1.1.0 • Published 7 years ago

jasmine-promise-tools v1.1.0

Weekly downloads
1,245
License
Apache-2.0
Repository
bitbucket
Last release
7 years ago

build-status

Testing promises in Jasmine can be tricky and error-prone. This library has a few simple and general purpose functions to make it safer and easier to write async promise-based tests in Jasmine.

Functionality

All these functions provide detailed and helpful output in the case of a test failure.

  • willResolve function converts a promise returning function into a Jasmine async function.
  • expectToReject function fails the test if the promise resolves unexpectedly.
  • failTest function returns a function which will fail a Jasmine async test.

Example usage

It's recommended to add a Jasmine helper file so willResolve() and expectToReject() are available as globals for all your tests.

const {willResolve, expectToReject} = require('jasmine-promise-tools');

global.willResolve = willResolve;
global.expectToReject = expectToReject;
it('passes when a promise is resolved', willResolve(() => {
    return doThingAndSucceed()
        .then(() => {
            expect(1).toBe(1);
        });
}));

it('passes when you expect a promise to reject', willResolve(() => {
    const promise = doThingAndFail();

    return expectToReject(promise)
        .then((err) => {
            expect(err).toBe(42);
        });
}));

Development guide

Install dependencies

npm install

Useful commands

# Run all checks
npm test

# Run just the jasmine tests
npm run test:jasmine

# Run just the linter
npm run test:lint

Perform a release

npm version 99.98.97
npm publish
git push
git push --tags

Contributors

Pull requests, issues and comments welcome. For pull requests:

  • Add tests for new features and bug fixes
  • Follow the existing style
  • Separate unrelated changes into multiple pull requests

See the existing issues for things to start contributing.

For bigger changes, make sure you start a discussion first by creating an issue and explaining the intended change.

Atlassian requires contributors to sign a Contributor License Agreement, known as a CLA. This serves as a record stating that the contributor is entitled to contribute the code/documentation/translation to the project and is willing to have it used in distributions and derivative works (or is willing to transfer ownership).

License

Copyright (c) 2016 Atlassian and others. Apache 2.0 licensed, see LICENSE file.

1.1.0

7 years ago

1.0.6

7 years ago

1.0.5

8 years ago

1.0.4

8 years ago

1.0.3

8 years ago

1.0.2

8 years ago

1.0.1

8 years ago

1.0.0

8 years ago