README.md 5.09 KB

Deprecation notice: Consider jsdom-global instead, a simpler alternative that also works outside of Mocha. mocha-jsdom still works, but jsdom-global is better supported.


mocha-jsdom

Test frontend libraries in the console using Node.js, mocha and jsdom.

Status


Usage

$ npm i --save-dev mocha-jsdom

npm version

Use jsdom() inside your describe(...) block (or the global context). It will turn your Node.js environment into a mock browser environment supporting the full DOM and browser API. The variables window, document, history (and so on) will then be available for use.

var jsdom = require('mocha-jsdom')
var expect = require('chai').expect

describe('mocha tests', function () {

  jsdom()

  it('has document', function () {
    var div = document.createElement('div')
    expect(div.nodeName).eql('DIV')
  })

})

See examples/basic for an example of a basic setup.


Upgrading to v2.0.0

If you are coming from mocha-jsdom v1.x, remove jsdom if you're not using it before upgrading. jsdom is now a direct dependency of mocha-jsdom.

# using Yarn
yarn remove jsdom
yarn upgrade mocha-jsdom
# using npm
npm uninstall -S -D jsdom
npm upgrade mocha-jsdom


Node and io.js information

As of jsdom 4.0.0, jsdom now requires io.js and will not work with Node.js 0.12 or below.


How it works

mocha-jsdom is a simple glue to integrate jsdom to mocha.

Invoking jsdom() will inject before and after handlers to the current mocha suite which will setup and teardown jsdom. Here's what it does:

  • Window: global.window will be available as the jsdom.

  • Globals: global variables like document and history are propagated, and they're cleaned up after tests run.

  • Error handling: jsdom errors are sanitized so that their stack traces are shortened.

NB: Before you try this library, learn about jsdom first. In fact, you may be able to integrate jsdom into your tests without this library; this is mostly syntactic sugar and reasonable defaults.


Using with a library

Perfect for testing small DOM-consuming utilities in the console. See test/jquery.js for an example.

describe('mocha tests', function () {

  var $
  jsdom()

  before(function () {
    $ = require('jquery')
  })

  it('works', function () {
    document.body.innerHTML = '<div>hola</div>'
    expect($("div").html()).eql('hola')
  })

})

See examples/basic for an example of a basic setup.


Using with a library, alternate

You can also pass the source code via src:

describe('mocha tests', function () {
  jsdom({
    src: fs.readFileSync('jquery.js', 'utf-8')
  })

  ...
})


Configuration

You can pass jsdom options:

describe('mocha tests', function () {
  jsdom({
    parsingMode: 'xml'
  })

  ...
})


Working with mocha --watch

When using with --watch, you my encounter strange errors from 3rd-party libraries like jQuery not working properly.

In these cases, use require('mocha-jsdom').rerequire instead of require(). This will ensure that the require() call will always happen.

var $
var jsdom = require('mocha-jsdom')
var rerequire = jsdom.rerequire

jsdom()

before(function () {
  $ = rerequire('jquery')
})


Special config

Other mocha-jsdom specific options:

  • globalize - propagates to values in window to global. defaults to true.

  • console - allows you to use console.log inside a jsdom script. defaults to true.

  • useEach - bind to Mocha's beforeEach/afterEach rather than before/after. defaults to false.

  • skipWindowCheck - skips checking of window at startup. When false, mocha-jsdom will throw an error if window already exists. Defaults to false.


Testling support

Yes, fully compatible with testling. A test suite using jsdom should be able to use testling.

See examples/basic for a setup that allows for testing via iojs (jsdom), testling, and mocha via the browser.


Thanks

mocha-jsdom © 2014-2018 Rico Sta. Cruz. Released under the MIT License.
Authored and maintained by Rico Sta. Cruz with help from contributors (list).

      ricostacruz.com