@jsdevtools/karma-config v3.2.0
Karma Config
Karma configuration builder with sensible defaults to minimize boilerplate
Karma can be configured to do pretty much anything you can imagine, but you'll probably find yourself repeating the same boilerplate configuration in every project.
Karma Config eliminates the redundancy and boilerplate by applying sensible defaults so you only need to specify the one-off settings that are particular to your project. It can reduce a typical karma.config.js
file from dozens of lines to just two or three lines.
Features
- Applies sensible defaults, but will never override your settings
- Uses the appropraite browsers for the platform (e.g. Safari on Mac, Edge on Windows)
- Uses headless browsers when running in CI/CD
- Produces code-coverage reports if
KARMA_COVERAGE
env var is set, or if you add--coverage
when running Karma
Related Projects
- karma-host-environment Provides host environment info (user agent, Node.js version, environment variables, etc.)
Installation
Use npm to install Karma Config as a dev dependency. Be sure to install karma and karma-cli too.
npm install --save-dev karma karma-cli @jsdevtools/karma-config
Usage
Using Default values
For typical projects, the defaults may be all you need, in which case your config can be one line:
karma.conf.js
module.exports = require("@jsdevtools/karma-config")();
Depending on the operating system and whether its running in a CI/CD environment, the above code will produce this config:
{
// Defaults to the Karma-Verbose-Reporter
// See https://www.npmjs.com/package/karma-verbose-reporter
reporters: ["verbose"],
// The browsers will vary depending on the OS.
// In CI/CD environments, FirefoxHeadless and ChromeHeadless are used instead.
browsers: ["Firefox", "Chrome"],
frameworks: [
// Defaults to the Mocha test framework.
"mocha",
// This makes it easy to detect which browser your tests are running in.
// Also provides access to environment variables.
// See https://jstools.dev/karma-host-environment
"host-environment"
],
files: [
// Assumes your tests are under the "test" folder and are named *.spec.js
// or *.test.js. (.mjs and .jsx file extensions are also supported)
"test/**/*.+(spec|test).+(js|jsx|mjs)",
// Allows your tests to dynamically access any file in the "test" folder.
// Useful for loading test data from CSV or JSON files.
{ pattern: "test/**/*", included: false, served: true }
],
preprocessors: {
// Uses Webpack to bundle your tests and their dependencies
"test/**/*.+(spec|test).+(js|jsx|mjs)": ["webpack"]
},
webpack: {
// Webpack development mode it easier to debug failing tests
mode: "development",
// Inlne source maps ensure proper stack traces in errors,
// and allow you to debug your original source code rather than bundled code.
devtool: "inline-source-map",
}
}
Adding or Overriding Settings
You can explicitly specify any Karma settings, and Karma Config will honor them. Your settings will be merged with the settings that Karma Config generates. This allows you to add additional settings that aren't normally set by Karma Config. It also allows you to override anything that Karma Config would normally generate.
karma.conf.js
module.exports = require("@jsdevtools/karma-config")({
config: {
port: 12345, // Set Karma's port number
browserNoActivityTimeout: 5000, // Set Karma's inactivity timeout
browsers: ["Opera", "Safari"] // Always use these browsers, regardless of OS
webpack: {
resolve: {
extensions: [".js", ".jsx", ".ts", ".tsx"] // Configure Webpack to resolve TypeScript file
},
mode: "production", // Override the default Webpack mode
module: {
rules: [
{ test: /\.ts$/, use: "ts-loader" } // Configure Webpack to support TypeScript
]
}
}
}
});
Another option is to use Karma Config's buildConfig
function, which returns the generated config object. You can then make whatever modifications you want to it before passing it to Karma.
