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Testing in Deno

Deno has a built-in test runner that you can use for testing JavaScript or TypeScript code.

Quickstart

Firstly, let's create a file url_test.ts and register a test case using Deno.test() function.

// url_test.ts
import { assertEquals } from "https://deno.land/std@0.206.0/assert/mod.ts";

Deno.test("url test", () => {
const url = new URL("./foo.js", "https://deno.land/");
assertEquals(url.href, "https://deno.land/foo.js");
});

Secondly, run the test using deno test subcommand.

$ deno test url_test.ts
running 1 test from file:///dev/url_test.js
test url test ... ok (2ms)

test result: ok. 1 passed; 0 failed; 0 ignored; 0 measured; 0 filtered out (9ms)

Writing tests

To define a test you need to register it with a call to Deno.test API. There are multiple overloads of this API to allow for greatest flexibility and easy switching between the forms (eg. when you need to quickly focus a single test for debugging, using only: true option):

import { assertEquals } from "https://deno.land/std@0.206.0/assert/mod.ts";

// Compact form: name and function
Deno.test("hello world #1", () => {
const x = 1 + 2;
assertEquals(x, 3);
});

// Compact form: named function.
Deno.test(function helloWorld3() {
const x = 1 + 2;
assertEquals(x, 3);
});

// Longer form: test definition.
Deno.test({
name: "hello world #2",
fn: () => {
const x = 1 + 2;
assertEquals(x, 3);
},
});

// Similar to compact form, with additional configuration as a second argument.
Deno.test("hello world #4", { permissions: { read: true } }, () => {
const x = 1 + 2;
assertEquals(x, 3);
});

// Similar to longer form, with test function as a second argument.
Deno.test(
{ name: "hello world #5", permissions: { read: true } },
() => {
const x = 1 + 2;
assertEquals(x, 3);
},
);

// Similar to longer form, with a named test function as a second argument.
Deno.test({ permissions: { read: true } }, function helloWorld6() {
const x = 1 + 2;
assertEquals(x, 3);
});

Async functions

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@0.206.0/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");
}
});

Test steps

The test steps API provides a way to report distinct steps within a test and do setup and teardown code within that test.

import { assertEquals } from "https://deno.land/std@0.206.0/assert/mod.ts";
import { Client } from "https://deno.land/x/postgres@v0.15.0/mod.ts";

interface User {
id: number;
name: string;
}

interface Book {
id: number;
title: string;
}

Deno.test("database", async (t) => {
const client = new Client({
user: "user",
database: "test",
hostname: "localhost",
port: 5432,
});
await client.connect();

// provide a step name and function
await t.step("insert user", async () => {
const users = await client.queryObject<User>(
"INSERT INTO users (name) VALUES ('Deno') RETURNING *",
);
assertEquals(users.rows.length, 1);
assertEquals(users.rows[0].name, "Deno");
});

// or provide a test definition
await t.step({
name: "insert book",
fn: async () => {
const books = await client.queryObject<Book>(
"INSERT INTO books (name) VALUES ('The Deno Manual') RETURNING *",
);
assertEquals(books.rows.length, 1);
assertEquals(books.rows[0].title, "The Deno Manual");
},
ignore: false,
// these default to the parent test or step's value
sanitizeOps: true,
sanitizeResources: true,
sanitizeExit: true,
});

// nested steps are also supported
await t.step("update and delete", async (t) => {
await t.step("update", () => {
// even though this test throws, the outer promise does not reject
// and the next test step will run
throw new Error("Fail.");
});

await t.step("delete", () => {
// ...etc...
});
});

// steps return a value saying if they ran or not
const testRan = await t.step({
name: "copy books",
fn: () => {
// ...etc...
},
ignore: true, // was ignored, so will return `false`
});

// steps can be run concurrently if sanitizers are disabled on sibling steps
const testCases = [1, 2, 3];
await Promise.all(testCases.map((testCase) =>
t.step({
name: `case ${testCase}`,
fn: async () => {
// ...etc...
},
sanitizeOps: false,
sanitizeResources: false,
sanitizeExit: false,
})
));

client.end();
});

Outputs:

test database ...
test insert user ... ok (2ms)
test insert book ... ok (14ms)
test update and delete ...
test update ... FAILED (17ms)
Error: Fail.
at <stack trace omitted>
test delete ... ok (19ms)
FAILED (46ms)
test copy books ... ignored (0ms)
test case 1 ... ok (14ms)
test case 2 ... ok (14ms)
test case 3 ... ok (14ms)
FAILED (111ms)

Notes:

  1. Test steps must be awaited before the parent test/step function resolves or you will get a runtime error.
  2. Test steps cannot be run concurrently unless sanitizers on a sibling step or parent test are disabled.
  3. If nesting steps, ensure you specify a parameter for the parent step.
    Deno.test("my test", async (t) => {
    await t.step("step", async (t) => {
    // note the `t` used here is for the parent step and not the outer `Deno.test`
    await t.step("sub-step", () => {
    });
    });
    });

Nested test steps

Running tests

To run the test, call deno test with the file that contains your test function. You can also omit the file name, in which case all tests in the current directory (recursively) that match the glob {*_,*.,}test.{ts, tsx, mts, js, mjs, jsx} will be run. If you pass a directory, all files in the directory that match this glob will be run.

