Source code of released version | Source code of development version
After reading this, you'll know:
- What Tinytest is used for.
- How to include tests in your package.
- How to structure your test file(s).
- When to use synchronous or asynchronous tests.
- How to run your tests.
- What assertions and utility methods are available to you.
Tinytest is the official Meteor package test runner.
It's used to test local packages. You cannot test non-local packages (for example packages you have included using meteor add some:package-name
) unless you clone their repos and make them available locally. The assumption is, of course, that you are testing packages under development.
Tinytest is specifically designed for unit testing. From wikipedia:
... Intuitively, one can view a unit as the smallest testable part of an application. In procedural programming, a unit could be an entire module, but it is more commonly an individual function or procedure. In object-oriented programming, a unit is often an entire interface, such as a class, but could be an individual method.
... Ideally, each test case is independent from the others. Substitutes such as method stubs, mock objects, fakes, and test harnesses can be used to assist testing a module in isolation.
The object of a unit test is to prove functionality you have written. It is not to prove third-party or other package or library code which may form a part of your codebase. This may require that you head up your tests with stubs, mocks/spies or fakes which satisfy the demands of your code, but are non-functional (or have limited functionality). Alternatively, instead of placing the stubs in your test file, you could put them into a separate stubs.js
file, which you api.addFiles
, or even create and add a stubs package which you then api.use
.
From martinfowler.com:
Fake objects actually have working implementations, but usually take some shortcut which makes them not suitable for production (an in memory database is a good example).
Stubs provide canned answers to calls made during the test, usually not responding at all to anything outside what's programmed in for the test. Stubs may also record information about calls, such as an email gateway stub that remembers the messages it 'sent', or maybe only how many messages it 'sent'.
Mocks [are] objects pre-programmed with expectations which form a specification of the calls they are expected to receive.
For a comprehensive way of including spies, stubs and other fun stuff, check out practicalmeteor:munit and smithy:describe, both of which wrap a host of useful functionality around Tinytest, including the more widely used describe ... it ... expect
syntax. This README covers standard Tinytest, so you should refer to the documentation for those if you prefer their syntax and functionality.
Tinytest is included through configuration in the package.js
file using Package.onTest()
.
// Define test section
Package.onTest(function(api) {
// We will need the following packages to run our tests.
// Note that we also need to include the package to be tested (myname:mypackage).
api.use(['tinytest', 'underscore', 'ecmascript', 'myname:mypackage']);
// In v1.2 test-packages no longer include any packages globally.
// You may need to make some exports global for your tests to run, for example:
api.imply('underscore');
// This file contains the tests we want to run (these will run on the client and the server)
api.addFiles('tests.js');
// You can add as many test files as you want and choose where they are to run:
api.addFiles('server-tests.js', 'server');
// and these only run on the client:
api.addFiles('client-tests.js', 'client');
});
The test file is normally written in Javascript/ES5 (but may be anything if the appropriate transpiler is included with api.use('some-transpiler');
within Package.onTest
). Examples in this README assume ES2015, for which you will have to include an api.use('ecmascript');
line in your Package.onTest
.
Note that currently the
package.js
file itself is processed as Javascript/ES5. This cannot be changed.
A "test" contains the code you want to test, plus zero or more assertions wrapped within a Tinytest.add
or Tinytest.addAsync
callback. The name
of the test is specified in the add
or addAsync
call. An assertion is a call to a method used to verify an actual result (or some property of an actual result) vs an expected result. For example, "is the result === 1?", or "is the result a JavaScript Number
?".
If a test has no assertions it is assumed to pass unless an exception is caught. However, it is more usual to explicitly specify assertions.
In any single test all assertions must pass for the test as a whole to pass.
The name
of the test may also be used to generate a hierarchical (grouped) result page. Hierarchical levels are split using " - " as a separator in the name. The name of the package should be at the head of the name
:
'mypackage - functional tests - test 1'
'mypackage - functional tests - test 2'
'mypackage - performance tests - test 1'
'mypackage - performance tests - test 2'
Would be good name
s to use for reporting test results in a hierarchy.
Multiple test files may be included in package.js
. They will be processed in the order declared. However, test results are presented in the order in which they appear in their groupings. The pass/fail status of tests is updated in order, including waiting for asynchronous tests to complete.
Tests may be synchronous or asynchronous.
A synchronous test is one in which the flow of code does not need to wait for the result of an external action to be made available through an on-completion callback.
Conversely, an asynchronous test is one in which the flow of code does need to wait for the result of an external action to be made available through an on-completion callback.
Synchronous tests are more common, but asynchronous tests are useful occasionally. With the introduction of Meteor Promises (promises running in fibers), we can now successfully write synchronous tests containing asynchronous code. However, examples of this usage are outside the scope of this section of the README.
