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vscode-jest

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v4 Release

After longer than expected development, v4 is finally released! πŸ˜„

This is a big release packed with changes to address many nagging issues you have been asking for, such as inconsistent test status indicators, high CPU usage, more granular control of the test runner, missing coverage, supporting parameterized tests, mysterious start up failure etc.

Knowing the scope of the changes is significant, while we tried to test it as much as we can, there are probably still some rough edges we have not discovered. If it interrupted your work, our apology! You can either look up on the document below to see if you can find a workaround; or revert to the earlier version. Please do not hesitate to file issues or ask questions in discussions, we will be monitoring them closely and address issues as best we can.

Feel free to read more about the features and migration or come chat with us in the release discussion for general comments or questions about this release.

P.S. We find the new version did made the development of this extension a bit easier (yes, we do eat our own dog food 🐢), hopefully, it will do the same for your project. Happy coding!


Content


The Aim

A comprehensive experience when using Facebook's Jest within a project.

  • Useful IDE based Feedback
  • Session based test watching
  • File based interactive testing

Screenshot of the tool

Features

  • Starts Jest automatically when you're in a root folder project with Jest installed.
  • Show individual fail / passes inline.
  • Show fails inside the problem inspector.
  • Highlights the errors next to the expect functions.
  • Adds syntax highlighting to snapshot files.
  • A one button update for failed snapshots.
  • Show coverage information in files being tested.
  • Help debug jest tests in vscode.
  • Supports multiple test run modes (automated, manual, and hybrid onSave) to meet user's preferred development experience.
  • Track and shows overall workspace/project test stats

Installation

Simply open Jest - Visual Studio Marketplace and click "Install". Alternatively open Visual Studio Code, go to the extension view and search for "Jest".

For detailed releases and migration help, please see releases.

How to use the extension?

This extension should work out of the box for common jest environments. Users should see test status indicators in test file editors and Jest stats in the StatusBar, for example. However, for more sophisticated projects or people who prefer different look-and-feel/behaviors, customization via settings might be needed.

Most features in this extension should be pretty straight forward without much configuration. But in case you want to change the default behavior or encountered some difficulty with the extension, please checkout the following how-to and troubleshooting guides.


common jest environments:

This extension can automatically start the jest process without any custom configuration when

  • we find Jest installed in the workspace: node_modules/.bin/jest
  • we find the workspace has been bootstrapped with create-react-app:
    • node_modules/react-scripts/node_modules/.bin/jest or
    • node_modules/react-native-scripts

How to get it set up?

This extension runs on top of your Jest installation. Upon starting, it has the expectation that the Jest environment is properly set up, i.e. jest can be executed in VS Code's terminal.

Out of the box, this extension should work for most simple/standard jest and react projects (see common jest environments). However, if you have a more sophisticated project or custom jest command, the extension might not be able to start the jest process automatically. In such case you can use the jest.jestCommandLine to customize the extension. In v4 and on, a setup wizard can be used to configure the essential settings for the extension.

Feel free to checkout the complete list of available custom settings.

How to trigger the test run?

By default, users need not do anything, the extension will automatically trigger related test run when needed by running jest in the watch mode. However, this can be easily changed if more granular control is desired. Below shows the execution models supported and how to use jest.autoRun to opt into it:

fully automated

No need to manually trigger any test run, all changes will be monitored and related tests will be run accordingly. It is basically running jest with --watch or --watchAll. This is the default mode prior to v4. Example:

  • "jest.autoRun": {"watch": true} => will start the jest with the watch flag and leave all tests at "unknown" state until changes are detected.
  • "jest.autoRun": {"watch": true, "onStartup": ["all-tests"]} => will start running all tests upon project launch to update overall project test stats, followed by the jest watch for changes.
interactive mode

Allow users to control test run completely either through commands/menu manually or use vscode's onSave event to automate related test runs:

  • fully manual
    • there will be no automatic test run, users will trigger test run by either command or context-menu.
    • Example: "jest.autoRun": "off"
  • automatically run tests when test file changed
    • the extension will trigger test run for the given test file upon save.
    • Example: "jest.autoRun": {"watch": false, "onSave": "test-file"}
  • automatically run tests when either test or source file changed:
    • the extension will trigger test run for the given test or source file upon save.
    • Example: "jest.autoRun": {"watch": false, "onSave": "test-src-file"}

Note: other than the "off" mode, users can specify the "onStartup" option for any "jest.autoRun" config, for example: {"watch": false, "onSave": "test-file", "onStartup": ["all-tests"]}

How to debug tests?

