I have some issues injecting my factory into testing spec. I am using requireJS to inject controllers and factories etc.
define(['controller', 'loginFactory', 'angular', 'angularMocks'],
function(ctrl, loginFactory, angular){
var scope,
OnBoardingCtrl;
describe('Controller: OnBoarding', function () {
beforeEach(angular.mock.inject(function ($rootScope, $controller, $location) {
angular.module('app');
scope = $rootScope.$new();
OnBoardingCtrl = $controller(ctrl, {
'$scope': scope,
'loginFactory': loginFactory,
});
}));
it('Should check endpoint', inject(function ($http, $httpBackend) {
var successCallback = jasmine.createSpy();
var url = 'login?un=test&pw=test';
var response = {"token":1}
$httpBackend.expectGET(url)
.respond(200, response);
$http.get(url).success(successCallback);
expect(successCallback).not.toHaveBeenCalled();
$httpBackend.flush();
expect(successCallback.token).toBe(1);
}));
});
}
);
How ever I keep getting TypeError: 'undefined' is not an object (evaluating 'successCallback.token) For reference my LoginFactory looks like this:
var LoginFactory = function ($q, $http) {
return {
getData: function (url) {
var deferred = $q.defer();
$http.get('http://local/'+url)
.then(function () {
deferred.resolve(true);
}, function () {
deferred.resolve(false);
});
return deferred.promise;
}
};
};
LoginFactory.$inject = ['$q', '$http'];
factories.factory('LoginFactory', LoginFactory);
return LoginFactory;
Thanks in advance!
As you mentioned already, successCallback.token is the point where your code is breaking because jasmine.createSpy() returns a function but it has no clue about your token from your mock response served by $httpBackend. From the official docs,
When there is not a function to spy on, jasmine.createSpy can create a “bare” spy.
This spy acts as any other spy – tracking calls, arguments, etc.
But there is no implementation behind it. Spies are JavaScript objects
and can be used as such.
So removing this line expect(successCallback.token).toBe(1); will resolve the error but if you actually want to verify the mock response from $httpBackend, you need to do that in success callback on $http (or) in the promise object's then method like below
$http.get(url).success(function(response){
expect(response.token).toBe(1);
});
Note that here I just modified your code to show the example, ideally you don't code the HTTP call separately in your test case, you invoke the actual function making the HTTP call and verify the expectations.
For more details on $httpBackend, have a look at this link.
Related
I have a recursive method that, if a flag is set, will call itself every five seconds. I'm trying to write a test that spies on the method, calls it, waits six seconds and then expects the method to have been called twice. My test fails, as the spy reports the method only being called once (the initial call).
I'm using the Angular style guide, so am attaching these methods to a placeholder for this. I suspect there may be an issue with scoping of the controller returned from angular-mocks $controller(), but I'm not sure—most people are attaching methods to $scope.
Without attaching methods to $scope, how can I create a spy to verify that my method has been called twice?
app.js:
'use strict';
angular
.module('MyApp', [
//...
]);
angular
.module('MyApp')
.controller('MyController', MyController);
MyController.$inject = [
//...
];
function MyController() {
var vm = this;
vm.callMyself = callMyself;
vm.flag = false;
function callMyself () {
console.log('callMyself');
if (vm.flag) {
console.log('callMyself & flag');
setTimeout(vm.callMyself, 5000);
}
}
}
appSpec.js:
describe('MyController', function () {
var $scope;
beforeEach(function () {
module('MyApp');
});
beforeEach(inject(function($rootScope, $controller) {
$scope = $rootScope.$new();
controllerInstance = $controller('MyController', {$scope: $scope});
}));
it('should call itself within 6 seconds if flag is true', function (done) {
controllerInstance.flag = true;
spyOn(controllerInstance, 'callMyself');
controllerInstance.callMyself();
setTimeout(function () {
expect(controllerInstance.callMyself).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(2);
done();
}, 6000);
}, 7000);
});
Working Plunker
You need to use .and.callThrough() to further execute the function that would call itself:
By chaining the spy with and.callThrough, the spy will still track all calls to it but in addition it will delegate to the actual implementation.
spyOn(controllerInstance, 'callMyself').and.callThrough();
Tested in the plunker - it works.
I have a factory defined like this:
angular.module("myServices")
.factory("$service1", ["$rootScope", "$service2", function($rootScope, $service2){...})];
Now, I want to test it, but just injecting $service1 is not working because i get an 'unknown provider' error. So I tried something like that. But I still can't make it work. Why?
beforeEach(function() {
module("myServices");
inject(function ($injector) {
dependencies["$service2"] = $injector.get("$service2");
});
module(function($provide) {
$provide.value("$service1", dependencies["$service2"]);
});
inject(function($injector) {
factory = $injector.get("$service1");
});
});
This is what's working in my tests, using underscores:
describe('Service: $service1', function () {
var $service2, scope;
beforeEach(inject(function (_$service2_, $rootScope) {
$service2 = _$service2_;
scope = $rootScope;
}));
//tests
});
If that still doesn't work, then maybe you're not loading the relevant files (such as service2.js) in your tests.
