node/doc/api/test.md
Beth Griggs 77373aa5d6
2022-04-19, Version 18.0.0 (Current)
Notable Changes:

Deprecations and Removals:

- (SEMVER-MAJOR) fs: runtime deprecate string coercion in `fs.write`,
  `fs.writeFileSync`
  (Livia Medeiros) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42607)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) dns: remove `dns.lookup` and `dnsPromises.lookup`
  options type coercion
  (Antoine du Hamel) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41431)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) process: runtime deprecate multipleResolves
  (Benjamin Gruenbaum) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41896)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) stream: remove thenable support (Robert Nagy)
  (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/40773)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) tls: move tls.parseCertString to end-of-life
  (Tobias Nießen) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41479)

fetch (experimental):

An experimental fetch API is available on the global scope by default.
The implementation is based upon https://undici.nodejs.org/#/,
an HTTP/1.1 client written for Node.js by contributors to the project.

Through this addition, the following globals are made available: `fetch`
, `FormData`, `Headers`, `Request`, `Response`.

Disable this API with the `--no-experimental-fetch` command-line flag.

Contributed by Michaël Zasso in https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41811.

HTTP Timeouts:

`server.headersTimeout`, which limits the amount of time the parser will
wait to receive the complete HTTP headers, is now set to `60000` (60
seconds) by default.

`server.requestTimeout`, which sets the timeout value in milliseconds
for receiving the entire request from the client, is now set to `300000`
(5 minutes) by default.

If these timeouts expire, the server responds with status 408 without
forwarding the request to the request listener and then closes the
connection.

Both timeouts must be set to a non-zero value to protect against
potential Denial-of-Service attacks in case the server is deployed
without a reverse proxy in front.

Contributed by Paolo Insogna in https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41263.

Test Runner module (experimental):

The `node:test` module facilitates the creation of JavaScript tests that
report results in TAP format. This module is only available under the
`node:` scheme.

Contributed by Colin Ihrig in https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42325.

Toolchain and Compiler Upgrades:

- Prebuilt binaries for Linux are now built on Red Hat Enterprise Linux
  (RHEL) 8 and are compatible with Linux distributions based on glibc
  2.28 or later, for example, Debian 10, RHEL 8, Ubuntu 20.04.
- Prebuilt binaries for macOS now require macOS 10.15 or later.
- For AIX the minimum supported architecture has been raised from Power
  7 to Power 8.

Prebuilt binaries for 32-bit Windows will initially not be available due
to issues building the V8 dependency in Node.js. We hope to restore
32-bit Windows binaries for Node.js 18 with a future V8 update.

Node.js does not support running on operating systems that are no longer
supported by their vendor. For operating systems where their vendor has
planned to end support earlier than April 2025, such as Windows 8.1
(January 2023) and Windows Server 2012 R2 (October 2023), support for
Node.js 18 will end at the earlier date.

Full details about the supported toolchains and compilers are documented
in the Node.js `BUILDING.md` file.

Contributed by Richard Lau in https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42292,
https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42604 and https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42659
, and Michaël Zasso in https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42105 and
https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42666.

V8 10.1:

The V8 engine is updated to version 10.1, which is part of Chromium 101.
Compared to the version included in Node.js 17.9.0, the following new
features are included:

- The `findLast` and `findLastIndex` array methods.
- Improvements to the `Intl.Locale` API.
- The `Intl.supportedValuesOf` function.
- Improved performance of class fields and private class methods (the
  initialization of them is now as fast as ordinary property stores).

The data format returned by the serialization API (`v8.serialize(value)`)
has changed, and cannot be deserialized by earlier versions of Node.js.
On the other hand, it is still possible to deserialize the previous
format, as the API is backwards-compatible.

Contributed by Michaël Zasso in https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42657.

Web Streams API (experimental):

Node.js now exposes the experimental implementation of the Web Streams
API on the global scope. This means the following APIs are now globally
available:

- `ReadableStream`, `ReadableStreamDefaultReader`,
`ReadableStreamBYOBReader`, `ReadableStreamBYOBRequest`,
`ReadableByteStreamController`, `ReadableStreamDefaultController`,
`TransformStream`, `TransformStreamDefaultController`, `WritableStream`,
`WritableStreamDefaultWriter`, `WritableStreamDefaultController`,
`ByteLengthQueuingStrategy`, `CountQueuingStrategy`, `TextEncoderStream`,
`TextDecoderStream`, `CompressionStream`, `DecompressionStream`.

