spy4js
Benefits
flow
support out-of-the-box- Performance
- No foreign dependencies
- Optimized error messages
- Customizable
- Intuitive
- Used in production of large projects
Introduction
spy4js provides a stand-alone spy framework. It is decoupled by any dependencies
and other assertion frameworks.
spy4js exports only one object called Spy
. The spy instances
are treated as class instances and come with a lot of useful features. See below for more.
Hint:
My favorite test framework is Jest. If you are using other
frameworks you might get issues related to automatically applied test suite hooks.
To overcome this default behaviour see here.
Installation
With yarn
yarn add --dev spy4js
With npm
npm install --save-dev spy4js
Interface
A spy instance can be initialized differently.
import {Spy} from 'spy4js';
const spy1 = new Spy();
const spy2 = new Spy('special spy for me');
const someObject1 = new Date(2017, 1, 15);
const spy3 = Spy.on(someObject1, 'toJSON');
const someObject2 = new Date(2017, 1, 15);
const someObject2$Mock = Spy.mock(someObject2, 'toJSON', 'toString', 'getDate');
Any spy instance can be configured by overriding the default configuration. For
example if you want to configure all spies not to favor own "equals" implementations.
Spy.configure({useOwnEquals: false});
You may apply additional behaviour to every spy. The valid operations here are:
configure
(some external libraries may use own "equals" implementations in an unexpected way)calls
(does make the spy call the provided functions sequentially)returns
(does make the spy return the provided params sequentially)throws
(does make the spy throw an error when called)transparent
(does make the spy call the original method of a mocked object)transparentAfter
(does make the spy call the original method of a mocked object after a certain amount of made calls)reset
(resets the registered calls which were already made)restore
(does make the spy restore the mocked object)
All those methods on a spy are designed in a builder pattern. So you may chain any of
these configurations. But be aware that some behaviours override existing behaviours.
const spy = Spy.on(someObject, 'someMethod');
spy.configure({useOwnEquals: false});
spy.calls(func1, func2, func3);
someObject.someMethod(arg);
someObject.someMethod(arg1, arg2);
someObject.someMethod(arg);
someObject.someMethod(arg1, arg2, arg3);
spy.returns(value1, value2);
someObject.someMethod(arg);
someObject.someMethod(arg1, arg2);
someObject.someMethod(arg);
spy.throws('throw this');
someObject.someMethod(arg);
spy.calls(() => new Date()).transparentAfter(2);
someObject.someMethod(arg);
someObject.someMethod(arg1, arg2);
someObject.someMethod(arg);
spy.transparent();
spy.reset();
spy.restore();
Even as important are the facts, we want to display:
wasCalled
(does display that the spy was called a specifiable amount of times)wasNotCalled
(does display that the spy was never called)wasCalledWith
(does display that the spy was called at least once like with the provided params)wasNotCalledWith
(does display that the spy was never like with the provided params)hasCallHistory
(does display that the spy was called with the following params in the given order)
Those methods on a spy display facts. Facts have to be true, otherwise they
will throw an Exception, which displays in a formatted debug message why the
given fact was a lie. By writing those facts in your tests, a big refactoring
loses its scare.
const spy = new Spy();
spy.wasNotCalled();
spy([1, 'test', {attr: [4]}]);
spy.wasCalled();
spy.wasCalled(1);
spy('with this text');
spy.wasCalled(2);
spy.wasCalledWith([1, 'test', {attr: [4]}]);
spy.wasNotCalledWith([1, 'test', {attr: [3]}]);
spy.hasCallHistory([ [1, 'test', {attr: [4]}] ], 'with this text');
There is one static method that does restore all existing spies in all tests.
This is extremely useful to clean up all still existing mocks and also
a very comfortable to this automatically after every test (this is done by default).
restoreAll
(does restore every existing spy)
Spy.restoreAll();
And also sometimes it is necessary to have access to some of the call arguments with
which the spy was called.
getCallArguments
(returns all call arguments for a specified call in an array)getCallArgument
(same as getCallArguments, but returns only a single element of the array)getCallCount
(returns the number of made calls)
const spy = new Spy();
spy('string', 1);
spy([1, 2, 3]);
spy();
spy(null);
spy.getCallArguments();
spy.getCallArgument();
spy.getCallArgument(0, 1);
spy.getCallArguments(1);
spy.getCallArgument(1);
spy.getCallArguments(2);
spy.getCallArgument(2);
spy.getCallArguments(3);
spy.getCallArgument(3);
spy.getCallArguments(4);
spy.getCallArgument(4);
The last method is showCallArguments
. It is mostly used internally to improve the
debug messages, but can be while you are in a console.log-mania.
Method-Details
Constructor
Spy(spyName:string = 'the spy') => SpyInstance
The returned Spy instance has his own name-attribute (only) for debugging purpose.
configure (static)
Spy.configure(config: {
useOwnEquals?:boolean,
beforeEach?: (scope: string) => void,
afterEach?: (scope: string) => void,
}) => void
Using this function you may edit the default behaviour spy4js itself.