A test can be debugged via the debug codeLens appeared above the debuggable tests. Simply clicking on the codeLens will launch vscode debugger for the specific test. The extension also supports parameterized tests and allows users to pick the specific parameter set to debug.

The simplest use cases should be supported out-of-the-box. If VS Code displays errors about the attribute program or runtimeExecutable not being available, you can either use setup wizard to help or create your own debug configuration within launch.json. See more details in Customization - Debug Config.

Illustration

For parameterized tests, you might see debug codeLens like Debug (2), which indicated there are 2 test candidates can be debugged. In such case, you will be prompted to choose when clicking the debug codeLens. All failed test results will appear in both the hovering message panel and the PROBLEMS area.

debug-screen-shot

By default debug codeLens will appear for failed and unknown tests, to change that and others, please see customization for more details.

How to use code coverage?

Code coverage can be triggered via Command Palette, select command like Jest: Toggle Coverage to activate or deactivate code coverage (see full list in commands. The coverage state is also shown in the StatusBar:

status-bar-modes

How to read coverage scheme and customize it

In addition to the coverage summary that is shown on the top of the file, each line will be marked by its coverage status according to the coverage formatter configured. There are 3 types of coverage you might see in your source code, distinguished by colors:

  • "covered": if the code is covered. Marked as "green" by default.
  • "not-covered": if the code is not covered. Marked as "red" by default.
  • "partially-covered": Usually this mean the branch (such as if, switch statements) only partially tested. Marked as "yellow" by default.
    • Please note, istanbuljs (the library jest used to generate coverage info) reports switch branch coverage with the first "case" statement instead of the "switch" statement.

coverage-screen-shot

You can customize coverage start up behavior, style and colors, see customization for more details.

⚠️ In rare cases, coverage info might be less than what it actual is in "watch" mode (with --watch flag), where only changed files/tests are run (see jestjs/jest#1284).

How to use the extension with monorepo projects?

The recommended approach is to setup the monorepo project as a multi-root workspaces in vscode, which each sub package is a "folder". While you can use jest projects to run all tests without multi-root workspaces, you won't be able to take advantage a more fine grained control such as toggle coverage for a specific package instead of all packages.

You can customize how the extension works in multi-root workspaces, see customization for more details.

How to read the StatusBar?

StatusBar shows 2 kinds of information: Jest shows the mode and state of the "active" workspace folder. Jest-WS shows the total test suite stats for the whole workspace. Clicking on each of these button will reveal the OUTPUT channel with more details.

Illustration shows the active workspace has coverage on.

shows the active workspace has onSave for test file only, and that the workspace stats is out of sync with the code, such as when the source file is changed but the related tests are not run yet.

shows the autoRun will be triggered by either test or source file changes.

Customization

Settings

Users can use the following settings to tailor the extension for their environments.

  • All settings are prefixed with jest and saved in standard .vscode/settings.json.
  • settings crossed out are to be deprecated in the future
  • settings marked with πŸ’Ό apply to the whole project, otherwise per workspace.
setting description default example/notes
Process
autoEnable ❌ Automatically start Jest for this project true Please use autoRun instead
jestCommandLine The command line to start jest tests undefined "jest.jestCommandLine": "npm test -" or "jest.jestCommandLine": "yarn test" or "jest.jestCommandLine": "node_modules/.bin/jest --config custom-config.js"
autoRun Controls when and what tests should be run undefined "jest.autoRun": "off" or "jest.autoRun": {"watch": true, "onStartup": ["all-tests"]} or "jest.autoRun": false, onSave:"test-only"}
pathToJest ❌ The path to the Jest binary, or an npm/yarn command to run tests undefined Please use jestCommandLine instead
pathToConfig ❌ The path to your Jest configuration file" "" Please use jestCommandLine instead
rootPath The path to your frontend src folder "" "jest.rootPath":"packages/app" or "jest.rootPath":"/apps/my-app"
runAllTestsFirst ❌ Run all tests before starting Jest in watch mode true Please use autoRun instead
Editor
enableInlineErrorMessages ❌ Whether errors should be reported inline on a file false It is recommended not to use the inline error message and in favor of vscode's hovering messages, especially for parameterized tests
Snapshot
enableSnapshotUpdateMessages Whether snapshot update messages should show true "jest.enableSnapshotUpdateMessages": false
enableSnapshotPreviews πŸ’Ό Whether snapshot previews should show true "jest.enableSnapshotPreviews": false
restartJestOnSnapshotUpdate ❌ Restart Jest runner after updating the snapshots false This is no longer needed in v4
Coverage
showCoverageOnLoad Show code coverage when extension starts false "jest.showCoverageOnLoad": true
coverageFormatter Determine the coverage overlay style "DefaultFormatter" "jest.coverageFormatter": "GutterFormatter"
coverageColors Coverage indicator color override undefined "jest.coverageColors": { "uncovered": "rgba(255,99,71, 0.2)", "partially-covered": "rgba(255,215,0, 0.2)"}
Debug
enableCodeLens πŸ’Ό Whether codelens for debugging should show true "jest.enableCodeLens": false
debugCodeLens.showWhenTestStateIn πŸ’Ό Show the debug CodeLens for the tests with the specified status. (window) ["fail", "unknown"] "jest.debugCodeLens.showWhenTestStateIn":["fail", "pass", "unknown"]
Misc
debugMode Enable debug mode to diagnose plugin issues. (see developer console) false "jest.debugMode": true
disabledWorkspaceFolders πŸ’Ό Disabled workspace folders names in multiroot environment [] "jest.disabledWorkspaceFolders": ["package-a", "package-b"]

