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06-configuration.md

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Configuration

Translations: Français

All of the CLI options can be configured in the ava section of either your package.json file, or an ava.config.* file. This allows you to modify the default behavior of the ava command, so you don't have to repeatedly type the same options on the command prompt.

To ignore files, prefix the pattern with an ! (exclamation mark).

package.json:

{
	"ava": {
		"files": [
			"test/**/*",
			"!test/exclude-files-in-this-directory",
			"!**/exclude-files-with-this-name.*"
		],
		"match": [
			"*oo",
			"!foo"
		],
		"concurrency": 5,
		"failFast": true,
		"failWithoutAssertions": false,
		"environmentVariables": {
			"MY_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE": "some value"
		},
		"verbose": true,
		"require": [
			"./my-helper-module.js"
		],
		"nodeArguments": [
			"--trace-deprecation",
			"--napi-modules"
		]
	}
}

Arguments passed to the CLI will always take precedence over the CLI options configured in package.json.

Options

  • files: an array of glob patterns to select test files. Files with an underscore prefix are ignored. By default only selects files with cjs, mjs & js extensions, even if the pattern matches other files. Specify extensions to allow other file extensions
  • watchMode: See the watch mode recipe for details
  • match: not typically useful in the package.json configuration, but equivalent to specifying --match on the CLI
  • cache: defaults to true to cache compiled files under node_modules/.cache/ava. If false, files are cached in a temporary directory instead
  • concurrency: max number of test files running at the same time (default: CPU cores)
  • workerThreads: use worker threads to run tests (enabled by default). If false, tests will run in child processes
  • failFast: stop running further tests once a test fails
  • failWithoutAssertions: if false, does not fail a test if it doesn't run assertions
  • environmentVariables: specifies environment variables to be made available to the tests. The environment variables defined here override the ones from process.env
  • tap: if true, enables the TAP reporter
  • verbose: if true, enables verbose output (though there currently non-verbose output is not supported)
  • snapshotDir: specifies a fixed location for storing snapshot files. Use this if your snapshots are ending up in the wrong location
  • extensions: extensions of test files. Setting this overrides the default ["cjs", "mjs", "js"] value, so make sure to include those extensions in the list. Experimentally you can configure how files are loaded
  • require: extra modules to load before test files
  • timeout: Timeouts in AVA behave differently than in other test frameworks. AVA resets a timer after each test, forcing tests to quit if no new test results were received within the specified timeout. This can be used to handle stalled tests. See our timeout documentation for more options.
  • nodeArguments: Configure Node.js arguments used to launch worker processes.
  • sortTestFiles: A comparator function to sort test files with. Available only when using a ava.config.* file. See an example use case here.
  • utilizeParallelBuilds: If false, disable parallel builds (default: true)

Note that providing files on the CLI overrides the files option.

Provide the typescript option (and install @ava/typescript as an additional dependency) for AVA to run tests written in TypeScript.

Using ava.config.* files

Rather than specifying the configuration in the package.json file you can use ava.config.js, ava.config.cjs or ava.config.mjs files.

To use these files:

  1. Your package.json must not contain an ava property (or, if it does, it must be an empty object)
  2. You must only have one ava.config.* file in any directory, so don't mix ava.config.js and ava.config.cjs files

AVA searches your file system for ava.config.* files. First, when you run AVA, it finds the closest package.json. Starting in that directory it recursively checks the parent directories until it either reaches the file system root or encounters a .git file or directory. The first ava.config.* file found is selected. This allows you to use a single configuration file in a monorepo setup.

ava.config.js

AVA follows Node.js' behavior, so if you've set "type": "module" you must use ESM, and otherwise you must use CommonJS.

The default export can either be a plain object or a factory function which returns a plain object. You can export or return a promise for a plain object:

export default {
	require: ['./_my-test-helper.js']
};
export default function factory() {
	return {
		require: ['./_my-test-helper.js']
	};
};

The factory function is called with an object containing a projectDir property, which you could use to change the returned configuration:

export default ({projectDir}) => {
	if (projectDir === '/Users/username/projects/my-project') {
		return {
			// Config A
		};
	}

	return {
		// Config B
	};
};

ava.config.cjs

For ava.config.cjs files you must assign module.exports. "Module scope" is available. You can require() dependencies.

