - 1 test files in
      parallel.
      If false, it would only run one test file at a time.
      Default: false.
    • files: {Array} An array containing the list of files to run.
      Default matching files from test runner execution model.
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress test execution.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the test execution will
      fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.
    • inspectPort {number|Function} Sets inspector port of test child process.
      This can be a number, or a function that takes no arguments and returns a
      number. If a nullish value is provided, each process gets its own port,
      incremented from the primary's process.debugPort.
      Default: undefined.
  • Returns: {TestsStream}

 run({ files: [path.resolve('./tests/test.js')] })
  .pipe(process.stdout);

test([name][, options][, fn])

  • name {string} The name of the test, which is displayed when reporting test
    results. Default: The name property of fn, or '<anonymous>' if fn
    does not have a name.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the test. The following
    properties are supported:
    • concurrency {number|boolean} If a number is provided,
      then that many tests would run in parallel.
      If true, it would run os.availableParallelism() - 1 tests in parallel.
      For subtests, it will be Infinity tests in parallel.
      If false, it would only run one test at a time.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: false.
    • only {boolean} If truthy, and the test context is configured to run
      only tests, then this test will be run. Otherwise, the test is skipped.
      Default: false.
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress test.
    • skip {boolean|string} If truthy, the test is skipped. If a string is
      provided, that string is displayed in the test results as the reason for
      skipping the test. Default: false.
    • todo {boolean|string} If truthy, the test marked as TODO. If a string
      is provided, that string is displayed in the test results as the reason why
      the test is TODO. Default: false.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the test will fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.
  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The function under test. The first argument
    to this function is a TestContext object. If the test uses callbacks,
    the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op
    function.
  • Returns: {Promise} Resolved with undefined once the test completes.

The test() function is the value imported from the test module. Each
invocation of this function results in reporting the test to the {TestsStream}.

The TestContext object passed to the fn argument can be used to perform
actions related to the current test. Examples include skipping the test, adding
additional diagnostic information, or creating subtests.

test() returns a Promise that resolves once the test completes. The return
value can usually be discarded for top level tests. However, the return value
from subtests should be used to prevent the parent test from finishing first
and cancelling the subtest as shown in the following example.

 test('top level test', async t => {
  // The setTimeout() in the following subtest would cause it to outlive its
  // parent test if 'await' is removed on the next line. Once the parent test
  // completes, it will cancel any outstanding subtests.
  await t.test('longer running subtest', async t => {
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
      setTimeout(resolve, 1000)
    })
  })
})

The timeout option can be used to fail the test if it takes longer than
timeout milliseconds to complete. However, it is not a reliable mechanism for
canceling tests because a running test might block the application thread and
thus prevent the scheduled cancellation.

describe([name][, options][, fn])

  • name {string} The name of the suite, which is displayed when reporting test
    results. Default: The name property of fn, or '<anonymous>' if fn
    does not have a name.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the suite.
    supports the same options as test([name][, options][, fn]).
  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The function under suite
    declaring all subtests and subsuites.
    The first argument to this function is a SuiteContext object.
    Default: A no-op function.
  • Returns: undefined.

The describe() function imported from the test module. Each
invocation of this function results in the creation of a Subtest.
After invocation of top level describe functions,
all top level tests and suites will execute.

describe.skip([name][, options][, fn])

Shorthand for skipping a suite, same as describe([name], { skip: true }[, fn]).

describe.todo([name][, options][, fn])

Shorthand for marking a suite as TODO, same as
describe([name], { todo: true }[, fn]).

it([name][, options][, fn])

  • name {string} The name of the test, which is displayed when reporting test
    results. Default: The name property of fn, or '<anonymous>' if fn
    does not have a name.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the suite.
    supports the same options as test([name][, options][, fn]).
  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The function under test.
    If the test uses callbacks, the callback function is passed as an argument.
    Default: A no-op function.
  • Returns: undefined.