Details

jestCommandLine

This should be the command users used to kick off the jest tests in the terminal. However, since the extension will append additional options at run time, please make sure the command line can pass along these options, which usually just means if you uses npm, add an additional "--" at the end (e.g. "npm run test --") if you haven't already in your script. It is recommended not to add the following options as they are managed by the extension: --watch, --watchAll, --coverage

rootPath

If your project doesn't live in the root of your repository, you may want to customize the jest.rootPath setting to enlighten the extension as to where to look. For instance: "jest.rootPath": "src/client-app" will direct the extension to use the src/client-app folder as the root for Jest.

debugCodeLens.showWhenTestStateIn

Possible status are: [ "fail", "pass", "skip", "unknown"]. Please note that this is a window level setting, i.e. its value will apply for all workspaces.

coverageFormatter

There are 2 formatters to choose from:

  1. DefaultFormatter: high light uncovered and partially-covered code inlilne as well as on the right overview ruler. (this is the default) coverage-DefaultFormatter.png

  2. GutterFormatter: render coverage status in the gutter as well as the overview ruler. coverage-GutterFormatter.png (Note, there is an known issue in vscode (microsoft/vscode#5923) that gutter decorators could interfere with debug breakpoints visibility. Therefore, you probably want to disable coverage before debugging or switch to DefaultFormatter)

coverageColors

Besides the formatter, user can also customize the color via jest.coverageColors to change color for 3 coverage categories: "uncovered", "covered", or "partially-covered", for example:

"jest.coverageColors": {
  "uncovered": "rgba(255,99,71, 0.2)",
  "partially-covered": "rgba(255,215,0, 0.2)",
}

the default color scheme below, note the opacity might differ per formatter:

"jest.coverageColors": {
  "covered": "rgba(9, 156, 65, 0.4)",
  "uncovered": "rgba(121, 31, 10, 0.4)",
  "partially-covered": "rgba(235, 198, 52, 0.4)",
}
autoRun
  • definition:
AutoRun =
  | 'off'
  | { watch: true; onStartup?: ["all-tests"] }
  | {
      watch: false;
      onStartup?: ["all-tests"];
      onSave?: 'test-file' | 'test-src-file';
    }
  • examples
    • Turn off auto run, users need to trigger tests run manually via run commands and menus:
      "jest.autoRun": "off"
    • Run all the tests in the workspace upon extension startup, followed by jest watch run for subsequent test/src file changes.
      "jest.autoRun": {
        "watch": true, 
        "onStartup": ["all-tests"]
      }
    • Only run tests in the test file when the test file itself changed. It will not run all tests for the workspace upon start up, nor triggering any test run when the source file changed.
      "jest.autoRun": {
         "watch": false, 
         "onSave": "test-file"
      }
    • Like the one above but does run all tests upon extension start up
      "jest.autoRun": {
        "watch": false, 
        "onSave": "test-file",
        "onStartup": ["all-tests"]
      }
  • migration rule from settings prior to v4:
    • if "jest.autoEnabled" = false => manual mode: "jest.autoRun": "off"
    • if "jest.runAllTestsFirst" = false => "jest.autoRun": {"watch": true }
    • if no customization of the 2 settings and no "jest.autoRun" found =>
    "jest.autoRun": {
       "watch": true, 
       "onStartup": ["all-tests"]
    }

Debug Config

This extension looks for "vscode-jest-tests" debug config in the workspace .vscode/launch.json. If not found, it will attempt to generate a default config that should work for most standard jest or projects bootstrapped by create-react-app.