Contributed James Snell in https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/39062,
and Antoine du Hamel in https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42225.

Other Notable Changes:

- (SEMVER-MAJOR) buffer: expose Blob as a global
  (James M Snell) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41270)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) child\_process: improve argument validation
  (Rich Trott) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41305)
- doc: add RafaelGSS to collaborators
  (RafaelGSS) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42718)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) http: make TCP noDelay enabled by default
  (Paolo Insogna) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42163)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) net: make `server.address()` return an integer for
  `family`
  (Antoine du Hamel) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41431)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) worker: expose BroadcastChannel as a global
  (James M Snell) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41271)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) worker: graduate BroadcastChannel to supported
  (James M Snell) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41271)

Semver-Major Commits:

- (SEMVER-MAJOR) assert,util: compare RegExp.lastIndex while using deep
  equal checks
  (Ruben Bridgewater) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41020)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) buffer: refactor `byteLength` to remove outdated
  optimizations
  (Rongjian Zhang) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/38545)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) buffer: expose Blob as a global
  (James M Snell) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41270)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) buffer: graduate Blob from experimental
  (James M Snell) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41270)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) build: make x86 Windows support temporarily
  experimental
  (Michaël Zasso) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42666)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) build: bump macOS deployment target to 10.15
  (Richard Lau) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42292)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) build: downgrade Windows 8.1 and server 2012 R2 to
  experimental
  (Michaël Zasso) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42105)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) child\_process: improve argument validation
  (Rich Trott) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41305)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) cluster: make `kill` to be just `process.kill`
  (Bar Admoni) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/34312)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) crypto: cleanup validation
  (Mohammed Keyvanzadeh) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/39841)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) crypto: prettify othername in PrintGeneralName
  (Tobias Nießen) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42123)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) crypto: fix X509Certificate toLegacyObject
  (Tobias Nießen) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42124)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) crypto: use RFC2253 format in PrintGeneralName
  (Tobias Nießen) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42002)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) crypto: change default check(Host|Email) behavior
  (Tobias Nießen) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41600)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) deps: V8: cherry-pick semver-major commits from 10.2
  (Michaël Zasso) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42657)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) deps: update V8 to 10.1.124.6
  (Michaël Zasso) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42657)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) deps: update V8 to 9.8.177.9
  (Michaël Zasso) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41610)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) deps: update V8 to 9.7.106.18
  (Michaël Zasso) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/40907)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) dns: remove `dns.lookup` and `dnsPromises.lookup`
  options type coercion
  (Antoine du Hamel) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41431)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) doc: update minimum glibc requirements for Linux
  (Richard Lau) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42659)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) doc: update AIX minimum supported arch
  (Richard Lau) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42604)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) fs: runtime deprecate string coercion in `fs.write`,
  `fs.writeFileSync`
  (Livia Medeiros) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42607)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) http: refactor headersTimeout and requestTimeout logic
  (Paolo Insogna) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41263)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) http: make TCP noDelay enabled by default
  (Paolo Insogna) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42163)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) lib: enable fetch by default
  (Michaël Zasso) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41811)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) lib: replace validator and error
  (Mohammed Keyvanzadeh) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41678)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) module,repl: support 'node:'-only core modules
  (Colin Ihrig) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42325)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) net: make `server.address()` return an integer for
  `family`
  (Antoine du Hamel) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41431)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) process: disallow some uses of Object.defineProperty()
  on process.env
  (Himself65) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/28006)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) process: runtime deprecate multipleResolves
  (Benjamin Gruenbaum) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41896)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) readline: fix question still called after closed
  (Xuguang Mei) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42464)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) stream: remove thenable support
  (Robert Nagy) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/40773)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) stream: expose web streams globals, remove runtime
  experimental warning
  (Antoine du Hamel) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42225)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) stream: need to cleanup event listeners if last stream
  is readable
  (Xuguang Mei) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41954)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) stream: revert revert `map` spec compliance
  (Benjamin Gruenbaum) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41933)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) stream: throw invalid arg type from End Of Stream
  (Jithil P Ponnan) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41766)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) stream: don't emit finish after destroy
  (Robert Nagy) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/40852)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) stream: add errored and closed props
  (Robert Nagy) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/40696)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) test: add initial test module
  (Colin Ihrig) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42325)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) timers: refactor internal classes to ES2015 syntax
  (Rabbit) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/37408)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) tls: represent registeredID numerically always
  (Tobias Nießen) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41561)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) tls: move tls.parseCertString to end-of-life
  (Tobias Nießen) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41479)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) url: throw on NULL in IPv6 hostname
  (Rich Trott) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42313)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) v8: make v8.writeHeapSnapshot() error codes consistent
  (Darshan Sen) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42577)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) v8: make writeHeapSnapshot throw if fopen fails
  (Antonio Román) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41373)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) worker: expose BroadcastChannel as a global
  (James M Snell) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41271)
- (SEMVER-MAJOR) worker: graduate BroadcastChannel to supported
  (James M Snell) (https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/41271)

