Content
- The Aim
- Maintainers
- Features
- How to get it?
- How to get it set up?
- How to start Jest?
- How do I debug tests?
- How do I show code coverage?
- Inspiration
- Wanted
- Troubleshooting
- Want to Contribute?
A comprehensive experience when using Facebook's Jest within a project.
- Useful IDE based Feedback
- Session based test watching
Orta Therox (@orta), Sean Poulter (@seanpoulter), Vincent Voyer (@vvo) & ConnectDotz (@connectdotz).
- 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.
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.
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. However, if you have a more sophisticated project or custom jest command, the default configuration most likely won't be sufficient but you can easily customize it with various settings*, such as jest.pathToJest
where you can specify how you usually run your jest tests.
If you encountered any difficulty or have suggestions, please do not hesitate to ask, we have an active community that you might find helpful.
*: all settings in this extension are prefixed with jest
The extension will start Jest for you when:
- we find Jest configuration files in the workspace:
jest.config.js
orjest.json
- 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
node_modules/react-native-scripts
- you run the Jest: Start Runner command
The simplest use cases should be supported out-of-the-box, but at the latest when VS Code displays errors about the attribute program
or runtimeExecutable
not being available, you have to create your own debug configuration within launch.json
.
This plugin provides blueprints for debugging plain Jest setups or projects bootstrapped by create-react-app
. (In the latter case you may have to edit the runtimeExecutable
to reflect the used react-scripts
package.) If those don't match your setup, you can modify the blueprints or create a completely new debug configuration, but keep in mind, that the type
has to be node
and that the configuration has to be named "vscode-jest-tests"
. In order to learn more about debug/launch configurations in general, visit VS Code Docs: Debugging.
Starting with debugging is possible by clicking on the debug
CodeLense above appendant it
tests, but you can also debug all tests at once by starting debugging of "vscode-jest-tests"
within the VS Code Debug Side Bar.
In contrast to previous versions of this plugin the debug settings are now independent from VS Code's jest.pathToJest
and jest.pathToConfig
setting. If you had to modify one of these, you pretty surely have to create a custom debug configuration and modify its path. This especially includes cases, in which jest
isn't at its default location.
Starting from v3.1, code coverage can be easily turned on/off at runtime without customization.
To toggle the coverage mode: go to Command Palette and select Jest: Toggle Coverage Overlay command. (TODO: toggle from StatusBar, PR welcome)
The coverage mode, along with watch mode, are shown in StatusBar:
(The initial coverage mode is off
but can be changed by adding "jest.showCoverageOnLoad": true
in settings.)
I'd like to give a shout out to Wallaby.js, which is a significantly more comprehensive and covers a lot more editors, if this extension interests you - check out that too.
Someone to take responsibility for ensuring that the default setup for create-react-app is always working. All the current authors use TypeScript and React/React Native and so have very little familiarity with changes to CRA. Apply via PRs :D.
If you don't use the root of your project for your JS with Jest tests, do not worry, you can still use this project. You will need to use the "Start Jest Runner" command, and maybe have to configure your own jest.pathToJest
setting inside the .vscode/settings.json
to whatever you would use.
These are the activation events which trigger the runner to start:
"activationEvents": [
"workspaceContains:node_modules/.bin/jest",
"workspaceContains:node_modules/react-scripts/node_modules/.bin/jest",
"workspaceContains:node_modules/react-native-scripts",
"onCommand:io.orta.jest.start"
],
These are the things that will trigger the extension loading. If one of these applies, and you're not seeing the "Jest" in the bottom bar, reference the self-diagnosis below
vscode-jest supports multiroot feature, but if you want to turn it off for some workspace folders check out jest.disabledWorkspaceFolders
configuration setting.
jest.disabledWorkspaceFolders
is an array of strings with folder names.
vscode-jest supports common jest configuration, such as when jest is in root/node_modules/.bin/jest
, or for react-native root/node_modules/react-native-scripts
.
However, if your repo doesn't fall into these patterns or you want to pass extra parameters, you can easily use the jest.pathToJest
or jest.pathToConfig
settings to instruct the plugin on how to start jest. You can even use the scripts from package.json, such as npm run test --
or yarn test
. Feel free to experiment and search the issues for many examples.
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 what it is actually doing:
- click on
Jest:stopped
on status bar to show Jest Output window: - turn on the debug mode: 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.pathToJest
and other settings.
Thanks for considering! Check here for useful tips and guidelines.