If the default config is not working for your project, you can either use the setup wizard, probably the easier approach (available in v4), or edit the launch.json file manually.

If you choose to edit the launch.json manually, you can use the jest templates, such as "Jest: Default jest configuration" or "Jest: create-react-app", as a starting point. See more detail on how to add debug config in vscode Debugging.

There are many information online about how to setup vscode debug config for specific environments/frameworks, you might find the following helpful:

Commands

This extension contributes the following commands and can be accessed via Command Palette:

command description availability
Jest: Start All Runners start or restart all jest runners always
Jest: Stop All Runners stop all jest runners always
Jest: Toggle Coverage toggle coverage mode for all runners always
Jest: Start Runner (Select Workspace) start or restart the jest runner for the selected workspace multi-root workspace
Jest: Stop Runner (Select Workspace) stop jest runner for the selected workspace multi-root workspace
Jest: Toggle Coverage (Select Workspace) toggle coverage mode for the selected workspace multi-root workspace
Jest: Run All Tests run all tests for all the workspaces interactive mode
Jest: Run All Tests (Select Workspace) run all tests for the selected workspace interactive mode and multi-root workspace
Jest: Run All Tests in Current Workspace run all tests for the current workspace based on the active editor interactive
Jest: Toggle Coverage for Current Workspace toggle coverage mode for the current workspace based on the active editor interactive
Jest: Setup Extension start the setup wizard always

One can assign keyboard shortcut to any of these commands, see vscode Key Bindings

Menu

In interactive mode, user can trigger the following action from the text editor context-menu

menu description keyboard shortcut
Jest: Run Related Tests if in test file, run all tests in the file; if in source file, run all tests with dependency to the file Ctrl-Option-t (Mac) or Ctrl-Alt-t

Please see vscode Key Bindings if you want to change the keyboard shortcut.

Troubleshooting

Sorry you are having trouble with the extension. If your issue did not get resolved after checking out the how-to section and the tips below, feel free to ask the community, chances are some one else had a similar experience and could help resolving it.

I don't see "Jest" in the bottom status bar This means the extension is not activated. The extension should be automatically activated as described in [How to start jest](#how-to-start-jest). If it failed because maybe you don't use the root of your project for jest tests, you can use [jest.rootPath](#rootPath) to point to that directory instead.
I got "Jest Process xxx failed unexpectedly..." or "Jest failed too many times..." error message

This usually mean the extension is not able to start jest process for you. First check the Jest OUTPUT channel or developer console to see what is the actual error (see self-diagnosis).

If it is related to the run time environment, such as

env: node: No such file or directory

The issue is probably not related to this extension. If this only happened occasionally after launch or you saw vscode warning about shell start up slow, try to simplified the env files, restart vscode or reload windows. See Resolving Shell Environment is Slow.

If you see error about not able to find jest or some other jest related runtime error: if you can run jest from terminal then you can use the "Run Setup Wizard" button in the error panel to help resolving the configuration issue, see Setup Wizard for more details. There could be other causes, such as jest test root path is different from the project's, which can be fixed by setting jest.rootPath. Feel free to check out the customization section to manually adjust the extension if needed.

It seems to make my vscode sluggish

By default the extension will run all tests when it is launched followed by a jest watch process. If you have many resource extensive tests or source files that can trigger many tests when changed, this could be the reason. Check out jest.autoRun to see how you can change and control when and what tests should be run.

The tests and status do not match or some tests showing question marks unexpectedly

If your test file happen to have parameterized tests, i.e. test.each variations, please make sure you have jest version >= 26.5.

If the above did not resolve your issue, please see the self-diagnosis below that could show more insight of why the test and result could not be matched.

The extension is not behaving as expected, what is going on? (try self diagnosis)

If your can execute jest tests on command line but vscode-jest was not running as expected, here is what you can do to find out more information:

  • See jest process output in the "OUTPUT" channel, which is usually named after the workspace folder, such as Jest (your-workspace-name). Or you can click on Jest label on status bar to show Jest Output window. This will show you the jest run output and the errors.
Screenshot of the tool
  • Turn on the debug mode to see more internal debugging message:
    • set "jest.debugMode": true in .vscode/settings.json
    • restart vscode-jest or reload the window (via Reload Window command)
    • open the developer tool (via Help > Toggle Developer Tools menu), you should see more information including how we extract jest config and spawn jest processes.

Hopefully most issues would be pretty obvious after seeing these extra output, and you can probably fix most yourself by customizing the jest.jestCommandLine and others.

Want to Contribute?

Thanks for considering! Check here for useful tips and guidelines.

License

vscode-jest is MIT licensed.

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