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jasmine-node

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This node.js module makes the wonderful Pivotal Lab's jasmine (http://github.com/pivotal/jasmine) spec framework available in node.js.

jasmine

Version 1.3.1 of Jasmine is currently included with node-jasmine.

what's new

  • Ability to test specs written in Literate Coffee-Script
  • Teamcity Reporter reinstated.
  • Ability to specify multiple files to test via list in command line
  • Ability to suppress stack trace with --noStack
  • Async tests now run in the expected context instead of the global one
  • --config flag that allows you to assign variables to process.env
  • Terminal Reporters are now available in the Jasmine Object #184
  • Done is now available in all timeout specs #199
  • afterEach is available in requirejs #179
  • Editors that replace instead of changing files should work with autotest #198
  • Jasmine Mock Clock now works!
  • Autotest now works!
  • Using the latest Jasmine!
  • Verbose mode tabs describe blocks much more accurately!
  • --coffee now allows specs written in Literate CoffeeScript (.litcoffee)

install

To install the latest official version, use NPM:

npm install jasmine-node -g

To install the latest bleeding edge version, clone this repository and check out the beta branch.

usage

Write the specifications for your code in *.js and *.coffee files in the spec/ directory (note: your specification files must end with either .spec.js, .spec.coffee or .spec.litcoffee; otherwise jasmine-node won't find them!). You can use sub-directories to better organise your specs.

If you have installed the npm package, you can run it with:

jasmine-node spec/

If you aren't using npm, you should add pwd/lib to the $NODE_PATH environment variable, then run:

node lib/jasmine-node/cli.js

You can supply the following arguments:

  • --autotest, provides automatic execution of specs after each change
  • --watch, when used with --autotest, paths after --watch will be watched for changes, allowing to watch for changes outside of specs directory
  • --coffee, allow execution of .coffee and .litcoffee specs
  • --color, indicates spec output should uses color to indicates passing (green) or failing (red) specs
  • --noColor, do not use color in the output
  • -m, --match REGEXP, match only specs comtaining "REGEXPspec"
  • --matchall, relax requirement of "spec" in spec file names
  • --verbose, verbose output as the specs are run
  • --junitreport, export tests results as junitreport xml format
  • --output FOLDER, defines the output folder for junitreport files
  • --teamcity, converts all console output to teamcity custom test runner commands. (Normally auto detected.)
  • --runWithRequireJs, loads all specs using requirejs instead of node's native require method
  • --requireJsSetup, file run before specs to include and configure RequireJS
  • --test-dir, the absolute root directory path where tests are located
  • --nohelpers, does not load helpers
  • --forceexit, force exit once tests complete
  • --captureExceptions, listen to global exceptions, report them and exit (interferes with Domains in NodeJs, so do not use if using Domains as well
  • --config NAME VALUE, set a global variable in process.env
  • --noStack, suppress the stack trace generated from a test failure

Individual files to test can be added as bare arguments to the end of the args.

Example:

jasmine-node --coffee spec/AsyncSpec.coffee spec/CoffeeSpec.coffee spec/SampleSpecs.js

async tests

jasmine-node includes an alternate syntax for writing asynchronous tests. Accepting a done callback in the specification will trigger jasmine-node to run the test asynchronously waiting until the done() callback is called.

    var request = require('request');

    it("should respond with hello world", function(done) {
      request("http://localhost:3000/hello", function(error, response, body){
        expect(body).toEqual("hello world");
        done();
      });
    });

An asynchronous test will fail after 5000 ms if done() is not called. This timeout can be changed by setting jasmine.getEnv().defaultTimeoutInterval or by passing a timeout interval in the specification.

    var request = require('request');

    it("should respond with hello world", function(done) {
      request("http://localhost:3000/hello", function(error, response, body){
        done();
      }, 250);  // timeout after 250 ms
    });

or

    var request = require('request');

    jasmine.getEnv().defaultTimeoutInterval = 500;
    
    it("should respond with hello world", function(done) {
      request("http://localhost:3000/hello", function(error, response, body){
        done();
      });  // timeout after 500 ms
    });

