Chai Exec
Chai assertions for testing your CLI
Features
-
Easy to use
Pass your CLI and arguments as a single string, an array of strings, or as separate parameters.
-
Don't repeat yourself
Set your common defaults once. Each test ony needs to specify the arguments that are unique to it.
-
Fluent assertions
Test your CLI using intuitive fluent syntax, such as myCLI.should.exit.with.code(0)
or myCLI.stdout.should.contain("some string")
.
-
Async Support
Just use await chaiExecAsync()
instead of chaiExec()
. Everything else is the same.
-
Windows Support
Excellent Windows support, thanks to cross-spawn.
Related Projects
- ez-spawn - Simple, consistent process spawning
Examples
const chaiExec = require("@jsdevtools/chai-exec");
const chai = require("chai");
chai.use(chaiExec);
describe("My CLI", () => {
it("should exit with a zero exit code", () => {
let myCLI = chaiExec('my-cli --arg1 --arg2 "some other arg"');
myCLI.should.exit.with.code(0);
myCLI.stdout.should.contain("Success!");
myCLI.stderr.should.be.empty;
expect(myCLI).to.exit.with.code(0);
expect(myCLI).stdout.to.contain("Success!");
expect(myCLI).stderr.to.be.empty;
assert.exitCode(myCLI, 0);
assert.stdout(myCLI, "Success!");
assert.stderr(myCLI, "");
});
});
Installation
Install using npm:
npm install @jsdevtools/chai-exec
Then require it in your test file and register it with Chai:
const chaiExec = require("@jsdevtools/chai-exec");
const chai = require("chai");
chai.use(chaiExec);
Usage
chaiExec(cli, [args], [options])
You can pass your CLI and its arguments as a single string, an array of strings, or as separate parameters. The following examples all do the same thing:
chaiExec(`git commit -am "Fixed a bug"`);
chaiExec("git", "commit", "-am", "Fixed a bug");
chaiExec(["git", "commit", "-am", "Fixed a bug"]);
chaiExec("git", ["commit", "-am", "Fixed a bug"]);
See ez-spawn options for details about the options
parameter.
chaiExecAsync(cli, [args], [options])
The chaiExecAsync()
function works exactly the same as chaiExec()
, except that it runs your CLI asynchronously and returns a Promise
that resolves when the CLI exits. You'll need to explicitly require the chaiExecAsync
export, like this:
const { chaiExecAsync } = require("@jsdevtools/chai-exec");
You can then use chaiExecAsync
exactly the same as chaiExec
, but remember to use the async
and await
keywords, since it's asynchronous.
const { chaiExecAsync } = require("@jsdevtools/chai-exec");
const chai = require("chai");
chai.use(chaiExecAsync);
describe("My CLI", () => {
it("should exit with a zero exit code", async () => {
let myCLI = await chaiExecAsync('my-cli --arg1 --arg2 "some other arg"');
myCLI.should.exit.with.code(0);
myCLI.stdout.should.contain("Success!");
myCLI.stderr.should.be.empty;
expect(myCLI).to.exit.with.code(0);
expect(myCLI).stdout.to.contain("Success!");
expect(myCLI).stderr.to.be.empty;
assert.exitCode(myCLI, 0);
assert.stdout(myCLI, "Success!");
assert.stderr(myCLI, "");
});
});
chaiExec.defaults
When writing tests for a CLI, you'll often want to use the same command, args, and/or options for every test. Rather than repeating the same parameters every time you call chaiExec
, you can just set chaiExec.defaults
once. Your default values will be used for every subsequent chaiExec()
call. You can specify additional CLI arguments and/or options for each call, in addition to the defaults.
-
defaults.command
(string)
The name or path of your CLI. Set this once, and then you only ever need to pass arguments to chaiExec()
-
defaults.args
(string or array of strings)
Arguments to pass to your CLI every time. If you pass additional arguments when you call chaiExec()
, they will be appended to the default arguments.
-
defaults.options
(options object)
Default options to use every time. If you pass additional options when you call chaiExec()
, they will be merged with the default arguments.
const chaiExec = require("@jsdevtools/chai-exec");
const chai = require("chai");
chai.use(chaiExec);
chaiExec.defaults = {
command: "my-cli",
args: "--arg1 --arg2",
options: {
cwd: "/usr/bin"
}
};
describe("My CLI", () => {
it("should use defaults", () => {
let myCLI("--arg3 --arg4");
myCLI.command.should.equal("my-cli");
myCLI.args.should.deep.equal([ "--arg1", "--arg2", "--arg3", "--arg4" ]);
});
});
Assertions
.exitCode(number, [message])
aliases: .exit.code
or .status
Asserts on your CLI's exit code. You can test for a specific code, a list of codes, or a range.
