Testing
To define a test you need to call with a name and function to be tested. There are two styles you can use.
Assertions
There are some useful assertion utilities at to make testing easier:
import {
assertArrayIncludes,
assertEquals,
} from "https://deno.land/std@$STD_VERSION/testing/asserts.ts";
Deno.test("hello world", () => {
const x = 1 + 2;
assertEquals(x, 3);
assertArrayIncludes([1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6], [3], "Expected 3 to be in the array");
});
You can also test asynchronous code by passing a test function that returns a promise. For this you can use the async
keyword when defining a function:
import { delay } from "https://deno.land/std@$STD_VERSION/async/delay.ts";
Deno.test("async hello world", async () => {
const x = 1 + 2;
// await some async task
await delay(100);
if (x !== 3) {
throw Error("x should be equal to 3");
}
});
Certain actions in Deno create resources in the resource table (learn more here). These resources should be closed after you are done using them.
For each test definition, the test runner checks that all resources created in this test have been closed. This is to prevent resource ‘leaks’. This is enabled by default for all tests, but can be disabled by setting the sanitizeResources
boolean to false in the test definition.
The same is true for async operation like interacting with the filesystem. The test runner checks that each operation you start in the test is completed before the end of the test. This is enabled by default for all tests, but can be disabled by setting the sanitizeOps
boolean to false in the test definition.
Deno.test({
name: "leaky test",
fn() {
Deno.open("hello.txt");
},
sanitizeOps: false,
});
There’s also the exit sanitizer which ensures that tested code doesn’t call Deno.exit() signaling a false test success.
This is enabled by default for all tests, but can be disabled by setting the sanitizeExit
boolean to false in thetest definition.
# Run all tests in the current directory and all sub-directories
deno test
# Run all tests in the util directory
deno test util/
# Run just my_test.ts
deno test my_test.ts
deno test
uses the same permission model as deno run
and therefore will require, for example, --allow-write
to write to the file system during testing.
To see all runtime options with deno test
, you can reference the command line help:
deno help test
Filtering
There are a number of options to filter the tests you are running.
Tests can be run individually or in groups using the command line --filter
option.
The filter flags accept a string or a pattern as value.
Assuming the following tests:
Deno.test({ name: "my-test", fn: myTest });
Deno.test({ name: "test-1", fn: test1 });
Deno.test({ name: "test2", fn: test2 });
This command will run all of these tests because they all contain the word “test”.
On the flip side, the following command uses a pattern and will run the second and third tests.
Within the tests themselves, you have two options for filtering.
Filtering out (Ignoring these tests)
Sometimes you want to ignore tests based on some sort of condition (for example you only want a test to run on Windows). For this you can use the ignore
boolean in the test definition. If it is set to true the test will be skipped.
Deno.test({
name: "do macOS feature",
ignore: Deno.build.os !== "darwin",
fn() {
doMacOSFeature();
},
Filtering in (Only run these tests)
Sometimes you may be in the middle of a problem within a large test class and you would like to focus on just that test and ignore the rest for now. For this you can use the only
option to tell the test framework to only run tests with this set to true. Multiple tests can set this option. While the test run will report on the success or failure of each test, the overall test run will always fail if any test is flagged with only
, as this is a temporary measure only which disables nearly all of your tests.
Deno.test({
name: "Focus on this test only",
only: true,
fn() {
testComplicatedStuff();
},
});
If you have a long running test suite and wish for it to stop on the first failure, you can specify the --fail-fast
flag when running the suite.
Test coverage
Deno will collect test coverage into a directory for your code if you specify the --coverage
flag when starting deno test
.
This coverage information is acquired directly from the JavaScript engine (V8) which is very accurate.
This can then be further processed from the internal format into well known formats by the deno coverage
tool.
# Go into your project's working directory
git clone https://github.com/oakserver/oak && cd oak
# Collect your coverage profile with deno test --coverage=<output_directory>
deno test --coverage=cov_profile --unstable
# From this you can get a pretty printed diff of uncovered lines
deno coverage --unstable cov_profile
# Or generate an lcov report
deno coverage --unstable cov_profile --lcov > cov_profile.lcov
# Which can then be further processed by tools like genhtml
By default, deno coverage
will exclude any files matching the regular expression test\.(js|mjs|ts|jsx|tsx)
and only consider including files matching the regular expression ^file:
.