PR-URL: https://github.com/nodejs/node/pull/42262
2022-04-19 16:27:11 +01:00

15 KiB

Test runner

Stability: 1 - Experimental

The node:test module facilitates the creation of JavaScript tests that report results in TAP format. To access it:

import test from 'node:test';
const test = require('node:test');

This module is only available under the node: scheme. The following will not work:

import test from 'test';
const test = require('test');

Tests created via the test module consist of a single function that is processed in one of three ways:

  1. A synchronous function that is considered failing if it throws an exception, and is considered passing otherwise.
  2. A function that returns a Promise that is considered failing if the Promise rejects, and is considered passing if the Promise resolves.
  3. A function that receives a callback function. If the callback receives any truthy value as its first argument, the test is considered failing. If a falsy value is passed as the first argument to the callback, the test is considered passing. If the test function receives a callback function and also returns a Promise, the test will fail.

The following example illustrates how tests are written using the test module.

test('synchronous passing test', (t) => {
  // This test passes because it does not throw an exception.
  assert.strictEqual(1, 1);
});

test('synchronous failing test', (t) => {
  // This test fails because it throws an exception.
  assert.strictEqual(1, 2);
});

test('asynchronous passing test', async (t) => {
  // This test passes because the Promise returned by the async
  // function is not rejected.
  assert.strictEqual(1, 1);
});

test('asynchronous failing test', async (t) => {
  // This test fails because the Promise returned by the async
  // function is rejected.
  assert.strictEqual(1, 2);
});

test('failing test using Promises', (t) => {
  // Promises can be used directly as well.
  return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
    setImmediate(() => {
      reject(new Error('this will cause the test to fail'));
    });
  });
});

test('callback passing test', (t, done) => {
  // done() is the callback function. When the setImmediate() runs, it invokes
  // done() with no arguments.
  setImmediate(done);
});

test('callback failing test', (t, done) => {
  // When the setImmediate() runs, done() is invoked with an Error object and
  // the test fails.
  setImmediate(() => {
    done(new Error('callback failure'));
  });
});

As a test file executes, TAP is written to the standard output of the Node.js process. This output can be interpreted by any test harness that understands the TAP format. If any tests fail, the process exit code is set to 1.

Subtests

The test context's test() method allows subtests to be created. This method behaves identically to the top level test() function. The following example demonstrates the creation of a top level test with two subtests.

test('top level test', async (t) => {
  await t.test('subtest 1', (t) => {
    assert.strictEqual(1, 1);
  });

  await t.test('subtest 2', (t) => {
    assert.strictEqual(2, 2);
  });
});

In this example, await is used to ensure that both subtests have completed. This is necessary because parent tests do not wait for their subtests to complete. Any subtests that are still outstanding when their parent finishes are cancelled and treated as failures. Any subtest failures cause the parent test to fail.

Skipping tests

Individual tests can be skipped by passing the skip option to the test, or by calling the test context's skip() method. Both of these options support including a message that is displayed in the TAP output as shown in the following example.