myCLI.exitCode.should.equal(0);
myCLI.should.have.exitCode(0);
myCLI.should.exit.with.code(0);
myCLI.should.exit.with.a.code.that.is.oneOf(0, [0, 1, 2, 3]);
myCLI.should.have.an.exit.code.of.at.least(0).and.at.most(5);
expect(myCLI).exitCode.to.equal(0);
expect(myCLI).to.have.exitCode(0);
expect(myCLI).to.exit.with.code(0);
expect(myCLI).to.exit.with.a.code.that.is.oneOf([0, 1, 2, 3]);
expect(myCLI).to.have.an.exit.code.of.at.least(0).and.at.most(5);
assert.equal(myCLI.exitCode, 0);
assert.exitCode(myCLI, 0);
assert.exitCode(myCLI, [0, 1, 2, 3]);
assert.notExitCode(myCLI, 1);
assert.notExitCode(myCLI, [1, 2, 3]);
assert.exitCodeBetween(myCLI, 0, 5);
assert.exitCodeNotBetween(myCLI, 1, 5);
.stdout(string, [message])
Asserts on your CLI's standard output (non-error, non-warning output). You can test for a specific string, a substring, or a regular expression.
myCLI.stdout.should.equal("Success!");
myCLI.should.have.stdout.that.contains("Success!");
myCLI.should.have.stdout.that.does.not.contain("Failure!");
myCLI.should.have.stdout.that.matches(/^Success!$/);
myCLI.should.have.stdout.that.does.not.match(/^Failure!$/);
expect(myCLI).stdout.to.equal("Success!");
expect(myCLI).to.have.stdout.that.contains("Success!");
expect(myCLI).to.have.stdout.that.does.not.contain("Failure!");
expect(myCLI).to.have.stdout.that.matches(/^Success!$/);
expect(myCLI).to.have.stdout.that.does.not.match(/^Failure!$/);
assert.stdout(myCLI, "Success!");
assert.stdout(myCLI, /^Success!$/);
assert.include(myCLI.stdout, "Success!");
assert.notInclude(myCLI.stdout, "Failure!");
assert.match(myCLI.stdout, /^Success!$/);
assert.notMatch(myCLI.stdout, /^Failure!$/);
.stderr(string, [message])
Asserts on your CLI's stderr output (errors and warnings). You can test for a specific string, a substring, or a regular expression.
myCLI.stderr.should.equal("Failure!");
myCLI.should.have.stderr.that.contains("Failure!");
myCLI.should.have.stderr.that.does.not.contain("Success!");
myCLI.should.have.stderr.that.matches(/^Failure!$/);
myCLI.should.have.stderr.that.does.not.match(/^Success!$/);
expect(myCLI).stderr.to.equal("Failure!");
expect(myCLI).to.have.stderr.that.contains("Failure!");
expect(myCLI).to.have.stderr.that.does.not.contain("Success!");
expect(myCLI).to.have.stderr.that.matches(/^Failure!$/);
expect(myCLI).to.have.stderr.that.does.not.match(/^Success!$/);
assert.stderr(myCLI, "Failure!");
assert.stderr(myCLI, /^Failure!$/);
assert.include(myCLI.stderr, "Failure!");
assert.notInclude(myCLI.stderr, "Success!");
assert.match(myCLI.stderr, /^Failure!$/);
assert.notMatch(myCLI.stderr, /^Success!$/);
.output(string, [message])
Asserts on all of your CLI's output (stdout + output). You can test for a specific string, a substring, or a regular expression.
myCLI.output.should.equal("Success!");
myCLI.should.have.output.that.contains("Failure!");
myCLI.should.have.output.that.does.not.contain("Success!");
myCLI.should.have.output.that.matches(/^(Success|Failure)!$/);
myCLI.should.have.output.that.does.not.match(/^(Success|Failure)!$/);
expect(myCLI).output.to.equal("Success!");
expect(myCLI).to.have.output.that.contains("Failure!");
expect(myCLI).to.have.output.that.does.not.contain("Success!");
expect(myCLI).to.have.output.that.matches(/^(Success|Failure)!$/);
expect(myCLI).to.have.output.that.does.not.match(/^(Success|Failure)!$/);
assert.output(myCLI, "Failure!");
assert.output(myCLI, /^(Success|Failure)!$/);
assert.include(myCLI.output, "Failure!");
assert.notInclude(myCLI.output, "Success!");
assert.match(myCLI.output, /^Failure!$/);
assert.notMatch(myCLI.output, /^Success!$/);
Contributing
Contributions, enhancements, and bug-fixes are welcome! Open an issue on GitHub and submit a pull request.
Building/Testing
To build/test the project locally on your computer:
-
Clone this repo
git clone hhttps://github.com/JS-DevTools/chai-exec.git
-
Install dependencies
npm install
-
Run the tests
npm test
License
Chai Exec is 100% free and open-source, under the MIT license. Use it however you want.
This package is Treeware. If you use it in production, then we ask that you buy the world a tree to thank us for our work. By contributing to the Treeware forest you’ll be creating employment for local families and restoring wildlife habitats.
Big Thanks To
Thanks to these awesome companies for their support of Open Source developers ❤