Tinytest.add(name, function(test) {
// test body
});
ES6/2015 (recommended):
Tinytest.add(name, (test) => {
// test body
});
Tinytest.addAsync(name, function(test, onComplete) {
someAsyncRequest(function(error, result) {
// test body
onComplete(); // invoke when async function completes.
}
});
ES6/2015 (recommended):
Tinytest.addAsync(name, (test, onComplete) => {
someAsyncRequest((error, result) => {
// test body
onComplete(); // invoke when async function completes.
}
});
Tests are executed by running the (development) application with the test-packages
command. By default, all packages are tested, but specific packages can be tested by specifying them by name.
meteor test-packages
runs tests on all (local) packages in the app.
meteor test-packages her:package his:package
runs tests only on her:package
and his:package
.
The results are presented on the browser (port 3000) as usual. When run as shown, the file watcher runs, so code may be edited and the tests will be re-run automatically. If this is undesirable, you may add the --run-once
switch.
The test
object in the above callbacks is used to add assertions to the test.
Tinytest.add('mypackage - basic tests', (test) => {
// Get the result from our function under test.
const result = myFunction(1);
// Do the test ... calling myFunction with 1 should return 2.
test.equal(result, 2);
});
Tests may include multiple assertions. The total number of successes and failures for each test are reported.
An optional message
may be added to the assertions which will change a failure report from fail - <failure-test>
to fail - <failure-test> - message <optional message>
test.equal(actual, expected[, message[, not]]);
not
is a boolean (true
/false
) parameter which may be used to switch the sense (equal
becomes notEqual
). Used internally by notEqual
. Don't use it in your tests - it just makes your code harder to grok.
Compares by type and value, so 2 is not equal to "2", for example. Is a better choice for checking something is strictly true
or false
than test.isTrue
or test.isFalse
(see below).
test.notEqual(actual, expected[, message]);
Internally, calls equal
with the not
flag set to true
.
test.matches(actual, regexp[, message]);
Checks regexp.test(actual)
test.notMatches(actual, regexp[, message]);
Checks !regexp.test(actual)
test.isTrue(actual[, message]);
Checks that actual
is truthy (does not check type is Boolean
).
test.isFalse(actual[, message]);
Checks that actual
is falsey (does not check type is Boolean
).
test.isNull(actual[, message]);
Checks actual === null
test.isNotNull(actual[, message]);
Checks !(actual === null)
test.isUndefined(actual[, message]);
Checks actual === undefined
test.isNotUndefined(actual[, message]);
Checks !(actual === undefined)
test.isNaN(actual[, message]);
Checks isNaN(actual)
test.isNotNaN(actual[, message]);
Checks !(isNaN(actual))
test.length(obj, expected_length[, message]);
Checks obj.length === expected_length
test.instanceOf(obj, klass[, message]);
Checks obj instanceof klass
test.notInstanceOf(obj, klass[, message]);
Checks !(obj instanceof klass)
test.include(haystack, needle[, message[, not]]);
haystack
may be an array
, object
or string
. Correspondingly, needle
may be an element
(simple elements only), key
(method or property name) or substring
.
not
is a boolean (true
/false
) parameter which may be used to switch the sense (include
becomes notInclude
). Used internally by notInclude
. Don't use it in your tests - it just makes your code harder to grok.
test.notInclude(haystack, needle[,message]);
Internally, calls include
with the not
flag set to true
.
test._stringEqual: function (actual, expected[, message]);
EXPERIMENTAL way to compare two strings that results in a nicer display in the test runner, e.g. for multiline strings.
test.throws(func, expected);
expected
can be:
undefined
: accept any exception.string
: pass if the string is a substring of the exception message.regexp
: pass if the exception message passes the regexp.function
: call the function as a predicate with the exception.
Note: Node's assert.throws
also accepts a constructor to test whether the error is of the expected class. But since JavaScript can't distinguish between constructors and plain functions and Node's assert.throws
also accepts a predicate function, if the error fails the instanceof
test with the constructor then the constructor is then treated as a predicate and called (!)
The upshot is, if you want to test whether an error is of a particular class, use a predicate function.
test.runId();
Returns a unique string id for this test (for example 'ZmXxMPyoWGFy5wEiB').
test.exception(exception);
Should only be used with asynchronous tests
Call this to fail the test with an exception that occurs inside asynchronous callbacks in tests. If you call this function, you should make sure that:
- the test doesn't call its callback (onComplete function).
- the test function doesn't directly raise an exception.
test.expect_fail();
May be used to change a fail to a qualified pass. The test is counted as a pass, but clicking on it reveals that the underlying test failed:
- expected_fail — assert_equal - expected xxx - actual yyy - not