5

I have these files:

File1.js

var mod1 = require('mod1');
mod1.someFunction()
...

File2.js

var File1 = require('./File1');

Now while writing unit tests for File2, is it possible to have mod1 mocked, so that I don't make calls to mod1.someFunction()?

Jesse
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arjun
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    Yes it is possible. You should read something about dependency injection. And have a look at sinon.js. – crackmigg Feb 01 '16 at 19:44
  • Take a look at this tutorial on mocking: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fgqh-OZjpYY It shows a technique you can use just for this. And yeah, definitely check out sinon. – Tad Donaghe Feb 01 '16 at 19:48
  • how will sinon address this? – dm03514 Feb 01 '16 at 19:49
  • Sinon helps with creating stubs for the functions being created, so that it's easy to verify whether they were called correctly, return the correct values, etc. – arjun Feb 04 '16 at 03:01

2 Answers2

5

I'm usually using mockery module like following:

lib/file1.js

var mod1 = require('./mod1');
mod1.someFunction();

lib/file2.js

var file1 = require('./file1');

lib/mod1.js

module.exports.someFunction = function() {
  console.log('hello from mod1');
};

test/file1.js

/* globals describe, before, beforeEach, after, afterEach, it */

'use strict';

//var chai = require('chai');
//var assert = chai.assert;
//var expect = chai.expect;
//var should = chai.should();

var mockery = require('mockery');

describe('config-dir-all', function () {

  before('before', function () {
    // Mocking the mod1 module
    var mod1Mock = {
      someFunction: function() {
        console.log('hello from mocked function');
      }
    };

    // replace the module with mock for any `require`
    mockery.registerMock('mod1', mod1Mock);

    // set additional parameters
    mockery.enable({
      useCleanCache:      true,
      //warnOnReplace:      false,
      warnOnUnregistered: false
    });
  });

  beforeEach('before', function () {

  });

  afterEach('after', function () {

  });

  after('after', function () {
    // Cleanup mockery
    after(function() {
      mockery.disable();
      mockery.deregisterMock('mod1');
    });
  });

  it('should throw if directory does not exists', function () {

    // Now File2 will use mock object instead of real mod1 module
    var file2 = require('../lib/file2');

  });

});

As it was suggested before, sinon module is very convenient to build the mocks.

alykoshin
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  • Thanks, that worked! I was actually trying Mockery before, but had the name of the mock in quotes, and didn't realize. – arjun Feb 01 '16 at 20:30
  • Hmm.. didn't work for me. Not sure why. Maybe because the nested require is using relative path for require? – geoidesic Sep 11 '18 at 00:06
2

Absolutely. There are 2 very popular node.js libraries exclusively for the purpose of mocking requires.

https://github.com/jhnns/rewire

https://github.com/mfncooper/mockery

Both of them have different API, and rewire has some strange caveats

dm03514
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