The it() function is the value imported from the test module.

it.skip([name][, options][, fn])

Shorthand for skipping a test,
same as it([name], { skip: true }[, fn]).

it.todo([name][, options][, fn])

Shorthand for marking a test as TODO,
same as it([name], { todo: true }[, fn]).

before([, fn][, options])

  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The hook function.
    If the hook uses callbacks,
    the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op
    function.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the hook. The following
    properties are supported:
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress hook.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the hook will fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.

This function is used to create a hook running before running a suite.

 describe('tests', async () => {
  before(() => console.log('about to run some test'));
  it('is a subtest', () => {
    assert.ok('some relevant assertion here');
  });
});

after([, fn][, options])

  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The hook function.
    If the hook uses callbacks,
    the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op
    function.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the hook. The following
    properties are supported:
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress hook.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the hook will fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.

This function is used to create a hook running after running a suite.

 describe('tests', async () => {
  after(() => console.log('finished running tests'));
  it('is a subtest', () => {
    assert.ok('some relevant assertion here');
  });
});

beforeEach([, fn][, options])

  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The hook function.
    If the hook uses callbacks,
    the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op
    function.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the hook. The following
    properties are supported:
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress hook.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the hook will fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.

This function is used to create a hook running
before each subtest of the current suite.

 describe('tests', async () => {
  beforeEach(() => t.diagnostics('about to run a test'));
  it('is a subtest', () => {
    assert.ok('some relevant assertion here');
  });
});

afterEach([, fn][, options])

  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The hook function.
    If the hook uses callbacks,
    the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op
    function.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the hook. The following
    properties are supported:
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress hook.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the hook will fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.

This function is used to create a hook running
after each subtest of the current test.

 describe('tests', async () => {
  afterEach(() => t.diagnostics('about to run a test'));
  it('is a subtest', () => {
    assert.ok('some relevant assertion here');
  });
});

Class: MockFunctionContext

The MockFunctionContext class is used to inspect or manipulate the behavior of
mocks created via the MockTracker APIs.

ctx.calls

  • {Array}

A getter that returns a copy of the internal array used to track calls to the
mock. Each entry in the array is an object with the following properties.

  • arguments {Array} An array of the arguments passed to the mock function.
  • error {any} If the mocked function threw then this property contains the
    thrown value. Default: undefined.
  • result {any} The value returned by the mocked function.
  • stack {Error} An Error object whose stack can be used to determine the
    callsite of the mocked function invocation.
  • target {Function|undefined} If the mocked function is a constructor, this
    field contains the class being constructed. Otherwise this will be
    undefined.
  • this {any} The mocked function's this value.

ctx.callCount()

  • Returns: {integer} The number of times that this mock has been invoked.

This function returns the number of times that this mock has been invoked. This
function is more efficient than checking ctx.calls.length because ctx.calls
is a getter that creates a copy of the internal call tracking array.

ctx.mockImplementation(implementation)

  • implementation {Function|AsyncFunction} The function to be used as the
    mock's new implementation.

This function is used to change the behavior of an existing mock.

The following example creates a mock function using t.mock.fn(), calls the
mock function, and then changes the mock implementation to a different function.

 test('changes a mock behavior', (t) => {
  let cnt = 0;
  function addOne() {
    cnt++;
    return cnt;
  }
  function addTwo() {
    cnt += 2;
    return cnt;
  }
  const fn = t.mock.fn(addOne);
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 1);
  fn.mock.mockImplementation(addTwo);
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 3);
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 5);
});

ctx.mockImplementationOnce(implementation[, onCall])

  • implementation {Function|AsyncFunction} The function to be used as the
    mock's implementation for the invocation number specified by onCall.
  • onCall {integer} The invocation number that will use implementation. If
    the specified invocation has already occurred then an exception is thrown.
    Default: The number of the next invocation.

