
Product
Introducing Tier 1 Reachability: Precision CVE Triage for Enterprise Teams
Socket’s new Tier 1 Reachability filters out up to 80% of irrelevant CVEs, so security teams can focus on the vulnerabilities that matter.
Amen is a simple, flexible testing library that supports async functions.
import {print, test} from "amen"
assert = require "assert"
# a few async functions to test
good = ->
new Promise (resolve) ->
setTimeout resolve, 100
bad = ->
new Promise (_, reject) ->
setTimeout (-> reject new Error "oops"), 100
never = -> new Promise ->
do ->
print await test "Using Amen to test itself", [
test "A simple test", -> assert true
test "A nested test", [
test "I'm nested", -> assert true
]
test "A failing test", -> assert false
test "A nested group of async tests", [
test "An async test", -> await good()
test "A failing async test", -> await bad()
test "An async test that never resolves", -> await never()
]
test "A pending test"
]
This would generate output like this:
npm i -D amen
There's no magic command line interface. You run your tests however you like.
Amen exports a success
value that indicates whether any tests have failed. You can import this if you want to take some action (say, like exiting with a non-zero status code) based on the success or failure of the tests.
The basic intuition for Amen is that test frameworks should basically get out of the way and let you write clear and simple tests. Mocks, asserts, reporting, and so on should be separate concerns.
Async functions also make it simpler now to handle asynchronous testing. Any test can simply return a promise.
Amen is so far less than fifty lines of code, yet extensible. Any function that returns a pair (an array with two elements, the description and either a test result or an array of pairs) can be used as a test function. Any function that can handle that as input can be a reporting function.
As is, Amen can handle nested tests, async tests, and pending tests.
FAQs
A simple test library for use with async functions
The npm package amen receives a total of 28 weekly downloads. As such, amen popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that amen demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 2 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
Product
Socket’s new Tier 1 Reachability filters out up to 80% of irrelevant CVEs, so security teams can focus on the vulnerabilities that matter.
Research
/Security News
Ongoing npm supply chain attack spreads to DuckDB: multiple packages compromised with the same wallet-drainer malware.
Security News
The MCP Steering Committee has launched the official MCP Registry in preview, a central hub for discovering and publishing MCP servers.