4.5 KiB
layout | title |
---|---|
default | Asynchronous Specs |
Asynchronous Specs
You may be thinking, "That's all very nice, but what's this about asynchronous tests?"
Well, say you need to make a call that is asynchronous - an AJAX API, event callback, or some other JavaScript library. That is, the call returns immediately, yet you want to make expectations 'at some point in the future' after some magic happens in the background.
Jasmine allows you to do this with runs()
, waits()
and waitsFor()
blocks.
runs(function)
runs()
blocks by themselves simply run as if they were called directly. The following snippets of code provide similar results:
{% highlight javascript %} it('should be a test', function () { var foo = 0 foo++;
expect(foo).toEqual(1); }); {% endhighlight %}
and
{% highlight javascript %} it('should be a test', function () { runs( function () { var foo = 0 foo++;
expect(foo).toEqual(1);
}); }); {% endhighlight %}
Multiple runs()
blocks in a spec will run serially. For example,
{% highlight javascript %} it('should be a test', function () { runs( function () { var foo = 0 foo++;
expect(foo).toEqual(1);
}); runs( function () { var bar = 0 bar++;
expect(bar).toEqual(1);
}); }); {% endhighlight %}
runs()
blocks share functional scope -- this
properties will be common to all blocks, but declared var
's will not!
{% highlight javascript %} it('should be a test', function () { runs( function () { this.foo = 0 this.foo++; var bar = 0; bar++;
expect(this.foo).toEqual(1);
expect(bar).toEqual(1);
}); runs( function () { this.foo++; var bar = 0 bar++;
expect(foo).toEqual(2);
expect(bar).toEqual(1);
}); }); {% endhighlight %}
waits(timeout)
runs()
blocks exist so you can test asynchronous processes. The function waits()
works with runs()
to provide a naive
timeout before the next block is run. You supply a time to wait before the next runs()
function is executed. For example:
{% highlight javascript %} it('should be a test', function () { runs(function () { this.foo = 0; var that = this; setTimeout(function () { that.foo++; }, 250); });
runs(function () { expect(this.foo).toEqual(0); });
waits(500);
runs(function () { expect(this.foo).toEqual(1); }); }); {% endhighlight %}
What's happening here?
- The first call to
runs()
sets call for 1/4 of a second in the future that incrementsthis.foo
. - The second
runs()
is executed immediately and then verifies thatthis.foo
was indeed initialized to zero in the previousruns()
. - Then we wait for half a second.
- Then the last call to
runs()
expects thatthis.foo
was incremented by thesetTimeout
.
waits()
allows you to pause the spec for a fixed period of time, in order to give your code the opportunity to perform
some other operation. But what if you don't know exactly how long you need to wait?
waitsFor(function, optional message, optional timeout)
waitsFor()
provides a better interface for pausing your spec until some other work has completed. Jasmine will wait until
the provided function returns true
before continuing with the next block. This may mean waiting an arbitrary period of
time, or you may specify a maxiumum period in milliseconds before timing out:
{% highlight javascript %} describe('Spreadsheet', function() { it('should calculate the total asynchronously', function () { var spreadsheet = new Spreadsheet(); spreadsheet.fillWith(lotsOfFixureDataValues()); spreadsheet.asynchronouslyCalculateTotal();
waitsFor(function() {
return spreadsheet.calculationIsComplete();
}, "Spreadsheet calculation never completed", 10000);
runs(function () {
expect(spreadsheet.total).toEqual(123456);
});
}); }); {% endhighlight %}
In this example, we create a spreadsheet and fill it with some sample data. We then ask the spreadsheet to start calculating
its total, which presumably is a slow operation and therefore happens asynchronously. We ask Jasmine to wait until the
spreadsheet's calculation work is complete (or up to 10 seconds, whichever comes first) before continuing with the rest of
the spec. If the calculation finishes within the allotted 10 seconds, Jasmine continues on to the final runs()
block, where
it validates the calculation. If the spreadsheet hasn't finished calculations within 10 seconds, the spec stops and reports
a spec failure with the message given in the waitsFor()
block.