Checkout spec/SampleSpecs.js to see how to use it.

requirejs

There is a sample project in /spec-requirejs. It is comprised of:

  1. requirejs-setup.js, this pulls in our wrapper template (next)
  2. requirejs-wrapper-template, this builds up requirejs settings
  3. requirejs.sut.js, this is a __SU__bject To __T__est, something required by requirejs
  4. requirejs.spec.js, the actual jasmine spec for testing

To run it:

node lib/jasmine-node/cli.js --runWithRequireJs --requireJsSetup ./spec-requirejs/requirejs-setup.js ./spec-requirejs/

exceptions

Often you'll want to capture an uncaught exception and log it to the console, this is accomplished by using the --captureExceptions flag. Exceptions will be reported to the console, but jasmine-node will attempt to recover and continue. It was decided to not change the current functionality until 2.0. So, until then, jasmine-node will still return 0 and continue on without this flag.

Scenario

You require a module, but it doesn't exist, ie require('Q') instead of require('q'). Jasmine-Node reports the error to the console, but carries on and returns 0. This messes up Travis-CI because you need it to return a non-zero status while doing CI tests.

Mitigation

Before --captureExceptions

> jasmine-node --coffee spec
> echo $status
0

Run jasmine node with the --captureExceptions flag.

> jasmine-node --coffee --captureExceptions spec
> echo $status
1

development

Install the dependent packages by running:

npm install

Run the specs before you send your pull request:

specs.sh

Note: Some tests are designed to fail in the specs.sh. After each of the individual runs completes, there is a line that lists what the expected Pass/Assert/Fail count should be. If you add/remove/edit tests, please be sure to update this with your PR.

changelog

  • 1.10.2 - Restored stack filter which was accidentally removed (thanks to kevinsawicki)
  • 1.10.1 - beforeEach and afterEach now properly handle the async-timeout function
  • 1.10.0 - Skipped tests now show in the terminal reporter's output (thanks to kevinsawicki)
  • 1.9.1 - Timeout now consistent between Async and Non-Async Calls (thanks to codemnky)
  • 1.9.0 - Now re-throwing the file-not-found error, added info to README.md, printing version with --version
  • 1.8.1 - Fixed silent failure due to invalid REGEX (thanks to pimterry)
  • 1.8.0 - Fixed bug in autotest with multiple paths and added --watch feature (thanks to davegb3)
  • 1.7.1 - Removed unneeded fs dependency (thanks to kevinsawicki) Fixed broken fs call in node 0.6 (thanks to abe33)
  • 1.7.0 - Literate Coffee-Script now testable (thanks to magicmoose)
  • 1.6.0 - Teamcity Reporter Reinstated (thanks to bhcleek)
  • 1.5.1 - Missing files and require exceptions will now report instead of failing silently
  • 1.5.0 - Now takes multiple files for execution. (thanks to abe33)
  • 1.4.0 - Optional flag to suppress stack trace on test failure (thanks to Lastalas)
  • 1.3.1 - Fixed context for async tests (thanks to omryn)
  • 1.3.0 - Added --config flag for changeable testing environments
  • 1.2.3 - Fixed #179, #184, #198, #199. Fixes autotest, afterEach in requirejs, terminal reporter is in jasmine object, done function missing in async tests
  • 1.2.2 - Revert Exception Capturing to avoid Breaking Domain Tests
  • 1.2.1 - Emergency fix for path reference missing
  • 1.2.0 - Fixed #149, #152, #171, #181, #195. --autotest now works as expected, jasmine clock now responds to the fake ticking as requested, and removed the path.exists warning
  • 1.1.1 - Fixed #173, #169 (Blocks were not indented in verbose properly, added more documentation to address #180
  • 1.1.0 - Updated Jasmine to 1.3.1, fixed fs missing, catching uncaught exceptions, other fixes

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Integration of Jasmine Spec framework with Node.js

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