Behavior-driven development
With the bdd.ts module you can write your tests in a familiar format for grouping tests and adding setup/teardown hooks used by other JavaScript testing frameworks like Jasmine, Jest, and Mocha.
The describe
function creates a block that groups together several related
tests. The it
function registers an individual test case.
Hooks
There are 4 types of hooks available for test suites. A test suite can have
multiples of each type of hook, they will be called in the order that they are
registered. The afterEach
and afterAll
hooks will be called whether or not
the test case passes. The *All
hooks will be called once for the whole group
while the *Each
hooks will be called for each individual test case.
beforeAll
: Runs before all of the tests in the test suite.afterAll
: Runs after all of the tests in the test suite finish.beforeEach
: Runs before each of the individual test cases in the test suite.afterEach
: Runs after each of the individual test cases in the test suite.
If a hook is registered at the top level, a global test suite will be registered and all tests will belong to it. Hooks registered at the top level must be registered before any individual test cases or test suites.
Focusing tests
If you would like to run only specific test cases, you can do so by calling
it.only
instead of it
. If you would like to run only specific test suites,
you can do so by calling describe.only
instead of describe
.
There is one limitation to this when using the flat test grouping style. When
describe
is called without being nested, it registers the test with
Deno.test
. If a child test case or suite is registered with it.only
or
describe.only
, it will be scoped to the top test suite instead of the file. To
make them the only tests that run in the file, you would need to register the
top test suite with describe.only
too.
Ignoring tests
If you would like to not run specific individual test cases, you can do so by
calling it.ignore
instead of it
. If you would like to not run specific test
suites, you can do so by calling describe.ignore
instead of describe
.
Sanitization options
Like Deno.TestDefinition
, the DescribeDefinition
and ItDefinition
have
sanitization options. They work in the same way.
sanitizeExit
: Ensure the test case does not prematurely cause the process to exit, for example via a call to Deno.exit. Defaults to true.sanitizeOps
: Check that the number of async completed ops after the test is the same as number of dispatched ops. Defaults to true.sanitizeResources
: Ensure the test case does not "leak" resources - ie. the resource table after the test has exactly the same contents as before the test. Defaults to true.
Permissions option
Like Deno.TestDefinition
, the DescribeDefintion
and ItDefinition
have a
permissions
option. They specify the permissions that should be used to run an
individual test case or test suite. Set this to "inherit"
to keep the calling
thread's permissions. Set this to "none"
to revoke all permissions.
This setting defaults to "inherit"
.
There is currently one limitation to this, you cannot use the permissions option
on an individual test case or test suite that belongs to another test suite.
That's because internally those tests are registered with t.step
which does
not support the permissions option.
Comparing to Deno.test
The default way of writing tests is using Deno.test
and t.step
. The
describe
and it
functions have similar call signatures to Deno.test
,
making it easy to switch between the default style and the behavior-driven
development style of writing tests. Internally, describe
and it
are
registering tests with Deno.test
and t.step
.
Below is an example of a test file using Deno.test
and t.step
. In the
following sections there are examples of how the same test could be written with
describe
and it
using nested test grouping, flat test grouping, or a mix of
both styles.
// https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd_examples/user_test.ts
import {
assertEquals,
assertStrictEquals,
assertThrows,
} from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/asserts.ts";
import { User } from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd_examples/user.ts";
Deno.test("User.users initially empty", () => {
assertEquals(User.users.size, 0);
});
Deno.test("User constructor", () => {
try {
const user = new User("Kyle");
assertEquals(user.name, "Kyle");
assertStrictEquals(User.users.get("Kyle"), user);
} finally {
User.users.clear();
}
});
Deno.test("User age", async (t) => {
const user = new User("Kyle");
await t.step("getAge", () => {
assertThrows(() => user.getAge(), Error, "Age unknown");
user.age = 18;
assertEquals(user.getAge(), 18);
});
await t.step("setAge", () => {
user.setAge(18);
assertEquals(user.getAge(), 18);
});
});
Nested test grouping
Tests created within the callback of a describe
function call will belong to
the new test suite it creates. The hooks can be created within it or be added to
the options argument for describe.
// https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd_examples/user_nested_test.ts
import {
assertEquals,
assertStrictEquals,
assertThrows,
} from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/asserts.ts";
import {
afterEach,
beforeEach,
describe,
it,
} from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd.ts";
import { User } from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd_examples/user.ts";
describe("User", () => {
it("users initially empty", () => {
assertEquals(User.users.size, 0);
});
it("constructor", () => {
try {
const user = new User("Kyle");
assertEquals(user.name, "Kyle");
assertStrictEquals(User.users.get("Kyle"), user);
} finally {
User.users.clear();
}
});
describe("age", () => {
let user: User;
beforeEach(() => {
user = new User("Kyle");
});
afterEach(() => {
User.users.clear();
});
it("getAge", function () {
assertThrows(() => user.getAge(), Error, "Age unknown");
user.age = 18;
assertEquals(user.getAge(), 18);
});
it("setAge", function () {
user.setAge(18);
assertEquals(user.getAge(), 18);
});
});
});
Flat test grouping
The describe
function returns a unique symbol that can be used to reference
the test suite for adding tests to it without having to create them within a
callback. The gives you the ability to have test grouping without any extra
indentation in front of the grouped tests.
// https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd_examples/user_flat_test.ts
import {
assertEquals,
assertStrictEquals,
assertThrows,
} from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/asserts.ts";
import {
describe,
it,
} from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd.ts";
import { User } from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd_examples/user.ts";
const userTests = describe("User");
it(userTests, "users initially empty", () => {
assertEquals(User.users.size, 0);
});
it(userTests, "constructor", () => {
try {
const user = new User("Kyle");
assertEquals(user.name, "Kyle");
assertStrictEquals(User.users.get("Kyle"), user);
} finally {
User.users.clear();
}
});
const ageTests = describe({
name: "age",
suite: userTests,
beforeEach(this: { user: User }) {
this.user = new User("Kyle");
},
afterEach() {
User.users.clear();
},
});
it(ageTests, "getAge", function () {
const { user } = this;
assertThrows(() => user.getAge(), Error, "Age unknown");
user.age = 18;
assertEquals(user.getAge(), 18);
});
it(ageTests, "setAge", function () {
const { user } = this;
user.setAge(18);
assertEquals(user.getAge(), 18);
});
Mixed test grouping
Both nested test grouping and flat test grouping can be used together. This can be useful if you'd like to create deep groupings without all the extra indentation in front of each line.
// https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd_examples/user_mixed_test.ts
import {
assertEquals,
assertStrictEquals,
assertThrows,
} from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/asserts.ts";
import {
describe,
it,
} from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd.ts";
import { User } from "https://deno.land/std@0.149.0/testing/bdd_examples/user.ts";
describe("User", () => {
it("users initially empty", () => {
assertEquals(User.users.size, 0);
});
it("constructor", () => {
try {
const user = new User("Kyle");
assertEquals(user.name, "Kyle");
assertStrictEquals(User.users.get("Kyle"), user);
} finally {
User.users.clear();
}
});
const ageTests = describe({
name: "age",
beforeEach(this: { user: User }) {
this.user = new User("Kyle");
},
afterEach() {
User.users.clear();
},
});
it(ageTests, "getAge", function () {
const { user } = this;
assertThrows(() => user.getAge(), Error, "Age unknown");
user.age = 18;
assertEquals(user.getAge(), 18);
});
it(ageTests, "setAge", function () {
const { user } = this;
user.setAge(18);
assertEquals(user.getAge(), 18);
});
});