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jasmine-node
Advanced tools
This node.js module makes the wonderful Pivotal Lab's jasmine (http://github.com/pivotal/jasmine) spec framework available in node.js.
Version 1.3.1
of Jasmine is currently included with node-jasmine.
--growl
flag (requires Growl to be installed)--noStack
--config
flag that allows you to assign variables to process.envafterEach
is available in requirejs #179describe
blocks much more accurately!--coffee
now allows specs written in Literate CoffeeScript (.litcoffee
)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.
Write the specifications for your code in *.js
and *.coffee
files in the spec/
directory.
You can use sub-directories to better organise your specs. In the specs use describe()
, it()
etc. exactly
as you would in client-side jasmine specs.
Note: your specification files must be named as *spec.js
, *spec.coffee
or *spec.litcoffee
,
which matches the regular expression /spec\.(js|coffee|litcoffee)$/i
;
otherwise jasmine-node won't find them!
For example, sampleSpecs.js
is wrong, sampleSpec.js
is right.
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.)--growl
, display test run summary in a growl notification (in addition to other outputs)--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 failureIndividual 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/SampleSpec.js
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.
There is a sample project in /spec-requirejs
. It is comprised of:
requirejs-setup.js
, this pulls in our wrapper template (next)requirejs-wrapper-template
, this builds up requirejs settingsrequirejs.sut.js
, this is a __SU__bject To __T__est, something required by requirejsrequirejs.spec.js
, the actual jasmine spec for testingTo run it:
node lib/jasmine-node/cli.js --runWithRequireJs --requireJsSetup ./spec-requirejs/requirejs-setup.js ./spec-requirejs/
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.
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.
Before --captureExceptions
> jasmine-node --coffee spec
> echo $status
0
Run jasmine node with the --captureExceptions
flag.
> jasmine-node --coffee --captureExceptions spec
> echo $status
1
Jasmine node can display Growl notifications of test
run summaries in addition to other reports.
Growl must be installed separately, see node-growl
for platform-specific instructions. Pass the --growl
flag to enable the notifications.
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.
util.print
to stdout.write
(thanks to nrstott)--growl
(thanks to
AlphaHydrae)beforeEach
and afterEach
now properly handle the async-timeout function--version
--watch
feature
(thanks to davegb3)0.6
(thanks to abe33)--config
flag for changeable testing environments--autotest
now works as expected, jasmine clock now responds to the fake ticking as requested, and removed the path.exists warning1.3.1
, fixed fs missing, catching uncaught exceptions, other fixesFAQs
DOM-less simple JavaScript BDD testing framework for Node
The npm package jasmine-node receives a total of 7,688 weekly downloads. As such, jasmine-node popularity was classified as popular.
We found that jasmine-node demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 3 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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