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Version: 29.0

Testarea codului asincron

Se întâmplă frecvent în JavaScript să se execute cod asincron. Atunci când aveţi cod care se execută în mod asincron, Jest trebuie să ştie când codul pe care-l testează s-a completat de executat, înainte de a trece la un alt test. Jest are mai multe moduri pentru a rezolva acest lucru.

Promisiuni

Return a promise from your test, and Jest will wait for that promise to resolve. If the promise is rejected, the test will fail.

For example, let's say that fetchData returns a promise that is supposed to resolve to the string 'peanut butter'. We could test it with:

test('the data is peanut butter', () => {
return fetchData().then(data => {
expect(data).toBe('peanut butter');
});
});

Async/Await

Alternativ, puteţi utiliza async şi await în teste. To write an async test, use the async keyword in front of the function passed to test. De exemplu, acelaşi scenariu fetchData poate fi testat cu:

test('the data is peanut butter', async () => {
const data = await fetchData();
expect(data).toBe('peanut butter');
});

test('the fetch fails with an error', async () => {
expect.assertions(1);
try {
await fetchData();
} catch (e) {
expect(e).toMatch('error');
}
});

You can combine async and await with .resolves or .rejects.

test('the data is peanut butter', async () => {
await expect(fetchData()).resolves.toBe('peanut butter');
});

test('the fetch fails with an error', async () => {
await expect(fetchData()).rejects.toMatch('error');
});

In these cases, async and await are effectively syntactic sugar for the same logic as the promises example uses.

caution

Be sure to return (or await) the promise - if you omit the return/await statement, your test will complete before the promise returned from fetchData resolves or rejects.

If you expect a promise to be rejected, use the .catch method. Asiguraţi-vă că utilizați expect.assertions pentru a verifica că un anumit număr de aserțiuni sunt executate. Otherwise, a fulfilled promise would not fail the test.

test('the fetch fails with an error', () => {
expect.assertions(1);
return fetchData().catch(e => expect(e).toMatch('error'));
});

Callback-uri

If you don't use promises, you can use callbacks. For example, let's say that fetchData, instead of returning a promise, expects a callback, i.e. fetches some data and calls callback(null, data) when it is complete. You want to test that this returned data is the string 'peanut butter'.

By default, Jest tests complete once they reach the end of their execution. That means this test will not work as intended:

// Don't do this!
test('the data is peanut butter', () => {
function callback(error, data) {
if (error) {
throw error;
}
expect(data).toBe('peanut butter');
}

fetchData(callback);
});

Problema este că testul se va termina de îndată ce fetchData își termină execuția, înainte de a apela vreodată callback-ul.

Există o formă alternativă de test care rezolvă acest lucru. În loc de a pune testul într-o funcţie cu un argument gol, utilizaţi un singur argument numit done. Jest va aştepta până când funcția done este apelată înainte de terminarea testului.

test('the data is peanut butter', done => {
function callback(error, data) {
if (error) {
done(error);
return;
}
try {
expect(data).toBe('peanut butter');
done();
} catch (error) {
done(error);
}
}

fetchData(callback);
});

If done() is never called, the test will fail (with timeout error), which is what you want to happen.

If the expect statement fails, it throws an error and done() is not called. If we want to see in the test log why it failed, we have to wrap expect in a try block and pass the error in the catch block to done. Otherwise, we end up with an opaque timeout error that doesn't show what value was received by expect(data).

caution

Jest will throw an error, if the same test function is passed a done() callback and returns a promise. This is done as a precaution to avoid memory leaks in your tests.

.resolves / .rejects

You can also use the .resolves matcher in your expect statement, and Jest will wait for that promise to resolve. În cazul în care promisiunea este respinsă, testul va eşua automat.

test('the data is peanut butter', () => {
return expect(fetchData()).resolves.toBe('peanut butter');
});

Be sure to return the assertion—if you omit this return statement, your test will complete before the promise returned from fetchData is resolved and then() has a chance to execute the callback.

If you expect a promise to be rejected, use the .rejects matcher. Funcționează exact ca validatorul .resolves. În cazul în care promisiunea este îndeplinită, testul va eşua automat.

test('the fetch fails with an error', () => {
return expect(fetchData()).rejects.toMatch('error');
});

None of these forms is particularly superior to the others, and you can mix and match them across a codebase or even in a single file. It just depends on which style you feel makes your tests simpler.