This function is used to change the behavior of an existing mock for a single
invocation. Once invocation onCall has occurred, the mock will revert to
whatever behavior it would have used had mockImplementationOnce() not been
called.

The following example creates a mock function using t.mock.fn(), calls the
mock function, changes the mock implementation to a different function for the
next invocation, and then resumes its previous behavior.

 test('changes a mock behavior once', (t) => {
  let cnt = 0;
  function addOne() {
    cnt++;
    return cnt;
  }
  function addTwo() {
    cnt += 2;
    return cnt;
  }
  const fn = t.mock.fn(addOne);
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 1);
  fn.mock.mockImplementationOnce(addTwo);
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 3);
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 4);
});

ctx.restore()

Resets the implementation of the mock function to its original behavior. The
mock can still be used after calling this function.

Class: MockTracker

The MockTracker class is used to manage mocking functionality. The test runner
module provides a top level mock export which is a MockTracker instance.
Each test also provides its own MockTracker instance via the test context's
mock property.

mock.fn([original[, implementation]][, options])

  • original {Function|AsyncFunction} An optional function to create a mock on.
    Default: A no-op function.
  • implementation {Function|AsyncFunction} An optional function used as the
    mock implementation for original. This is useful for creating mocks that
    exhibit one behavior for a specified number of calls and then restore the
    behavior of original. Default: The function specified by original.
  • options {Object} Optional configuration options for the mock function. The
    following properties are supported:
    • times {integer} The number of times that the mock will use the behavior of
      implementation. Once the mock function has been called times times, it
      will automatically restore the behavior of original. This value must be an
      integer greater than zero. Default: Infinity.
  • Returns: {Proxy} The mocked function. The mocked function contains a special
    mock property, which is an instance of MockFunctionContext, and can
    be used for inspecting and changing the behavior of the mocked function.

This function is used to create a mock function.

The following example creates a mock function that increments a counter by one
on each invocation. The times option is used to modify the mock behavior such
that the first two invocations add two to the counter instead of one.

 test('mocks a counting function', (t) => {
  let cnt = 0;
  function addOne() {
    cnt++;
    return cnt;
  }
  function addTwo() {
    cnt += 2;
    return cnt;
  }
  const fn = t.mock.fn(addOne, addTwo, { times: 2 });
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 2);
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 4);
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 5);
  assert.strictEqual(fn(), 6);
});

mock.getter(object, methodName[, implementation][, options])

This function is syntax sugar for MockTracker.method with options.getter
set to true.

mock.method(object, methodName[, implementation][, options])

  • object {Object} The object whose method is being mocked.
  • methodName {string|symbol} The identifier of the method on object to mock.
    If object[methodName] is not a function, an error is thrown.
  • implementation {Function|AsyncFunction} An optional function used as the
    mock implementation for object[methodName]. Default: The original method
    specified by object[methodName].
  • options {Object} Optional configuration options for the mock method. The
    following properties are supported:
    • getter {boolean} If true, object[methodName] is treated as a getter.
      This option cannot be used with the setter option. Default: false.
    • setter {boolean} If true, object[methodName] is treated as a setter.
      This option cannot be used with the getter option. Default: false.
    • times {integer} The number of times that the mock will use the behavior of
      implementation. Once the mocked method has been called times times, it
      will automatically restore the original behavior. This value must be an
      integer greater than zero. Default: Infinity.
  • Returns: {Proxy} The mocked method. The mocked method contains a special
    mock property, which is an instance of MockFunctionContext, and can
    be used for inspecting and changing the behavior of the mocked method.