I have a resource factory
angular.module('mean.clusters').factory('Clusters', ['$resource',
function($resource) {
return $resource('clusters/:clusterId/:action', {
clusterId: '#_id'
}, {
update: {method: 'PUT'},
status: {method: 'GET', params: {action:'status'}}
});
}]);
and a controller
angular.module('mean.clusters').controller('ClustersController', ['$scope',
'$location', 'Clusters',
function ($scope, $location, Clusters) {
$scope.create = function () {
var cluster = new Clusters();
cluster.$save(function (response) {
$location.path('clusters/' + response._id);
});
};
$scope.update = function () {
var cluster = $scope.cluster;
cluster.$update(function () {
$location.path('clusters/' + cluster._id);
});
};
$scope.find = function () {
Clusters.query(function (clusters) {
$scope.clusters = clusters;
});
};
}]);
I am writing my unit tests and every example I find is using some form of $httpBackend.expect to mock the response from the server, and I can do that just fine.
My problems is, when unit testing my controller functions I would like to mock the Clusters object. If I'm using $httpBackend.expect, and I introduce a bug in my factory every unit test in my controller will fail.
I would like to have my test of $scope.create test only $scope.create and not also my factory code.
I've tried adding a provider in the beforeEach(module('mean', function ($provide) { part of my tests but I cant seem to get it right.
I also tried
clusterSpy = function (properties){
for(var k in properties)
this[k]=properties[k];
};
clusterSpy.$save = jasmine.createSpy().and.callFake(function (cb) {
cb({_id: '1'});
});
and setting Clusters = clusterSpy; in the before(inject but in the create function, the spy gets lost with
Error: Expected a spy, but got Function.
I have been able to get a spy object to work for the cluster.$update type calls but then it fails at var cluster = new Clusters(); with a 'not a function' error.
I can create a function that works for var cluster = new Clusters(); but then fails for the cluster.$update type calls.
I'm probably mixing terms here but, is there a proper way to mock Clusters with spies on the functions or is there a good reason to just go with $httpBackend.expect?
Looks like I was close a few times but I think I have it figured out now.
The solution was the 'I also tried' part above but I was not returning the spy object from the function.
This works, it can be placed in either the beforeEach(module( or beforeEach(inject sections
Step 1: create the spy object with any functions you want to test and assign it to a variable that's accessible to your tests.
Step 2: make a function that returns the spy object.
Step 3: copy the properties of the spy object to the new function.
clusterSpy = jasmine.createSpyObj('Clusters', ['$save', 'update', 'status']);
clusterSpyFunc = function () {
return clusterSpy
};
for(var k in clusterSpy){
clusterSpyFunc[k]=clusterSpy[k];
}
Step 4: add it to the $controller in the beforeEach(inject section.
ClustersController = $controller('ClustersController', {
$scope: scope,
Clusters: clusterSpyFunc
});
inside your tests you can still add functionality to the methods using
clusterSpy.$save.and.callFake(function (cb) {
cb({_id: '1'});
});
then to check the spy values
expect(clusterSpy.$save).toHaveBeenCalled();
This solves both problems of new Clusters() and Clusters.query not being a function. And now I can unit test my controller with out a dependency on the resource factory.
Another way to mock the Clusters service is this:
describe('Cluster Controller', function() {
var location, scope, controller, MockClusters, passPromise, q;
var cluster = {_id : '1'};
beforeEach(function(){
// since we are outside of angular.js framework,
// we inject the angujar.js services that we need later on
inject(function($rootScope, $controller, $q) {
scope = $rootScope.$new();
controller = $controller;
q = $q;
});
// let's mock the location service
location = {path: jasmine.createSpy('path')};
// let's mock the Clusters service
var MockClusters = function(){};
// since MockClusters is a function object (not literal object)
// we'll need to use the "prototype" property
// for adding methods to the object
MockClusters.prototype.$save = function(success, error) {
var deferred = q.defer();
var promise = deferred.promise;
// since the Clusters controller expect the result to be
// sent back as a callback, we register the success and
// error callbacks with the promise
promise.then(success, error);
// conditionally resolve the promise so we can test
// both paths
if(passPromise){
deferred.resolve(cluster);
} else {
deferred.reject();
}
}
// import the module containing the Clusters controller
module('mean.clusters')
// create an instance of the controller we unit test
// using the services we mocked (except scope)
controller('ClustersController', {
$scope: scope,
$location: location,
Clusters: MockClusters
});
it('save completes successfully', function() {
passPromise = true;
scope.save();
// since MockClusters.$save contains a promise (e.g. an async call)
// we tell angular to process this async call before we can validate
// the response
scope.$apply();
// we can call "toHaveBeenCalledWith" since we mocked "location.path" as a spy
expect(location.path).toHaveBeenCalledWith('clusters/' + cluster._id););
});
it('save doesn''t complete successfully', function() {
passPromise = false;
scope.save();
// since MockClusters.$save contains a promise (e.g. an async call)
// we tell angular to process this async call before we can validate
// the response
scope.$apply();
expect(location.path).toHaveBeenCalledWith('/error'););
});
});
});
I've just read a lot of articles about mocking $http and something is wrong with my code. I still have error: No pending request to flush !
