jest-dynalite
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Enchaned unit testing, with a mock DynamoDB instance
jest-dynalite
is a fork of @shelf/jest-dynamodb that allows unit tests to execute real
queries against a local DynamoDB instance. It was created in an attempt to address some of the most important missing
features of @shelf/jest-dynamodb
, such as the fact that it uses a single shared database, which makes it hard to keep tests independent while also potentially causing race conditions because of jest's parallel execution of tests (see this issue for more information).
Why should I use this?
Using this jest-dynalite
makes writing queries with DynamoDB very easy, your tests can really
check if your data is manipulated in the way you expect it to be. This means that queries and mutations
can be developed without ever having to deploy or run your application, and significantly speeds up
writing code which interacts with DynamoDB.
This in turn makes your tests much more robust, because a change to a data structure or
db query in your application will be reflected by failing tests, instead of using mocks to check
if calls were made correctly.
This library could almost be seen as an integration test, but the lines are very blurred these days and
I'd definitely place this within the unit testing boundary because it can easily integrate with unit tests.
Features
- Optionally clear tables between tests
- Isolated tables between test runners
- Ability to specify config directory
- No
java
requirement
BREAKING CHANGES
From v2.0.0
jest-dynalite
now uses a JavaScript file for table configuration. This change makes it possible to set the dynalite config programatically (enabling things such as reading the parameters from a cloudformation template) while also improving compatibility with jest-dynamodb. Thanks to @corollari for this change.
From v3.0.0
you can now use the preset in a monorepo. The jest-dynalite-config.js
will be picked up from your jest <rootDir>
, which should be the same directory as your jest config.
Installation
yarn add jest-dynalite -D
Timeouts
Because jest has a default timeout of 5000ms per test, jest-dynalite
can sometimes cause failures due to the timeout
being exceeded. This can happen when there are many tests or lots of tables to create between tests.
If this happens, try increasing your test timeouts jest.setTimeout(10000)
. Another option is to selectively
run the database only for suites which use it. Please see advanced config.
Config
In your jest project root (next to your jest.config.js
), create a jest-dynalite-config.js
with the tables schemas,
and an optional basePort
to run dynalite on:
module.exports = {
tables: [
{
TableName: "table",
KeySchema: [{ AttributeName: "id", KeyType: "HASH" }],
AttributeDefinitions: [{ AttributeName: "id", AttributeType: "S" }],
ProvisionedThroughput: {
ReadCapacityUnits: 1,
WriteCapacityUnits: 1
}
}
],
basePort: 8000
};
Update your sourcecode
const client = new DocumentClient({
...yourConfig,
...(process.env.MOCK_DYNAMODB_ENDPOINT && {
endpoint: process.env.MOCK_DYNAMODB_ENDPOINT,
sslEnabled: false,
region: "local"
})
});
process.env.MOCK_DYNAMODB_ENDPOINT
is unqiue to each test runner.
Jest config
Simple usage (preset)
jest.config.js
module.exports = {
...
preset: "jest-dynalite"
}
The simple preset config will use the config and clear tables
between tests.
This the recommended usage, unless you have a custom testEnvironment
set.
Advanced setup
If you are using your own testEnvironment
in your Jest configuration, then you must setup
jest-dynalite
manually. You should also use this manual configuration if you don't want a DynamoDB mock to run
for all your tests (faster).
setupBeforeEnv.js
import { setup } from "jest-dynalite";
setup(__dirname);
In every test suite where you are using DynamoDB, apply import "jest-dynalite/withDb"
to the top of
that test suite to run the db for all the tests in the suite.
If you want the tables to exist for all your suites, create a
setupAfterEnv.js
file with the content:
import "jest-dynalite/withDb";
You then must add the setup files to your jest config
jest.config.js
module.exports = {
...
setupFiles: ["./setupBeforeEnv.js"],
setupFilesAfterEnv: ["./setupAfterEnv.js"]
}
If you want to be even more granular, you can start
the db yourself at any point.
import { startDb, stopDb, createTables, deleteTables } from "jest-dynalite";
beforeAll(startDb);
beforeAll(createTables);
beforeEach(createTables);
afterEach(deleteTables);
afterAll(stopDb);
Other options
jest.config.js
module.exports = {
...
testEnvironment: "jest-dynalite/dist/environment",
setupFilesAfterEnv: [
"jest-dynalite/dist/setupTables",
"jest-dynalite/dist/clearAfterEach"
]
}
This setup should be used if you want to override the default config of clearAfterEach
, but still want to use the most simple configuration.
License
MIT