ospec
About | Usage | API | Goals
Noiseless testing framework
About
- ~180 LOC
- terser and faster test code than with mocha, jasmine or tape
- test code reads like bullet points
- assertion code follows SVO structure in present tense for terseness and readability
- supports:
- test grouping
- assertions
- spies
equals
, notEquals
, deepEquals
and notDeepEquals
assertion typesbefore
/after
/beforeEach
/afterEach
hooks- test exclusivity (i.e.
.only
) - async tests and hooks
- explicitly disallows test-space configuration to encourage focus on testing, and to provide uniform test suites across projects
Usage
Single tests
Both tests and assertions are declared via the o
function. Tests should have a description and a body function. A test may have one or more assertions. Assertions should appear inside a test's body function and compare two values.
var o = require("ospec")
o("addition", function() {
o(1 + 1).equals(2)
})
o("subtraction", function() {
o(1 - 1).notEquals(2)
})
Assertions may have descriptions:
o("addition", function() {
o(1 + 1).equals(2)("addition should work")
})
Grouping tests
Tests may be organized into logical groups using o.spec
o.spec("math", function() {
o("addition", function() {
o(1 + 1).equals(2)
})
o("subtraction", function() {
o(1 - 1).notEquals(2)
})
})
Group names appear as a breadcrumb trail in test descriptions: math > addition: 2 should equal 2
Nested test groups
Groups can be nested to further organize test groups. Note that tests cannot be nested inside other tests.
o.spec("math", function() {
o.spec("arithmetics", function() {
o("addition", function() {
o(1 + 1).equals(2)
})
o("subtraction", function() {
o(1 - 1).notEquals(2)
})
})
})
Callback test
The o.spy()
method can be used to create a stub function that keeps track of its call count and received parameters
function call(cb, arg) {cb(arg)}
var o = require("ospec")
o.spec("call()", function() {
o("works", function() {
var spy = o.spy()
call(spy, 1)
o(spy.callCount).equals(1)
o(spy.args[0]).equals(1)
})
})
A spy can also wrap other functions, like a decorator:
var count = 0
function inc() {
count++
}
var o = require("ospec")
o.spec("call()", function() {
o("works", function() {
var spy = o.spy(inc)
spy()
o(count).equals(1)
})
})
Asynchronous tests
If a test body function declares a named argument, the test is assumed to be asynchronous, and the argument is a function that must be called exactly one time to signal that the test has completed. As a matter of convention, this argument is typically named done
.
o("setTimeout calls callback", function(done) {
setTimeout(done, 10)
})
By default, asynchronous tests time out after 20ms. This can be changed on a per-test basis using the timeout
argument:
o("setTimeout calls callback", function(done, timeout) {
timeout(50)
setTimeout(done, 30)
})
Note that the timeout
function call must be the first statement in its test.
Asynchronous tests generate an assertion that succeeds upon calling done
or fails on timeout with the error message async test timed out
.
before
, after
, beforeEach
, afterEach
hooks
These hooks can be declared when it's necessary to setup and clean up state for a test or group of tests. The before
and after
hooks run once each per test group, whereas the beforeEach
and afterEach
hooks run for every test.
o.spec("math", function() {
var acc
o.beforeEach(function() {
acc = 0
})
o("addition", function() {
acc += 1
o(acc).equals(1)
})
o("subtraction", function() {
acc -= 1
o(acc).equals(-1)
})
})
It's strongly recommended to ensure that beforeEach
hooks always overwrite all shared variables, and avoid if/else
logic, memoization, undo routines inside beforeEach
hooks.
Asynchronous hooks
Like tests, hooks can also be asynchronous. Tests that are affected by asynchronous hooks will wait for the hooks to complete before running.
o.spec("math", function() {
var acc
o.beforeEach(function(done) {
setTimeout(function() {
acc = 0
done()
})
})
o("addition", function() {
acc += 1
o(acc).equals(1)
})
o("subtraction", function() {
acc -= 1
o(acc).equals(-1)
})
})
Running only one test
A test can be temporarily made to run exclusively by calling o.only()
instead of o
. This is useful when troubleshooting regressions, to zero-in on a failing test, and to avoid saturating console log w/ irrelevant debug information.
o.spec("math", function() {
o("addition", function() {
o(1 + 1).equals(2)
})
o.only("subtraction", function() {
o(1 - 1).notEquals(2)
})
})
Running the test suite
o("addition", function() {
o(1 + 1).equals(2)
})
o.run()
Running test suites concurrently
The o.new()
method can be used to create new instances of ospec, which can be run in parallel. Note that each instance will report independently, and there's no aggregation of results.
var _o = o.new('optional name')
_o("a test", function() {
_o(1).equals(1)
})
_o.run()
Running the test suite from the command-line
ospec will automatically evaluate all *.js
files in any folder named /tests
.
o.run()
is automatically called by the cli - no need to call it in your test code.