My method from controllers.js looks similar to this (browserDebugMode, webRoot, commentsAction are global variables - it wasn't mi idea to make it global :D)
$scope.getComments = function(){
if (browserDebugMode) {
$http({
method : "GET",
url : webRoot+commentsAction,
params : {action: "list"},
})
.success(function(data, status) {
//...
})
.error(function(data, status) {
//...
});
}
}
And now test for it:
var browserDebugMode = true;
var webRoot = "http://localhost/name";
var commentsAction = '/commentsMobile.php';
describe('myApp', function() {
var scope,
httpBackend,
http,
controller;
beforeEach(angular.mock.module('myApp'));
describe('NewsDetailCtrl', function() {
beforeEach(inject(function ($rootScope, $controller, $httpBackend, $http) {
scope = $rootScope.$new();
httpBackend = $httpBackend;
http = $http;
httpBackend.when("GET", webRoot+commentsAction).respond([{}]);
controller = $controller('NewsDetailCtrl', {
'$scope': scope, 'GlobalService': globalService, $http: $http
});
}));
it('checks if AJAX is done', function () {
httpBackend.expectGET(webRoot+commentsAction).respond([{}]);
scope.getComments()
httpBackend.flush();
});
});
});
And please don't ask for PHP script :) I was pushed to do it.
I just want to check if I can test $http, nothing more. I don't know what I do wrong. I tested other things in that controller and it was okay, I looked if getComments() is fired with console.log and it's fired. Something must be wrong with configuring it.
Your code under test and the unit tests execute in different contexts, so they will have different global objects and therefore the browserDebugMode that exists in your tests is different to the one in your actual code.
The controller should inject $window (Angular's wrapper around the window object) and then check the browserDebugMode property of that:
if ($window.browserDebugMode) {
// actual code
}
The tests should also inject $window and then set the browserDebugMode property of that:
beforeEach(inject(function ($window) {
$window.browserDebugMode = true;
}));
Now both the controller and tests will reference the same global object, the if condition should evaluate true, and the $http call should execute.
I am currently using Jasmine with Karma(Testacular) and Web Storm to write unit test. I am having trouble spying on a method that gets called immediately when the controller is initialized. Is it possible to spy on a method that is called when the controller is initialized?
My controller code, the method I am attempting to spy on is getServicesNodeList().
myApp.controller('TreeViewController', function ($scope, $rootScope ,$document, DataServices) {
$scope.treeCollection = DataServices.getServicesNodeList();
$rootScope.viewportHeight = ($document.height() - 100) + 'px';
});
And here is the test spec:
describe("DataServices Controllers - ", function () {
beforeEach(angular.mock.module('myApp'));
describe("DataServicesTreeview Controller - ", function () {
beforeEach(inject(function ($controller, $rootScope, $document, $httpBackend, DataServices) {
scope = $rootScope.$new(),
doc = $document,
rootScope = $rootScope;
dataServices = DataServices;
$httpBackend.when('GET', '/scripts/internal/servicedata/services.json').respond(...);
var controller = $controller('TreeViewController', {$scope: scope, $rootScope: rootScope, $document: doc, DataServices: dataServices });
$httpBackend.flush();
}));
afterEach(inject(function($httpBackend){
$httpBackend.verifyNoOutstandingExpectation();
$httpBackend.verifyNoOutstandingRequest();
}));
it('should ensure DataServices.getServicesNodeList() was called', inject(function ($httpBackend, DataServices) {
spyOn(DataServices, "getServicesNodeList").andCallThrough();
$httpBackend.flush();
expect(DataServices.getServicesNodeList).toHaveBeenCalled();
}));
});
});
The test is failing saying that the method has not been called. I know that I should mock the DataServices and pass that into the test controller. But it seems like I would still have the same problem when spying on that method whether it is a mock or not. Anyone have any ideas or could point me to resources on the correct way to handle this?
When writing unit tests, you should isolate each piece of code. In this case, you need to isolate your service and test it separately. Create a mock of the service and pass it to your controller.
var mockDataServices = {
getServicesNodeList: function () {
return <insert your sample data here > ;
}
};
beforeEach(inject(function ($controller, $rootScope, $document) {
scope = $rootScope.$new(),
doc = $document,
rootScope = $rootScope;
var controller = $controller('TreeViewController', {
$scope: scope,
$rootScope: rootScope,
$document: doc,
DataServices: mockDataServices
});
}));
If it is your service that is making the $http request, you can remove that portion from your unit controller test. Write another unit test that tests that the service is making the correct http calls when it is initialized.