This function is used to create a mock on an existing object method. The
following example demonstrates how a mock is created on an existing object
method.

 test('spies on an object method', (t) => {
  const number = {
    value: 5,
    subtract(a) {
      return this.value - a;
    },
  };
  t.mock.method(number, 'subtract');
  assert.strictEqual(number.subtract.mock.calls.length, 0);
  assert.strictEqual(number.subtract(3), 2);
  assert.strictEqual(number.subtract.mock.calls.length, 1);
  const call = number.subtract.mock.calls[0];
  assert.deepStrictEqual(call.arguments, [3]);
  assert.strictEqual(call.result, 2);
  assert.strictEqual(call.error, undefined);
  assert.strictEqual(call.target, undefined);
  assert.strictEqual(call.this, number);
});

mock.reset()

This function restores the default behavior of all mocks that were previously
created by this MockTracker and disassociates the mocks from the
MockTracker instance. Once disassociated, the mocks can still be used, but the
MockTracker instance can no longer be used to reset their behavior or
otherwise interact with them.

After each test completes, this function is called on the test context's
MockTracker. If the global MockTracker is used extensively, calling this
function manually is recommended.

mock.restoreAll()

This function restores the default behavior of all mocks that were previously
created by this MockTracker. Unlike mock.reset(), mock.restoreAll() does
not disassociate the mocks from the MockTracker instance.

mock.setter(object, methodName[, implementation][, options])

This function is syntax sugar for MockTracker.method with options.setter
set to true.

Class: TestsStream

  • Extends {ReadableStream}

A successful call to run() method will return a new {TestsStream}
object, streaming a series of events representing the execution of the tests.
TestsStream will emit events, in the order of the tests definition

Event: 'test:diagnostic'

  • data {Object}
    • file {string|undefined} The path of the test file,
      undefined if test is not ran through a file.
    • message {string} The diagnostic message.
    • nesting {number} The nesting level of the test.

Emitted when context.diagnostic is called.

Event: 'test:fail'

  • data {Object}
    • details {Object} Additional execution metadata.
      • duration {number} The duration of the test in milliseconds.
      • error {Error} The error thrown by the test.
    • file {string|undefined} The path of the test file,
      undefined if test is not ran through a file.
    • name {string} The test name.
    • nesting {number} The nesting level of the test.
    • testNumber {number} The ordinal number of the test.
    • todo {string|boolean|undefined} Present if context.todo is called
    • skip {string|boolean|undefined} Present if context.skip is called

Emitted when a test fails.

Event: 'test:pass'

  • data {Object}
    • details {Object} Additional execution metadata.
      • duration {number} The duration of the test in milliseconds.
    • file {string|undefined} The path of the test file,
      undefined if test is not ran through a file.
    • name {string} The test name.
    • nesting {number} The nesting level of the test.
    • testNumber {number} The ordinal number of the test.
    • todo {string|boolean|undefined} Present if context.todo is called
    • skip {string|boolean|undefined} Present if context.skip is called

Emitted when a test passes.

Event: 'test:plan'

  • data {Object}
    • file {string|undefined} The path of the test file,
      undefined if test is not ran through a file.
    • nesting {number} The nesting level of the test.
    • count {number} The number of subtests that have ran.

Emitted when all subtests have completed for a given test.

Event: 'test:start'

  • data {Object}
    • file {string|undefined} The path of the test file,
      undefined if test is not ran through a file.
    • name {string} The test name.
    • nesting {number} The nesting level of the test.

Emitted when a test starts.

Class: TestContext

An instance of TestContext is passed to each test function in order to
interact with the test runner. However, the TestContext constructor is not
exposed as part of the API.

context.beforeEach([, fn][, options])

  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The hook function. The first argument
    to this function is a TestContext object. If the hook uses callbacks,
    the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op
    function.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the hook. The following
    properties are supported:
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress hook.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the hook will fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.

This function is used to create a hook running
before each subtest of the current test.

 test('top level test', async (t) => {
  t.beforeEach((t) => t.diagnostics(`about to run ${t.name}`));
  await t.test(
    'This is a subtest',
    (t) => {
      assert.ok('some relevant assertion here');
    }
  );
});

context.after([fn][, options])

  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The hook function. The first argument
    to this function is a TestContext object. If the hook uses callbacks,
    the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op
    function.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the hook. The following
    properties are supported:
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress hook.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the hook will fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.