Create an npm script in your package:
"scripts": {
...
"test": "ospec",
...
}
$ npm test
Direct use from the command line
Ospec doesn't work when installed globally. Using global scripts is generally a bad idea since you can end up with different, incompatible versions of the same package installed locally and globally.
To work around this limitation, you can use npm-run
which enables one to run the binaries of locally installed packages.
npm install npm-run -g
Then, from a project that has ospec installed as a (dev) dependency:
npm-run ospec
API
Square brackets denote optional arguments
void o.spec(String title, Function tests)
Defines a group of tests. Groups are optional
void o(String title, Function([Function done [, Function timeout]]) assertions)
Defines a test.
If an argument is defined for the assertions
function, the test is deemed to be asynchronous, and the argument is required to be called exactly one time.
Assertion o(any value)
Starts an assertion. There are four types of assertion: equals
, notEquals
, deepEquals
and notDeepEquals
.
Assertions have this form:
o(actualValue).equals(expectedValue)
As a matter of convention, the actual value should be the first argument and the expected value should be the second argument in an assertion.
Assertions can also accept an optional description curried parameter:
o(actualValue).equals(expectedValue)("this is a description for this assertion")
Assertion descriptions can be simplified using ES6 tagged template string syntax:
o(actualValue).equals(expectedValue) `this is a description for this assertion`
Function(String description) o(any value).equals(any value)
Asserts that two values are strictly equal (===
)
Function(String description) o(any value).notEquals(any value)
Asserts that two values are strictly not equal (!==
)
Function(String description) o(any value).deepEquals(any value)
Asserts that two values are recursively equal
Function(String description) o(any value).notDeepEquals(any value)
Asserts that two values are not recursively equal
void o.before(Function([Function done [, Function timeout]]) setup)
Defines code to be run at the beginning of a test group
If an argument is defined for the setup
function, this hook is deemed to be asynchronous, and the argument is required to be called exactly one time.
void o.after(Function([Function done [, Function timeout]]) teardown)
Defines code to be run at the end of a test group
If an argument is defined for the teardown
function, this hook is deemed to be asynchronous, and the argument is required to be called exactly one time.
void o.beforeEach(Function([Function done [, Function timeout]]) setup)
Defines code to be run before each test in a group
If an argument is defined for the setup
function, this hook is deemed to be asynchronous, and the argument is required to be called exactly one time.
void o.afterEach(Function([Function done [, Function timeout]]) teardown)
Defines code to be run after each test in a group
If an argument is defined for the teardown
function, this hook is deemed to be asynchronous, and the argument is required to be called exactly one time.
void o.only(String title, Function([Function done [, Function timeout]]) assertions)
Declares that only a single test should be run, instead of all of them
Function o.spy([Function fn])
Returns a function that records the number of times it gets called, and its arguments
Number o.spy().callCount
The number of times the function has been called
Array o.spy().args
The arguments that were passed to the function in the last time it was called
void o.run()
Runs the test suite
Function o.new()
Returns a new instance of ospec. Useful if you want to run more than one test suite concurrently
var $o = o.new()
$o("a test", function() {
$o(1).equals(1)
})
$o.run()
Goals
- Do the most common things that the mocha/chai/sinon triad does without having to install 3 different libraries and several dozen dependencies
- Disallow configuration in test-space:
- Disallow ability to pick between API styles (BDD/TDD/Qunit, assert/should/expect, etc)
- Disallow ability to pick between different reporters
- Disallow ability to add custom assertion types
- Make assertion code terse, readable and self-descriptive
- Have as few assertion types as possible for a workable usage pattern
Explicitly disallowing modularity and configuration in test-space has a few benefits:
- tests always look the same, even across different projects and teams
- single source of documentation for entire testing API
- no need to hunt down plugins to figure out what they do, especially if they replace common javascript idioms with fuzzy spoken language constructs (e.g. what does
.is()
do?) - no need to pollute project-space with ad-hoc configuration code
- discourages side-tracking and yak-shaving