The scope param will contain the test-suite name, which was provided as first parameter
of the describe
function.
The configuration possibility are:
- useOwnEquals: Applies for all spy instances. See configure for more details.
- beforeEach: Let's you override the default beforeEach test suite hook.
- afterEach: Let's you override the default afterEach test suite hook.
on (static)
Spy.on(object:Object, methodName:string) => SpyInstance
Initializing a spy on an object, simply replaces the original function by a spy and
stores the necessary information to be able to restore the mocked method.
If the attribute was already spied or is not a function, the Spy will throw an exception
to avoid unexpected behaviour. You never want to spy other attributes than functions and
for no purpose a spy should ever be spied.
mock (static)
Spy.mock(object:Object, ...methodNames:Array<string>) => Object (Mock)
Creating an object that references spies for all given methodNames.
Initialize as many spies as required for one and the same object. Only
after Spy.initMocks
gets called, the created mock does affect the given object.
initMocks (static)
Spy.initMocks(scope?: string) => void
Does initialize all global and scope-related mocks by applying spies. Mocks can be
created with mock. This function has not to be called manually, if you rely on
the default test suite hooks.
restoreAll (static)
Spy.restoreAll() => void
Does restore all mocked objects to their original state. See restore for
further information. This function has not be called manually, if you rely on
the default test suite hooks.
resetAll (static)
Spy.resetAll() => void
Does reset all existing spies. This effects even persistent spies.
See reset for further information. This function has not be
called manually in between different tests, if you rely on the default
test suite hooks.
IGNORE (static)
Spy.IGNORE = $Internal Symbol$
This object can be passed anywhere where you want the "wasCalledWith"
or "hasCallHistory" to ignore that object or value for comparison.
spy({prop: 'value', other: 13}, 12);
spy.wasCalledWith(Spy.IGNORE, 12);
spy.wasCalledWith({prop: Spy.IGNORE, other: 13}, 12);
COMPARE (static)
Spy.COMPARE(comparator: (arg: any) => boolean) => SpyComparator
This function can be called with a custom comparator and passed anywhere where you want the "wasCalledWith"
or "hasCallHistory" to apply your custom comparison.
spy({prop: 'value', other: 13}, 12);
spy.wasCalledWith(Spy.COMPARE(obj => obj.prop === 'value'), 12);
configure
spy.configure(config:{useOwnEquals?: boolean, persistent?: boolean}) => (this) SpyInstance
With configure
the spy can be configured. One configuration possibility
is to ignore any equals
methods while comparing objects. There might be libraries which
come with those methods, but do not support ES6 classes or anything else. By default this
configuration is set to favor own equals
implementations while comparing objects.
Another possible configuration is to make the spy persist while other spies have to restore
when "restoreAll" was called. This spy can ONLY RESTORE the mocked object when
you configure it back to be NOT PERSISTENT. This configuration can only be applied to mocking
spies. For Spies created with new Spy()
this configuration will throw an exception.
calls
spy.calls(...functions:Array<Function>) => (this) SpyInstance
The provided functions will be called sequentially in order when the spy will be called.
Meaning spy.calls(func1, func2, func3)
will call first func1
then func2
and the rest
of the time func3
.
returns
spy.returns(...args:Array<any>) => (this) SpyInstance
The provided arguments will be returned sequentially in order when the spy will be called.
Meaning spy.returns(arg1, arg2, arg3)
will return first arg1
then arg2
and the rest
of the time arg3
.
resolves
spy.resolves(...args:Array<any>) => (this) SpyInstance
The provided arguments will be resolved sequentially in order when the spy will be called.
Meaning spy.resolves(arg1, arg2, arg3)
will return first Promise.resolve(arg1)
then Promise.resolve(arg2)
and the rest
of the time Promise.resolve(arg3)
.
rejects
spy.rejects(...args:Array<?string | Error>) => (this) SpyInstance
The provided arguments will be rejected sequentially in order when the spy will be called.
Meaning spy.rejects('foo', null, new Error('bar'))
will return first Promise.reject(new Error('foo'))
then Promise.reject(new Error('<SPY_NAME> was requested to throw'))
and the rest
of the time Promise.reject(new Error('bar'))
.
throws
spy.throws(message: ?string | Error) => (this) SpyInstance
Perform this on a spy to make it throw an error when called. The error message can be
provided but a default is also implemented. If an Error instance gets passed, exactly this one will
be thrown.
reset
spy.reset() => (this) SpyInstance
Does reset the registered calls on that spy.
restore
spy.restore() => (this) SpyInstance
Restores the spied object, if existing, to its original state. The spy won't lose any
other information. So it is still aware of made calls, can be plugged anywhere else
and can still be called anywhere else. But it loses all references to the spied object.
