I played around with testing lately. One thing I tried to do was to test the endpoints of my Express application.
Setting up the test was the hard part. People who write about tests don't actually teach you how they set it up. I could not find any useful information about this, and I had to try and figure it out.
So today, I want to share the setup I created for myself. Hopefully, this can help you when you create your own tests.
First, let's talk about the stack.
The Stack
- I created my app with Express.
- I used Mongoose to connect to MongoDB
- I used Jest as my test framework.
You might have expected Express and Mongoose because everyone else seems to use those two frameworks. I used them too.
But why Jest and not other test frameworks?
Why Jest
I don't like Facebook, so I didn't want to try anything that was created by Facebook's team. I know it sounds silly, but that was the truth.
Before Jest, I tried out all sorts of test frameworks. I tried Tap, Tape, Mocha, Jasmine, and AVA. Each test framework has its own pros and cons. I almost ended up with AVA, but I didn't go with AVA because I found it hard to set up. Eventually, I tried Jest out because Kent C. Dodds recommended it.
I fell in love with Jest after trying it out. I love it because:
- It's easy to setup
- The watch-mode is amazing
- When you
console.log
something, it actually shows up without any difficulty (this was a bitch with AVA).
Setting up Jest
First, you need to install Jest.
npm install jest --save-dev
Next, you want to add tests scripts to your package.json
file. It helps to add the test
and test:watch
scripts (for one-off testing and watch-mode respectively).
"scripts": {
"test": "jest",
"test:watch": "jest --watch"
},
You can choose to write your test files in one of the following formats. Jest picks them up for you automatically.
-
js
files in the__tests__
folder - files named with
test.js
(likeuser.test.js
) - files named with
spec.js
(likeuser.spec.js
)
You can place your files however you like. When I tested endpoints, I put the test files together with my endpoints. I found this easier to manage.
- routes
|- users/
|- index.js
|- users.test.js
Writing your first test
Jest includes describe
, it
and expect
for you in every test file. You don't have to require
them.
-
describe
lets you wrap many tests together under one umbrella. (It is used for organizing your tests). -
it
lets you run a test. -
expect
lets you perform assertions. The test passes if all assertions passes.
Here's an example of a test that fails. In this example, I expect
that 1
should be strictly equal to 2
. Since 1 !== 2
, the test fails.
// This test fails because 1 !== 2
it("Testing to see if Jest works", () => {
expect(1).toBe(2);
});
You'll see a failing message from Jest if you run Jest.
npm run test:watch
You can make the test pass by expecting 1 === 1
.
// This passes because 1 === 1
it("Testing to see if Jest works", () => {
expect(1).toBe(1);
});
This is the most basic of tests. It's not useful at all because we haven't testing anything real yet.
Asynchronous tests
You need to send a request to test an endpoint. Requests are asynchronous, which means you must be able to conduct asynchronous tests.
This is easy with Jest. There are two steps:
- Add the
async
keyword - Call
done
when you're done with your tests
Here's what it can look like:
it("Async test", async done => {
// Do your async tests here
done();
});
Note: Here's an article on Async/await in JavaScript if you don't know how to use it.
Testing Endpoints
You can use Supertest to test endpoints. First, you need to install Supertest.
npm install supertest --save-dev
Before you can test endpoints, you need to setup the server so Supertest can use it in your tests.
Most tutorials teach you to listen
to the Express app in the server file, like this:
const express = require("express");
const app = express();
// Middlewares...
// Routes...
app.listen(3000);
This doesn't work because it starts listening to one port. If you try to write many test files, you'll get an error that says "port in use".
You want to allow each test file to start a server on their own. To do this, you need to export app
without listening to it.
// server.js
const express = require("express");
const app = express();
// Middlewares...
// Routes...
module.exports = app;
For development or production purposes, you can listen to your app
like normal in a different file like start.js
.
// start.js
const app = require("./server.js");
app.listen(3000);
Using Supertest
To use Supertest, you require your app and supertest in the test file.
const app = require("./server"); // Link to your server file
const supertest = require("supertest");
const request = supertest(app);
Once you do this, you get the ability to send GET, POST, PUT, PATCH and DELETE requests. Before we send a request, we need to have an endpoint. Let's say we have a /test
endpoint.
app.get("/test", async (req, res) => {
res.json({ message: "pass!" });
});
To send a GET request to /test
, you use the .get
method from Supertest.
it("Gets the test endpoint", async done => {
// Sends GET Request to /test endpoint
const res = await request.get("/test");
// ...
done();
});
Supertest gives you a response from the endpoint. You can test both HTTP status and the body (whatever you send through res.json
) like this:
it("gets the test endpoint", async done => {
const response = await request.get("/test");
expect(response.status).toBe(200);
expect(response.body.message).toBe("pass!");
done();
});
If you want to find out more about Supertest, you can read its documentation here.
In the next article, I'll show you how to to do a POST request and how to connect to Mongoose in your test file.
Thanks for reading. This article was originally posted on my blog. Sign up for my newsletter if you want more articles to help you become a better frontend developer.