Today we are excited to announce Jest 23, our largest major release to date! Together with over 100 contributors, we've shipped a ton of features and bug fixes. Thank you to everyone in the community for helping make JavaScript Testing Delightful.
We would also like to welcome both Babel and webpack to the Jest community! After converting from Mocha to Jest 23 Beta, webpack saw their total test suite time reduced 6x from over 13 minutes to 2 minutes 20 seconds. #blazingmeansgood
Here's are some of the Jest 23 highlights and breaking changes.
For a full list see the changelog.
Modo de Snapshot Interativo
We've added a new default watch menu option we're calling Interactive Snapshot Mode. This new mode allows you to step through each failing snapshot in each failing suite to review your failed snapshots and choose to update or skip each individually.
See the Interactive Snapshot Mode docs here.
Snapshot Property Matchers
Often, objects you're snapshotting contain generated values like Dates and IDs. Jest now allows you to pass properties to the snapshot matcher which specify the structure of the data instead of the specific values. These property matchers are then verified before serializing the matcher type (instead of the value), giving you consistent snapshot results across test runs.
See the updated toMatchSnapshot
docs or the Property Matcher guide for more information.
Custom Asynchronous matchers
We now support asynchronous matchers with expect.extends
! Async matchers return a Promise so that you can await
for the matcher to resolve. As an example:
Docs available here.
Custom Asymmetric Matchers
Asymmetric matchers are a great tool to use when you only care about asymmetric equality. For example, when the left side is expected to be an object with some subset of properties on the right, instead of an exact match. Jest provides a number of asymmetric matchers out of the box, and in this release we're introducing Custom Asymmetric Matchers.
Jest Each
@mattphillipsio has donated the jest-each
package to Jest Core (thanks Matt!). jest-each
is a library inspired by mocha-each
and Spock Data Tables which allows you to define a table of test cases, and then run a test for each row with the specified column values. We support both array types and template literals for all flavors of describe
and test
. Docs are available here, and for those not on Jest 23 yet, we're still publishing jest-each
separately!
Huge shout out to Prettier for fixing the table formatting so quickly (see Prettier 1.13)!
New Matchers
We only add matchers to core if we believe they will be useful to a large amount of people in the Jest community, and leave the majority of matchers to the community (see jest-extended). Some matchers make the cut into core, and Jest 23 adds:
- nthCalledWith
- toReturn
- toReturnTimes
- toReturnWith
- lastReturnedWith
- nthReturnedWith
- toStrictEqual
See the updated expect docs here.
Debug Hanging Tests
A common issue we see on the issue tracker relates to “Jest” hanging after a test run. This is usually due to app code leaving handles open, preventing Jest from exiting. In the past, users have resorted to --forceExit
to fix (not recommended).
To help debug these issues, we're now detecting when Jest does not exit:
And we offer a new flag --detectOpenHandles
to help find the open handles:
See the updated CLI docs here.
Watch Mode Plugins
We have completely rewritten the watch mode system to allow adding custom plugins to watch mode. Watch Mode Plugins now make it possible to hook into Jest events and provide custom menu options in the Watch Mode Menu. All of the default Watch Mode prompts are implemented as plugins in this system, and the docs to create your own are available here.
With this change, we're also now able to bring back typeahead support as a Watch Mode Plugin via jest-watch-typeahead!
See jest-watch-typeahead for documentation and install instructions. Huge thank you to @rogeliog for the new watch mode plugin system and the jest-watch-typeahead plugin!
Breaking Changes
As with every major release, we are making a few breaking changes to make larger changes in the future possible and to push the testing experience to a new level. Here's a list of the biggest changes you may see:
- Require test descriptions and functions: We're now failing tests that do not include both a function and a description.
- Remove undefined props from React snapshots: Smaller snapshots and proper React behavior.
- Remove deprecations: We removed mapCoverage since it's no longer needed. Additionally, we removed
jest.genMockFunction
andjest.genMockFn
since these are the same asjest.fn
. - Add snapshot names to failures: We added the snapshot name (if provided) to the snapshot failure message so it's easier to find the snapshot that's failing.
- Replace mock timestamps: We replaced mock timestamps with invocationCallOrder since two or mocks may often have the same timestamp, making it impossible to test the call order.
- Add results to mock snapshots: We added mock function call results to snapshots so that both the calls and the results of the invocation are tracked.
Other Improvements
- Watch mode coverage: Coverage is now limited to only the files tested in watch mode or when using
--onlyChanged
and--findRelatedTests
. - Version documentation: We added docs for each minor release back to Jest 22, and have removed all of the “Requires Jest X.X+” from the docs.
- Better snapshot summaries: We overhauled the Snapshot Summary output to make obsolete snapshots more informative.
- Better stack traces: We added stack traces to asynchronous errors, timeout errors, expect.assertions, and thrown non-errors. We're also indicating the column in the code frame!
- Better React 16 support: Adds snapshot support for
React.Fragment
,React.forwardRef
, andReact.createContext
. - Track mock return and throw values: Adds
mock.results
that contains the return value or thrown value for each mock call. - Blazing 🔥: We've added a blazing badge to the README to indicate that Jest is blazing good.
Jest Summit
Last week, the Jest Core Team met for the Jest Summit at Facebook London where worked on and released Jest 23, announced the Jest Open Collective, and gave a number of talks:
- Christoph Nakazawa – Intro
- Aaron Abramov – Writing Meaningful Tests
- Rick Hanlon II – Blazing Fast Snapshot Testing in Jest 23
- Simen Bekkhus – Jest's Delightful Error Messages
- Matt Phillips – Level up your Jest experience with community packages
- Michele Bertoli – Snapshot all the things
- Jordan Eldredge – Webamp: Learn by imitating
Full talk is available here.
The turnout was amazing, and we were able to meet a lot of the London-based community in person. Thank you to everyone who joined us and for your continued support! Stay tuned for our next post which will outline the Jest Open Collective and the plans we have for the future.
As always, this release couldn't have been possible without you, the JavaScript community. We are incredibly grateful that we get the opportunity to work on improving JavaScript testing together. If you'd like to contribute to Jest, please don't hesitate to reach out to us on GitHub or on Discord.