The module export can either be a plain object or a factory function which returns a plain object. You can export or return a promise for a plain object:

module.exports = {
	require: ['./_my-test-helper.js']
};
module.exports = () => {
	return {
		require: ['./_my-test-helper.js']
	};
};

The factory function is called with an object containing a projectDir property, which you could use to change the returned configuration:

module.exports = ({projectDir}) => {
	if (projectDir === '/Users/username/projects/my-project') {
		return {
			// Config A
		};
	}

	return {
		// Config B
	};
};

ava.config.mjs

The default export can either be a plain object or a factory function which returns a plain object. You can export or return a promise for a plain object:

export default {
	require: ['./_my-test-helper.js']
};
export default function factory() {
	return {
		require: ['./_my-test-helper.js']
	};
};

The factory function is called with an object containing a projectDir property, which you could use to change the returned configuration:

export default ({projectDir}) => {
	if (projectDir === '/Users/username/projects/my-project') {
		return {
			// Config A
		};
	}

	return {
		// Config B
	};
};

Alternative configuration files

The CLI lets you specify a specific configuration file, using the --config flag. This file must have either a .js, .cjs or .mjs extension and is processed like an ava.config.js, ava.config.cjs or ava.config.mjs file would be.

When the --config flag is set, the provided file will override all configuration from the package.json and ava.config.js, ava.config.cjs or ava.config.mjs files. The configuration is not merged.

You can use this to customize configuration for a specific test run. For instance, you may want to run unit tests separately from integration tests:

ava.config.cjs:

module.exports = {
	files: ['unit-tests/**/*']
};

integration-tests.config.cjs:

const baseConfig = require('./ava.config.cjs');

module.exports = {
	...baseConfig,
	files: ['integration-tests/**/*']
};

You can now run your unit tests through npx ava and the integration tests through npx ava --config integration-tests.config.cjs.

Object printing depth

By default, AVA prints nested objects to a depth of 3. However, when debugging tests with deeply nested objects, it can be useful to print with more detail. This can be done by setting util.inspect.defaultOptions.depth to the desired depth, before the test is executed:

import util from 'util';

import test from 'ava';

util.inspect.defaultOptions.depth = 5;  // Increase AVA's printing depth

test('My test', t => {
	t.deepEqual(someDeeplyNestedObject, theExpectedValue);
});

AVA has a minimum depth of 3.

Experiments

From time to time, AVA will implement experimental features. These may change or be removed at any time, not just when there's a new major version. You can opt in to such a feature by enabling it in the nonSemVerExperiments configuration.

ava.config.js:

export default {
	nonSemVerExperiments: {
		feature: true
	}
};

Configuring module formats

Node.js can only load non-standard extension as ES Modules when using experimental loaders. To use this you'll also have to configure AVA to import() your test file.

As with the array form, you need to explicitly list js, cjs, and mjs extensions. These must be set using the true value; other extensions are configurable using either 'commonjs' or 'module':

ava.config.js:

export default {
	extensions: {
		js: true,
		ts: 'module'
	}
};

Requiring extra modules

Use the require configuration to load extra modules before test files are loaded. Relative paths are resolved against the project directory and can be loaded through @ava/typescript. Otherwise, modules are loaded from within the node_modules directory inside the project.

You may specify a single value, or an array of values:

ava.config.js:

export default {
	require: './_my-test-helper.js'
}
export default {
	require: ['./_my-test-helper.js']
}

If the module exports a function, it is called and awaited:

_my-test-helper.js:

export default function () {
	// Additional setup
}

_my-test-helper.cjs:

module.exports = function () {
	// Additional setup
}

In CJS files, a default export is also supported:

exports.default = function () {
	// Never called
}

You can provide arguments:

ava.config.js:

export default {
	require: [
		['./_my-test-helper.js', 'my', 'arguments']
	]
}

_my-test-helper.js:

export default function (first, second) { // 'my', 'arguments'
	// Additional setup
}

Arguments are copied using the structured clone algorithm. This means Map values survive, but a Buffer will come out as a Uint8Array.

You can load dependencies installed in your project:

ava.config.js:

export default {
	require: '@babel/register'
}

These may also export a function which is then invoked, and can receive arguments.

Node arguments

The nodeArguments configuration may be used to specify additional arguments for launching worker processes. These are combined with --node-arguments passed on the CLI and any arguments passed to the node binary when starting AVA.