A plugin extending the default Jest behavior to fail any tests which do not perform a runtime assertion.
Asynchronous tests could be challenging to get right, particularly for junior developers or engineers new to async JavaScript. The most common mistake is an async test which does not fire any assertions, either due to logic or even syntax errors. Static analysis (linters) gets close to pointing out the issues, but is not enough to catch logic mistakes. For this, we require a runtime check that some assertion was run during the test.
Jest, unfortunately, has no "failWithoutAssertions" configuration options, so this plugin aims to remedy that. The plugin patches the Jest API to force tests without any assertions to fail. In addition to failing tests without assertions this plugin also patches a bug in Jest which leads to assertions "leaking" accross different tests.
npm i -D jest-plugin-must-assert
or
yarn add -D jest-plugin-must-assert
For default behavior, add the plugin to your setup files.
jest-plugin-must-assert
- Default supported environment,node
jest-plugin-must-assert/jsdom
- JSDOM environment support. Necessary for mocking window task functions likesetTimeout
when usingjest-environment-jsdom
. Useful for React tests.
You may import the plugin into any test file you need additional safeguard for async logic.
import 'jest-plugin-must-assert';
test('some logic', () => {
setTimeout(() => expect(1).toBe(2)); // will be caught by the plugin
...
});
Alternatively, you can enable the plugin for an entire test suite by adding it to your jest configuration.
...
setupFilesAfterEnv: ['jest-plugin-must-assert'],
...
You may also extend the default behavior with the following, manual configuration.
// <rootDir>/must-assert-setup.js
const patchJestAPI = require('jest-plugin-must-assert/manual');
patchJestAPI({
/**
* Control the task execution during a test. You may log a custom warning message
* from here, throw an error etc.
*
* Default: The default behavior is that mismatched testIds result in ignoring of the task
* and a warning message.
*
* @param {Object} options Options for the handler (see below)
*
* Options:
* @param {Number} originTestId The unique ID of the test where the task is oginating from
* @param {Number} currentTestId The unique ID of the currently executing test
* @param {String} testName The name of the test which triggered this event
* @param {Object} task The task which is about to be invoked
* @param {String} task.type The type of task being invoked (micro/macro task)
* @param {String} task.source The source of the taks ("promise.then", "setTimeout" etc)
* @param {Object} logger The logger object (defaults to console)
* @param {Function} getStackTrace Returns the stack-trace of the stack
*
* @throws {Error} Default: throws. This function _may_ throw an error instead of logging it if
* you would like a stack trace back to the origin of the task being ignored.
*
* @return {Boolean} true/false for whether or not the task should execute
*/
onInvokeTask({
originZoneId,
currentZoneId,
testName,
task,
}) {
// This is the default implementation of onInvokeTask. The error thrown will
// be displayed as a logger.warn with a cleaned up stack trace.
if (originZoneId !== currentZoneId) {
throw new Error(
`Test "${testName}" is attempting to invoke a ${task.type}(${task.source}) after test completion. Ignoring`
);
}
return true;
},
/**
* Logger DI. Used by the internal methods to log warnings/errors. Should match console API.
*/
logger,
/**
* Regex list of what functions should be REMOVED from the stack traces of cancelled tasks.
* These are the default values. Overwriting this option removes these values
*/
ignoreStack = [/Zone/, /zone\.js/, /node_modules/],
});
Then in your config file:
...
setupFilesAfterEnv: [
'<rootDir>/must-assert-setup'
],
...
There are some performance implications of using this plugin as it does add a bit of overhead, but from testing it's a trivial increase. This plugin has been tested within a project with 1600+ test suites and over 10k individual tests, with only a negligible slow-down.