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babel-test

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babel-test

An opinionated library to make testing Babel plugins easier

  • 0.2.0
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babel-test

Build Status Code Coverage MIT License Version

An opinionated library to make testing babel plugins easier.

Demo

Why

I like to use fixture files instead of snapshots for testing my babel plugins because it's easier to read with proper syntax highlighting. But I missed the features of snapshots, i.e. creating and updating snapshots with press of a key. It was too annoying to copy paste transformed code from the terminal every time. So I wanted to make something which integrates with Jest's snapshot feature.

I also felt that the current solutions add too much abstraction and I wanted to make something simpler. I built this instead of contributing to existing tools because it's not addressing lack of features in existing tools, but exploring a different API.

The tool works with Jest (recommended) or any testing framework which provides the describe and it global functions, such as Mocha.

Installation

npm install --save-dev babel-test

or

yarn add --dev babel-test

Usage

The library exports a create function, which you can use to create helpers for your test using a babel config. The fixtures function from the returned object can be used to run tests against a directory containing fixtures:

import path from 'path';
import { create } from 'babel-test';

const { fixtures } = create({
  plugins: [require.resolve('./my-plugin')],
});

fixtures('my plugin', path.join(__dirname, '__fixtures__'));

API

Calling the create function with a babel config returns an object with test and fixtures functions:

import { create } from 'babel-test';

const { test, fixtures } = create({
  plugins: [require.resolve('./my-plugin')],
});

The create function accepts the same options object as Babel. It'll additionally set babelrc and configFile options to false by default if you haven't explicitly passed them. This avoids your tests being affected by external babel configuration.

Testing fixtures

To run the tests against a directory with fixtures, you can use the fixtures function returned from create:

fixtures('my plugin', path.join(__dirname, '__fixtures__'));

It accepts a title for the describe block and the absolute path to the directory containing the fixtures.

The fixtures directory should contain subdirectories with test files. Every test should contain a code.js file, which will be used as the input. If the transform should throw, it should have an error.js file. If the transform should pass, it should have an output.js file with the transformed code. The title for each test will be based the name of the directory. The first argument is used as the title for the describe block.

.
├── function-expression
│   ├── code.js
│   └── output.js
├── invalid-syntax
│   ├── code.js
│   └── error.js
└── simple-variable
    ├── code.js
    └── output.js

You can use fixtures.skip and fixtures.only, similar to Jest's describe.skip and describe.only. To skip an individual fixture, you can rename the fixture's directory to skip.name-of-the-fixture, and to run a specific fixture only, you can rename the fixture's directory to only.name-of-the-fixture.

To use hooks such as beforeEach, afterEach, beforeAll and afterAll, you can pass an object with these properties as the third argument:

fixtures('my plugin', path.join(__dirname, '__fixtures__'), {
  beforeEach() {
    // Do some setup here
  },
});

By default, it will compare the outputs with the files on the filesystem and you have to manually update the files in case of a mismatch. If you're using Jest, you can use the snapshot feature to automatically update the files with a keypress. (See below) on how to set it up.

Standalone test

To run a standalone test with some custom logic, you can use the test function returned from create:

test('transpiles const to var', ({ transform }) => {
  const { code } = await transform('const foo = 42', { filename: 'foo.js' });

  expect(code).toBe('var foo = 42');
});

It accepts a title for the test and a callback containing the test. The callback will receive a transform function, and should return a promise if it's asynchronous. The transform function takes an optional second parameter containing additional options for Babel, useful for passing additional information such as filename required by some plugins.

You can use test.skip and test.only, similar to Jest's it.skip and it.only.

Custom transform

Sometimes it's useful to test a plugin against a different babel instance. You can pass a transform function to create instead of a config object to test against a custom babel instance:

const { test, fixtures } = create((code, options) =>
  // transform function for babel 6
  require('babel-core').transform(
    code,
    Object.assign(
      {
        babelrc: false,
        plugins: [require.resolve('./my-plugin')],
      },
      options
    )
  )
);

The custom transform function will receive the code and additional options for babel (such as filename) and should return an object with code property containing the transformed code.

If you're using the same fixtures directory with a different transform function, keep in mind that the same plugins can produce slightly different code in a different Babel version, and it's likely that error stack traces will be different. In these cases, there will be conflicts when updating the snapshots. It'll be better to separately test those fixtures for the different transforms to avoid conflicts.

Integration with Jest snapshot

Integrating with Jest snapshots allows you to automatically create and update output files. To integrate with Jest snapshots, you need to:

Install and add the jest-file-snapshot matcher:

import { toMatchFile } from 'jest-file-snapshot';

expect.extend({ toMatchFile });

Then configure the Jest watcher to ignore output files by adding the following under the jest key in package.json:

"watchPathIgnorePatterns": [
  "__fixtures__\\/[^/]+\\/(output|error)\\.js"
]

Now you can create and update the output files like you would do with snapshots.

Alternatives

Contributing

Make sure your code passes the unit tests, ESLint and TypeScript. Run the following to verify:

yarn test
yarn lint
yarn typescript

To fix formatting errors, run the following:

yarn lint -- --fix

Keywords

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Package last updated on 01 Jun 2019

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