The glob expands to:

  • files named test.{ts, tsx, mts, js, mjs, jsx},
  • or files ending with .test.{ts, tsx, mts, js, mjs, jsx},
  • or files ending with _test.{ts, tsx, mts, js, mjs, jsx}
# 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

# Run test modules in parallel
deno test --parallel

Note that starting in Deno v1.24, some test options can be configured via a configuration file.

⚠️ If you want to pass additional CLI arguments to the test files use -- to inform Deno that remaining arguments are scripts arguments.

# Pass additional arguments to the test file
deno test my_test.ts -- -e --foo --bar

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.

Command line filtering

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: "test-2", fn: test2 });

This command will run all of these tests because they all contain the word "test".

deno test --filter "test" tests/

On the flip side, the following command uses a pattern and will run the second and third tests.

deno test --filter "/test-*\d/" tests/

To let Deno know that you want to use a pattern, wrap your filter with forward-slashes like the JavaScript syntactic sugar for a REGEX.

Including and excluding paths in the configuration file

You can also filter tests by specifying paths to include or exclude in the Deno configuration file.

For example, if you want to only test src/fetch_test.ts and src/signal_test.ts and exclude everything in out/:

{
"test": {
"include": [
"src/fetch_test.ts",
"src/signal_test.ts"
]
}
}

Or more likely:

{
"test": {
"exclude": ["out/"]
}
}

Then running deno test in the same directory tree as the configuration file will take these options into account.

Test definition filtering

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() {
// do MacOS feature here
},
});

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() {
// test complicated stuff here
},
});

Failing fast

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.

deno test --fail-fast

Reporters

Deno ships with three built-in reporters:

  • pretty (default)
  • dot
  • junit

You can specify the reporter to use with the --reporter flag.

# use default pretty reporter
$ deno test

# use dot reporter with concise output
$ deno test --reporter=dot

# use JUnit reporter
$ deno test --reporter=junit

You can also write the output of machine-readable JUnit report to a file, while still enjoying human-readable output in the terminal. In such situations specify --junit-path flag:

$ deno test --junit-path=./report.xml

Integration with testing libraries

Deno's test runner works with popular testing libraries like Chai, Sinon.JS or fast-check.

For example integration see:

Example: spying on a function with Sinon

Test spies are function stand-ins that are used to assert if a function's internal behavior matches expectations. Sinon is a widely used testing library that provides test spies and can be used in Deno by importing it from NPM:

import sinon from "npm:sinon";

Say we have two functions, foo and bar and want to assert that bar is called during execution of foo. There are a few ways to achieve this with Sinon, one is to have function foo take another function as a parameter:

// my_file.js
export function bar() {/*...*/}

export function foo(fn) {
fn();
}

This way, we can call foo(bar) in the application code or wrap a spy function around bar and call foo(spy) in the testing code:

import sinon from "npm:sinon";
import { assertEquals } from "https://deno.land/std@0.206.0/assert/mod.ts";
import { bar, foo } from "./my_file.js";

Deno.test("calls bar during execution of foo", () => {
// create a test spy that wraps 'bar'
const spy = sinon.spy(bar);

// call function 'foo' and pass the spy as an argument
foo(spy);

assertEquals(spy.called, true);
assertEquals(spy.getCalls().length, 1);
});

If you prefer not to add additional parameters for testing purposes only, you can also use sinon to wrap a method on an object instead. In other JavaScript environments bar might have been accessible via a global such as window and callable via sinon.spy(window, "bar"), but in Deno this will not work and instead you can export an object with the functions to be tested. This means rewriting my_file.js to something like this:

// my_file.js
function bar() {/*...*/}

export const funcs = {
bar,
};

// 'foo' no longer takes a parameter, but calls 'bar' from an object
export function foo() {
funcs.bar();
}

And then import in a test file:

import sinon from "npm:sinon";
import { assertEquals } from "https://deno.land/std@0.206.0/assert/mod.ts";
import { foo, funcs } from "./my_file.js";

Deno.test("calls bar during execution of foo", () => {
// create a test spy that wraps 'bar' on the 'funcs' object
const spy = sinon.spy(funcs, "bar");

// call function 'foo' without an argument
foo();

assertEquals(spy.called, true);
assertEquals(spy.getCalls().length, 1);
});