This function is used to create a hook that runs after the current test
finishes.

 test('top level test', async (t) => {
  t.after((t) => t.diagnostic(`finished running ${t.name}`));
  assert.ok('some relevant assertion here');
});

context.afterEach([, fn][, options])

  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The hook function. The first argument
    to this function is a TestContext object. If the hook uses callbacks,
    the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op
    function.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the hook. The following
    properties are supported:
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress hook.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the hook will fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.

This function is used to create a hook running
after each subtest of the current test.

 test('top level test', async (t) => {
  t.afterEach((t) => t.diagnostics(`finished running ${t.name}`));
  await t.test(
    'This is a subtest',
    (t) => {
      assert.ok('some relevant assertion here');
    }
  );
});

context.diagnostic(message)

  • message {string}Message to be reported.

This function is used to write diagnostics to the output. Any diagnostic
information is included at the end of the test's results. This function does
not return a value.

context.name

The name of the test.

context.runOnly(shouldRunOnlyTests)

  • shouldRunOnlyTests {boolean} Whether or not to run only tests.

If shouldRunOnlyTests is truthy, the test context will only run tests that
have the only option set. Otherwise, all tests are run. If Node.js was not
started with the [--test-only][] command-line option, this function is a
no-op.

context.signal

  • AbortSignal Can be used to abort test subtasks when the test has been aborted.

Warning
On Node.js v14.x, this feature won't be available unless you pass the
--experimental-abortcontroller CLI flag or added an external global polyfill
for AbortController.

 test('top level test', async (t) => {
  await fetch('some/uri', { signal: t.signal });
});

context.skip([message])

  • message {string} Optional skip message.

This function causes the test's output to indicate the test as skipped. If
message is provided, it is included in the output. Calling skip() does
not terminate execution of the test function. This function does not return a
value.

context.todo([message])

  • message {string} Optional TODO message.

This function adds a TODO directive to the test's output. If message is
provided, it is included in the output. Calling todo() does not terminate
execution of the test function. This function does not return a value.

context.test([name][, options][, fn])

  • name {string} The name of the subtest, which is displayed when reporting
    test results. Default: The name property of fn, or '<anonymous>' if
    fn does not have a name.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the subtest. The following
    properties are supported:
    • concurrency {number|boolean|null} If a number is provided,
      then that many tests would run in parallel.
      If true, it would run all subtests in parallel.
      If false, it would only run one test at a time.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: null.
    • only {boolean} If truthy, and the test context is configured to run
      only tests, then this test will be run. Otherwise, the test is skipped.
      Default: false.
    • skip {boolean|string} If truthy, the test is skipped. If a string is
      provided, that string is displayed in the test results as the reason for
      skipping the test. Default: false.
    • signal {AbortSignal} Allows aborting an in-progress test.
    • todo {boolean|string} If truthy, the test marked as TODO. If a string
      is provided, that string is displayed in the test results as the reason why
      the test is TODO. Default: false.
    • timeout {number} A number of milliseconds the test will fail after.
      If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent.
      Default: Infinity.
  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The function under test. The first argument
    to this function is a TestContext object. If the test uses callbacks,
    the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op
    function.
  • Returns: {Promise} Resolved with undefined once the test completes.

This function is used to create subtests under the current test. This function
behaves in the same fashion as the top level test() function.

Class: SuiteContext

An instance of SuiteContext is passed to each suite function in order to
interact with the test runner. However, the SuiteContext constructor is not
exposed as part of the API.

context.name

The name of the suite.

context.signal

  • AbortSignal Can be used to abort test subtasks when the test has been aborted.

Warning
On Node.js v14.x, this feature won't be available unless you pass the
--experimental-abortcontroller CLI flag or added an external global polyfill
for AbortController.

License

MIT

Dependencies