// The skip option is used, but no message is provided.
test('skip option', { skip: true }, (t) => {
  // This code is never executed.
});

// The skip option is used, and a message is provided.
test('skip option with message', { skip: 'this is skipped' }, (t) => {
  // This code is never executed.
});

test('skip() method', (t) => {
  // Make sure to return here as well if the test contains additional logic.
  t.skip();
});

test('skip() method with message', (t) => {
  // Make sure to return here as well if the test contains additional logic.
  t.skip('this is skipped');
});

only tests

If Node.js is started with the --test-only command-line option, it is possible to skip all top level tests except for a selected subset by passing the only option to the tests that should be run. When a test with the only option set is run, all subtests are also run. The test context's runOnly() method can be used to implement the same behavior at the subtest level.

// Assume Node.js is run with the --test-only command-line option.
// The 'only' option is set, so this test is run.
test('this test is run', { only: true }, async (t) => {
  // Within this test, all subtests are run by default.
  await t.test('running subtest');

  // The test context can be updated to run subtests with the 'only' option.
  t.runOnly(true);
  await t.test('this subtest is now skipped');
  await t.test('this subtest is run', { only: true });

  // Switch the context back to execute all tests.
  t.runOnly(false);
  await t.test('this subtest is now run');

  // Explicitly do not run these tests.
  await t.test('skipped subtest 3', { only: false });
  await t.test('skipped subtest 4', { skip: true });
});

// The 'only' option is not set, so this test is skipped.
test('this test is not run', () => {
  // This code is not run.
  throw new Error('fail');
});

Extraneous asynchronous activity

Once a test function finishes executing, the TAP results are output as quickly as possible while maintaining the order of the tests. However, it is possible for the test function to generate asynchronous activity that outlives the test itself. The test runner handles this type of activity, but does not delay the reporting of test results in order to accommodate it.

In the following example, a test completes with two setImmediate() operations still outstanding. The first setImmediate() attempts to create a new subtest. Because the parent test has already finished and output its results, the new subtest is immediately marked as failed, and reported in the top level of the file's TAP output.

The second setImmediate() creates an uncaughtException event. uncaughtException and unhandledRejection events originating from a completed test are handled by the test module and reported as diagnostic warnings in the top level of the file's TAP output.

test('a test that creates asynchronous activity', (t) => {
  setImmediate(() => {
    t.test('subtest that is created too late', (t) => {
      throw new Error('error1');
    });
  });

  setImmediate(() => {
    throw new Error('error2');
  });

  // The test finishes after this line.
});

Running tests from the command line

The Node.js test runner can be invoked from the command line by passing the --test flag:

node --test

By default, Node.js will recursively search the current directory for JavaScript source files matching a specific naming convention. Matching files are executed as test files. More information on the expected test file naming convention and behavior can be found in the test runner execution model section.

Alternatively, one or more paths can be provided as the final argument(s) to the Node.js command, as shown below.

node --test test1.js test2.mjs custom_test_dir/

In this example, the test runner will execute the files test1.js and test2.mjs. The test runner will also recursively search the custom_test_dir/ directory for test files to execute.

Test runner execution model

When searching for test files to execute, the test runner behaves as follows:

  • Any files explicitly provided by the user are executed.
  • If the user did not explicitly specify any paths, the current working directory is recursively searched for files as specified in the following steps.
  • node_modules directories are skipped unless explicitly provided by the user.
  • If a directory named test is encountered, the test runner will search it recursively for all all .js, .cjs, and .mjs files. All of these files are treated as test files, and do not need to match the specific naming convention detailed below. This is to accommodate projects that place all of their tests in a single test directory.
  • In all other directories, .js, .cjs, and .mjs files matching the following patterns are treated as test files:
    • ^test$ - Files whose basename is the string 'test'. Examples: test.js, test.cjs, test.mjs.
    • ^test-.+ - Files whose basename starts with the string 'test-' followed by one or more characters. Examples: test-example.js, test-another-example.mjs.
    • .+[\.\-\_]test$ - Files whose basename ends with .test, -test, or _test, preceded by one or more characters. Examples: example.test.js, example-test.cjs, example_test.mjs.
    • Other file types understood by Node.js such as .node and .json are not automatically executed by the test runner, but are supported if explicitly provided on the command line.

