I'm trying to use Jasmine 2.0 to write unit tests for some logic in an AngularJS app, but the logic is inside an event listener. From the controller:
window.addEventListener('message', function(e) {
if (e.data === "sendMessage()") {
$scope.submit();
}
}, false);
And from the test file:
describe("post message", function() {
beforeEach(function(done) {
var controller = createController(controllerParams);
spyOn($scope, 'submit');
window.postMessage('sendMessage()', '*');
done();
});
it('should submit on a sent message', function (done) {
expect($scope.submit).toHaveBeenCalled();
done();
});
});
But the test fails, the spy never being hit. Extra info from putting in console debug statements:
window.addEventListener
in the controller IS getting called.beforeEach
and it
block are both getting called.What is my test missing here?
It is happening because in your beforeEach
block you call window.postMessage()
(which is asynchronous and you don't know when it's gonna execute) and then you call done()
right after it as it would be synchronous code. But window.postMessage()
as async, and basically you need to call done()
when your async operation is complete. It could be done like this:
beforeEach(function(done) {
spyOn(someObject, 'submit').and.callFake(function () {
done();
});
});
So when your spy executes, then async operation is considered complete.
This could be expressed even shorter:
beforeEach(function(done) {
spyOn(someObject, 'submit').and.callFake(done);
});
Here is the full code:
var someObject = {
submit: function () {
console.log('Submit');
}
};
window.addEventListener('message', function(e) {
if (e.data === "sendMessage()") {
someObject.submit();
}
}, false);
// Test
describe('window.postMessage', function () {
beforeEach(function(done) {
spyOn(someObject, 'submit').and.callFake(function () {
done();
});
window.postMessage('sendMessage()', '*');
});
it('should submit on a sent message', function () {
expect(someObject.submit).toHaveBeenCalled();
});
});
See a working JS Bin: http://jsbin.com/xikewogagu/1/edit?html,js,console,output
I did not use Angular in this sample because it is reproducible with a pure JS.
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