jasmine-auto-spies
Easy and type safe way to write spies for jasmine tests, for both sync and async (promises, Observables) returning methods.
IMPORTANT: compatibility
- Version
2.x
and above requires RxJS 6.0 and above. - Version
3.x
and above requires TypeScript 2.8 and above.
What is it?
Creating spies has never been EASIER! 💪👏
If you need to create a spy from any class, just do:
const myServiceSpy = createSpyFromClass(MyService);
THAT'S IT!
If you're using TypeScript, you get EVEN MORE BENEFITS:
const myServiceSpy: Spy<MyService> = createSpyFromClass(MyService);
Now you can autocomplete AND have an auto spy for each method, returning Observable / Promise specific control methods.
What is it good for?
✅ Keep your tests DRY - no more repeated spy setup code, no need for separate spy files
✅ Type completion for both the original Class and the spy methods
✅ Automatic return type detection by using a conditional types
Installation
yarn add -D jasmine-auto-spies
or
npm install -D jasmine-auto-spies
Usage (JavaScript)
my-component.js
export class MyComponent {
constructor(myService) {
this.myService = myService;
}
init() {
this.compData = this.myService.getData();
}
}
my-service.js
export class MyService{
getData{
return [
{ ...someRealData... }
]
}
}
my-spec.js
import { createSpyFromClass } from 'jasmine-auto-spies';
import { MyService } from './my-service';
import { MyComponent } from './my-component';
describe('MyComponent', () => {
let myServiceSpy;
let componentUnderTest;
beforeEach(() => {
myServiceSpy = createSpyFromClass(MyService);
componentUnderTest = new MyComponent(myServiceSpy);
});
it('should fetch data on init', () => {
const fakeData = [{ fake: 'data' }];
myServiceSpy.getData.and.returnWith(fakeData);
componentUnderTest.init();
expect(myServiceSpy.getData).toHaveBeenCalled();
expect(componentUnderTest.compData).toEqual(fakeData);
});
});
Usage (TypeScript)
1. Spying on regular sync methods
import { Spy, createSpyFromClass } from 'jasmine-auto-spies';
import { MyService } from './my-service';
let myServiceSpy: Spy<MyService>;
beforeEach( ()=> {
myServiceSpy = createSpyFromClass( MyService );
});
it('should do something' ()=> {
myServiceSpy.getName.and.returnValue('Fake Name');
... (the rest of the test) ...
});
class MyService{
getName(): string{
return 'Bonnie';
}
}
2. Spy on a Promise
returning method
Use the resolveWith
or rejectWith
methods -
import { Spy, createSpyFromClass } from 'jasmine-auto-spies';
let myServiceSpy: Spy<MyService>;
beforeEach(() => {
myServiceSpy = createSpyFromClass(MyService);
});
it(() => {
myServiceSpy.getItems.and.resolveWith(fakeItemsList);
myServiceSpy.getItems.and.rejectWith(fakeError);
});
3. Spy on an Observable
returning method
Use the nextWith
or throwWith
and other methods -
import { Spy, createSpyFromClass } from 'jasmine-auto-spies';
let myServiceSpy: Spy<MyService>;
beforeEach(() => {
myServiceSpy = createSpyFromClass(MyService);
});
it(() => {
myServiceSpy.getProducts.and.nextWith(fakeProductsList);
myServiceSpy.getProducts.and.nextOneTimeWith(fakeProductsList);
myServiceSpy.getProducts.and.throwWith(fakeError);
myServiceSpy.getProducts.and.complete();
});
Use calledWith()
to configure conditional return values
You can setup the expected arguments ahead of time
by using calledWith
like so:
myServiceSpy.getProducts.calledWith(1).returnValue(true);
and it will only return this value if your subject was called with getProducts(1)
.
Oh, and it also works with Promises / Observables:
myServiceSpy.getProductsPromise.calledWith(1).resolveWith(true);
myServiceSpy.getProducts$.calledWith(1).nextWith(true);
Use mustBeCalledWith()
to create a mock instead of a stub
myServiceSpy.getProducts.mustBeCalledWith(1).returnValue(true);
is equal to:
myServiceSpy.getProducts.and.returnValue(true);
expect(myServiceSpy.getProducts).toHaveBeenCalledWith(1);
But the difference is that the error is being thrown during getProducts()
call and not in the expect(...)
call.
Manual Setup
If you need to manually add methods that you want to be spies by passing an array of names as the second param of the createSpyFromClass
function:
let spy = createSpyFromClass(MyClass, ['customMethod1', 'customMethod2']);
This is good for times where a method is not part of the prototype
of the Class but instead being defined in its constructor.
class MyClass {
constructor() {
this.customMethod1 = function () {
};
}
}