Each matching test file is executed in a separate child process. If the child process finishes with an exit code of 0, the test is considered passing. Otherwise, the test is considered to be a failure. Test files must be executable by Node.js, but are not required to use the node:test module internally.

test([name][, options][, fn])

  • name {string} The name of the test, which is displayed when reporting test results. Default: The name property of fn, or '<anonymous>' if fn does not have a name.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the test. The following properties are supported:
    • concurrency {number} The number of tests that can be run at the same time. If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent. Default: 1.
    • only {boolean} If truthy, and the test context is configured to run only tests, then this test will be run. Otherwise, the test is skipped. Default: false.
    • skip {boolean|string} If truthy, the test is skipped. If a string is provided, that string is displayed in the test results as the reason for skipping the test. Default: false.
    • todo {boolean|string} If truthy, the test marked as TODO. If a string is provided, that string is displayed in the test results as the reason why the test is TODO. Default: false.
  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The function under test. This first argument to this function is a TestContext object. If the test uses callbacks, the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op function.
  • Returns: {Promise} Resolved with undefined once the test completes.

The test() function is the value imported from the test module. Each invocation of this function results in the creation of a test point in the TAP output.

The TestContext object passed to the fn argument can be used to perform actions related to the current test. Examples include skipping the test, adding additional TAP diagnostic information, or creating subtests.

test() returns a Promise that resolves once the test completes. The return value can usually be discarded for top level tests. However, the return value from subtests should be used to prevent the parent test from finishing first and cancelling the subtest as shown in the following example.

test('top level test', async (t) => {
  // The setTimeout() in the following subtest would cause it to outlive its
  // parent test if 'await' is removed on the next line. Once the parent test
  // completes, it will cancel any outstanding subtests.
  await t.test('longer running subtest', async (t) => {
    return new Promise((resolve, reject) => {
      setTimeout(resolve, 1000);
    });
  });
});

Class: TestContext

An instance of TestContext is passed to each test function in order to interact with the test runner. However, the TestContext constructor is not exposed as part of the API.

context.diagnostic(message)

  • message {string} Message to be displayed as a TAP diagnostic.

This function is used to write TAP diagnostics to the output. Any diagnostic information is included at the end of the test's results. This function does not return a value.

context.runOnly(shouldRunOnlyTests)

  • shouldRunOnlyTests {boolean} Whether or not to run only tests.

If shouldRunOnlyTests is truthy, the test context will only run tests that have the only option set. Otherwise, all tests are run. If Node.js was not started with the --test-only command-line option, this function is a no-op.

context.skip([message])

  • message {string} Optional skip message to be displayed in TAP output.

This function causes the test's output to indicate the test as skipped. If message is provided, it is included in the TAP output. Calling skip() does not terminate execution of the test function. This function does not return a value.

context.todo([message])

  • message {string} Optional TODO message to be displayed in TAP output.

This function adds a TODO directive to the test's output. If message is provided, it is included in the TAP output. Calling todo() does not terminate execution of the test function. This function does not return a value.

context.test([name][, options][, fn])

  • name {string} The name of the subtest, which is displayed when reporting test results. Default: The name property of fn, or '<anonymous>' if fn does not have a name.
  • options {Object} Configuration options for the subtest. The following properties are supported:
    • concurrency {number} The number of tests that can be run at the same time. If unspecified, subtests inherit this value from their parent. Default: 1.
    • only {boolean} If truthy, and the test context is configured to run only tests, then this test will be run. Otherwise, the test is skipped. Default: false.
    • skip {boolean|string} If truthy, the test is skipped. If a string is provided, that string is displayed in the test results as the reason for skipping the test. Default: false.
    • todo {boolean|string} If truthy, the test marked as TODO. If a string is provided, that string is displayed in the test results as the reason why the test is TODO. Default: false.
  • fn {Function|AsyncFunction} The function under test. This first argument to this function is a TestContext object. If the test uses callbacks, the callback function is passed as the second argument. Default: A no-op function.
  • Returns: {Promise} Resolved with undefined once the test completes.

This function is used to create subtests under the current test. This function behaves in the same fashion as the top level test() function.