If the spy was configured to be persistent this method will throw an error.
transparent
spy.transparent() => (this) SpyInstance
Can be useful with spies on objects. It does make the spy behave like not existing. So
the original function of the "mocked" object will be called, but the spy does remember
the call information.
transparentAfter
spy.transparentAfter(callCount:number) => (this) SpyInstance
Works like transparent but the spy will get transparent after called as
often as specified. Meaning spy.transparentAfter(num)
will not be transparent on the first
num
calls.
wasCalled
spy.wasCalled(callCount:number = 0) => (fact) void
This call does display a fact. So if the spy is violating the fact, it is told to throw
an error. The provided argument does represent the registered calls on that spy.
wasNotCalled
spy.wasNotCalled() => (fact) void
This fact displays that the spy was never called. Directly after the spy was reseted,
this fact will be given.
wasCalledWith
spy.wasCalledWith(...args:Array<any>) => (fact) void
This fact displays that the spy was called at least once with equal arguments.
The equality check is a deep equality check, which (by default) does consider
own "equals" implementations.
By supplying Spy.IGNORE
anywhere inside the expected call arguments, you
can avoid that the comparison is further executed. See Spy.IGNORE for further information and examples.
The deep equality check does also recursively iterate to the first difference found and is able
to return a string which contains valuable information about the first found difference.
If any difference was detected. The fact is broken and a helpful error message will be displayed.
If using monospaced consoles for the output which do support new lines, there will be really
neat output. For examples see showCallArguments
wasNotCalledWith
spy.wasNotCalledWith(...args:Array<any>) => (fact) void
This fact displays simply the opposite of wasCalledWith.
hasCallHistory
spy.hasCallHistory(...callHistory:Array<Array<any> | any>) => (fact) void
Works similar to wasCalledWith but instead matches each
call one by one in correct order and correct call count.
ATTENTION: single argument calls can be provided without wrapping into an array. But e.g. if
the single argument is an array itself, than you have to warp it also yourself. (Inspired by jest
data providers)
getCallArguments
spy.getCallArguments(callNr:number = 0) => Array<any>
Returns the call arguments that were registered on the given call. Meaning
spy.getCallArguments(num)
does return the (num + 1)'th call arguments.
Throws an exception if the provided (callNr
- 1) is bigger than the made calls.
getCallArgument
spy.getCallArgument(callNr:number = 0, argNr:number = 0) => any
Same as getCallArguments but returns only a single entry out
of the array of arguments. Most useful in situations where exactly one call param is expected.
If argNr
is given, it returns the (argNr + 1)'th argument of the call.
getCallCount
spy.getCallCount() => number
This method simply returns the number of made calls on the spy.
showCallArguments
spy.showCallArguments(additionalInformation:Array<string> = []) => string
This primarily internally used method is responsible for returning formatted informative debug
messages when facts are broken. Let's do an example:
const spy = new Spy('my awesome spy');
spy(42, 'test', {attr1: [1, 2, new Date(2017, 1, 20)], attr2: 1337});
spy(42, 'test', {attr1: [0, 2, new Date(2017, 1, 20)], attr2: 1336});
spy(42, 'test', {attr1: [1, 2, new Date(2017, 1, 21)], attr2: 1336});
spy(42, 'tes', {attr1: [1, 2, new Date(2017, 1, 20)], attr2: 1336});
spy(42, 'test');
The following broken fact...
spy.wasCalledWith(42, 'test', {attr1: [1, 2, new Date(2017, 1, 20)], attr2: 1336});
...would produce the following error output:
Error:
my awesome spy was considered to be called with the following arguments:
--> [42, "test", {attr1: [1, 2, >Date:1487545200000<], attr2: 1336}]
Actually there were:
call 0: [42, "test", {attr1: [1, 2, >Date:1487545200000<], attr2: 1337}]
--> 2 / attr2 / different number
call 1: [42, "test", {attr1: [0, 2, >Date:1487545200000<], attr2: 1336}]
--> 2 / attr1 / 0 / different number
call 2: [42, "test", {attr1: [1, 2, >Date:1487631600000<], attr2: 1336}]
--> 2 / attr1 / 2 / different date
call 3: [42, "tes", {attr1: [1, 2, >Date:1487545200000<], attr2: 1336}]
--> 1 / different string
call 4: [42, "test"]
--> 2 / one was undefined
There you can see that the arguments of the fact (displayed above all others) does not
match any of the call arguments on the 5 made calls.
For each call we display additional error information (the first found difference).
If the additional information begins with a -->
there was made a deep equality.
If you would travers with the displayed keys you would be directed to those objects which differ.
In this example the arguments differ for call 0
in -->
the third argument (2
) and
its attribute attr2
because there was a different number.
While recursively traversing down in the deep equality check, the object keys will be reported.
Meaning that 2
is representing the index of the array. So for example if you want to grep the
different objects you could:
const callArgs = spy.getCallArguments(0);
const differentNumber = callArgs[2]['attr2'];