karma.conf.js
const { buildConfig } = require("@jsdevtools/karma-config");
module.exports = (karma) => {
// Let Karma Config generate its config, as usual
let config = buildConfig();
// Modify the config object however you want
config.port = 12345;
config.browserNoActivityTimeout = 5000;
config.browsers.push("Opera");
config.webpack.mode = "production";
config.webpack.module.rules.push({ test: /\.ts$/, use: "ts-loader" });
// Pass the final config to Karma
karma.set(config);
});
Options
Karma Config exposes a few options that allow you to control the config that it generates. Here's an example that demonstrates setting a few options:
karma.conf.js
module.exports = require("@jsdevtools/karma-config")({
sourceDir: "my/source/dir", // Override the default sourceDir ("src")
testDir: "my/test/dir", // Override the default testDir ("test")
coverage: true, // Always produce a code-coverage report
browsers: {
firefox: false, // Never test in Firefox
ie: true, // Always test in Internet Explorer
}
});
All Options
Option | Type | Default Value | Description |
---|---|---|---|
browsers | object | This object allows you to specify which browsers to test on | |
browsers.chrome | boolean | true for Linuxfalse on other platforms | Whether to test on Chrome. |
browsers.firefox | boolean | true for Linuxfalse on other platforms | Whether to test on Firefox. |
browsers.safari | boolean | true for Macfalse on other platforms | Whether to test on Safari.Can use SauceLabs if configured. |
browsers.edge | boolean | true for Windowsfalse on other platforms | Whether to test on Edge (the EdgeHTML engine, not Chromium).Can use SauceLabs if configured. |
browsers.ie | boolean | false | Whether to test on Internet Explorer.Can use SauceLabs if configured. |
sourceDir | string | src | The relative path of the source directory. |
testDir | string | test | The relative path of the test directory. |
tests | string string[] object object[] | ${testDir}/**/*.spec.js ${testDir}/**/*.test.js ${testDir}/**/*.spec.jsx ${testDir}/**/*.test.jsx ${testDir}/**/*.spec.mjs ${testDir}/**/*.test.mjs | One or more file patterns that specify your test files. These are the files that will be bundled by Webpack and run by Karma. |
fixtures | string string[] object object[] | none | One or more file patterns that specify your test fixtures. Test fixtures will be run before any of your test files are loaded, which gives you an opportunity to setup the runtime environment, load polyfills, etc. |
serve | string string[] object object[] | ${testDir}/**/* | One or more file patterns that Karma will allow to be served. This is useful for loading test data from CSV or JSON files. |
transpile | boolean | false * | Indicates whether your source code should be transpiled to ES5 syntax to support older web browsers. If set to true , then Webpack will be configured to use Babel.* If browsers.ie is enabled, then this option defaults to true when running on Windows. You can explicitly set it to false if desired. |
coverage | boolean | false | Indicates whether code coverage analysis should be performed. If set to true , then Webpack will be configured to inject code-coverage instrumentation and write code-coverage reports in the ./coverage/ directory.This option can also be enabled by setting the KARMA_COVERAGE environment variable, or by using the --coverage command-line flag when running Karma. |
platform | string | process.platform | The operating system platform (e.g. "linux", "win32", "darwin", etc.). This determines which browsers will be launched by Karma. |
CI | boolean | auto-detected | Indicates whether Karma is running in a CI environment. If set to true , then Karma will be configured to run headless browsers where possible.Karma Config will auto-detect most CI environments. This option can also be enabled by setting the CI or KARMA_CI environment variables. |
config | object | {} | Explicit Karma configuration settings. This is useful for adding additional settings that aren't normally set by Karma Config, or for overriding Karma Config's settings. |
SauceLabs
Safari, Edge, and Internet Explorer aren't supported on some CI/CD services. Karma Config allows you to use SauceLabs to test on these browsers.
Karma Config uses the Sauce Connect proxy to open a secure channel to SauceLabs. Sauce Connect is only supported on Linux and requires the SAUCE_USERNAME
and SAUCE_ACCESS_KEY
environment variables to be set.
module.exports = require("@jsdevtools/karma-config")({
browsers: {
// No need to explicitly set these, since they are tested by default on Linux
// firefox: true,
// chrome: true,
// Test these browsers using SauceLabs
ie: true,
edge: true,
safari: true,
}
});
Contributing
Contributions, enhancements, and bug-fixes are welcome! Open an issue on GitHub and submit a pull request.
Building/Testing
To build/test the project locally on your computer:
Clone this repo
git clone hhttps://github.com/JS-DevTools/karma-config.git
Install dependencies
npm install
Build the code
npm run build
Run the tests
npm test
License
Karma Config is 100% free and open-source, under the MIT license. Use it however you want.
This package is Treeware. If you use it in production, then we ask that you buy the world a tree to thank us for our work. By contributing to the Treeware forest you’ll be creating employment for local families and restoring wildlife habitats.
Big Thanks To
Thanks to these awesome companies for their support of Open Source developers ❤