@smartive/testcafe-utils
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1.3.3 • Public • Published

@smartive/testcafe-utils

This package is a toolbox which contains various helpers we often use when working with TestCafe.

FakeTimers

The FakeTimers class is a TestCafe adaption of (@sinonjs/fake-timers)[https://github.com/sinonjs/fake-timers] and helps to mock/intercept time related functionality.

From their website:

@sinonjs/fake-timers can be used to simulate passing time in automated tests and other situations where you want the scheduling semantics, but don't want to actually wait.

Example

// The following snippet does not include all needed imports and code it is intended
// to give you a starting point and an idea how this class can be used.

import { FakeTimers } from '@smartive/testcafe-utils';

fixture('My Fixture').page`http://localhost:3000`;

const mockClock = new FakeTimers({ toFake: ['setTimeout'] });

test.clientScripts([
  // IMPORTANT!
  // This ensures the mock is loaded before your app under test.
  mockClock.clientScript(),
])('My Test', (t) =>
  t
    .click(page.loadPeople)
    .expect(page.spinner.exists)
    .ok()

    // It is also possible to `await mockClock.execute({ t, method: 'next', methodArgs: [] });`
    // instead of chaining the command.
    .expect(mockClock.execute({ t, method: 'next', methodArgs: [] }))

    .ok()
    .expect(page.list.childElementCount)
    .gt(0)
    .click(page.loadMorePeople)
    .expect(page.spinner.exists)
    .ok()
);

FetchInterceptor or XHRInterceptor

The FetchInterceptor class can be used to intercept the window.fetch-calls within the browser and the XHRInterceptor does the same for XMLHttpRequest. Both classes take a key/value object as constructor argument, where the values are string, RegExp or { method: HTTPMethod, pattern: RegExp | string } to intercept an URL. Afterwards it is possible to resolve a running fetch call at any desired time with await fetchInterceptor.resolve('interceptURLKey')({ t }). (where t is the TestCafe TestController)

Example

The example only shows the FetchInterceptor because the XHRInterceptor is used the same way.

// The following snippet does not include all needed imports and code it is intended
// to give you a starting point and an idea how this class can be used.

import { FetchInterceptor } from '@smartive/testcafe-utils';

fixture('My Fixture').page`http://localhost:3000`;

const fetchInterceptor = new FetchInterceptor({
  fetchLuke: 'https://swapi.dev/api/people/1/',
  fetchPeople: /.+swapi\.dev.+\/people\/$/,
  fetchMore: { method: 'GET', pattern: /.+swapi\.dev.+\/people\/\?page=.+/ },
});

test.clientScripts([
  // IMPORTANT!
  // This ensures the mock is loaded before your app under test.
  fetchInterceptor.clientScript(),
])('My Test', async (t) => {
  await t.click(page.loadPeople).expect(page.spinner.exists).ok();

  // It is also possible to "inline/chain" `fetchInterceptor.resolve` like
  // `.expect(fetchInterceptor.resolve('fetchPeople')({ t })).ok()`
  await fetchInterceptor.resolve('fetchPeople')({ t });

  await t
    .expect(page.list.childElementCount)
    .gt(0)
    .click(page.loadMorePeople)
    .expect(page.spinner.exists)
    .ok();
  await fetchInterceptor.resolve('fetchMore')({ t });
  await t
    .expect(page.list.childElementCount)
    .gt(10)
    .click(page.loadLuke)
    .expect(page.spinner.exists)
    .ok();
  await fetchInterceptor.resolve('fetchLuke')({ t });
  await t.expect(detailPage.title.textContent).eql('Luke Skywalker');
});

mockHeaders

The mockHeaders object can be used to fix the cross origin problem which often occurs because TestCafe does not set an often desired access-control-allow-credentials and access-control-allow-origin header property.

Example

import { mockHeaders } from '@smartive/testcafe-utils';
import { RequestMock } from 'testcafe';

const mockCrossOriginRequest = RequestMock()
  .onRequestTo(({ method, url }) => method === 'post' && RegExp(/\/people\/$/).test(url))
  .respond(null, 200, mockHeaders);

mockResponse

The mockResponse function can be used to simplify the creation of mock responses. Additionally it adds a new header field x-testcafe-mock to make a mocked request better traceable.

Example

import { mockResponse } from '@smartive/testcafe-utils';
import { RequestMock } from 'testcafe';

const PeopleRequestMock = RequestMock()
  .onRequestTo(/.+swapi\.dev.+\/people\/$/)
  .respond(
    mockResponse(
      {}, // response data
      400, // statusCode (default: 200)
      'PUT', // method (default: 'GET') somehow TestCafe needs this on response object ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
      { 'my-foobar-header': 42 } // additionalHeaders (default: {})
    )
  );

RequestCallCountMock

The RequestCallCountMock class can be used to add a RequestMock to a TestCafe fixture or test which returns the given responses according to the call count. An extra header 'x-testcafe-call-count' will be added to the response to make a mocked request better traceable.

Example

import { mockResponse, RequestCallCountMock } from '@smartive/testcafe-utils';

test.requestHooks([
  new RequestCallCountMock(/.+swapi\.dev.+\/people\/$/, [
    { body: mockResponse(['a', 'b', 'c']) }, // On the first api call to `/.+swapi\.dev.+\/people\/$/` the response is `['a', 'b', 'c']`
    { body: mockResponse([1, 2, 3]) }, // on the second call the response is `[1,2,3]`
    { body: mockResponse({}, 400) }, // on the third and all following calls the repsonse is a `statusCode` 400 and `{}`
  ]),
]);

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  • smartive-ci
  • mfeltscher
  • petermanser
  • cbuehler
  • dwirz
  • deniaz
  • nmaro