Utility to make jest tests fail when console.error()
, console.warn()
, etc. are used
Jest doesn't fail the tests when there is a console.error
. In large codebase, we can end up with the test output overloaded by a lot of errors, warnings, etc..
To prevent this, we want to fail each test that is logging to the console. We also want to conserve a clear output of the original error.
This is what this utility is doing.
yarn add -D jest-fail-on-console
or
npm install -D jest-fail-on-console
In a file used in the setupFilesAfterEnv
option of Jest, add this code:
import failOnConsole from 'jest-fail-on-console'
failOnConsole()
// or with options:
failOnConsole({
shouldFailOnWarn: false,
})
If a console.error()
is expected, then you should assert for it:
test('should log an error', () => {
jest.spyOn(console, 'error').mockImplementation()
// do your logic
expect(console.error).toHaveBeenCalledWith('your error message')
})
You can pass an object with options to the function:
Use this if you want to override the default error message of this library.
// signature
type errorMessage = (
methodName: 'assert' | 'debug' | 'error' | 'info' | 'log' | 'warn',
bold: (string: string) => string
) => string
Use this to make a test fail when a console.assert()
is logged.
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
false
Use this to make a test fail when a console.debug()
is logged.
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
false
Use this to make a test fail when a console.error()
is logged.
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
true
Use this to make a test fail when a console.info()
is logged.
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
false
Use this to make a test fail when a console.log()
is logged.
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
false
Use this to make a test fail when a console.warn()
is logged.
- Type:
boolean
- Default:
true
// signature
type silenceMessage = (
message: string,
methodName: 'assert' | 'debug' | 'error' | 'info' | 'log' | 'warn'
) => boolean
This function is called for every console method supported by this utility.
If true
is returned, the message will not show in the console and the test won't fail.
Example:
failOnConsole({
silenceMessage: (errorMessage) => {
if (/Not implemented: navigation/.test(errorMessage)) {
return true
}
return false
},
})
Use this if you want to ignore checks introduced by this library for specific tests determined by
the return of the callback function. Return false
if you do not want to skip console checks for
the specific test and return true
if you would like to skip it.
const ignoreList = [/.*components\/SomeComponent.test.tsx/]
failOnConsole({
skipTest: ({ testPath }) => {
for (const pathExp of ignoreList) {
const result = pathExp.test(testPath)
if (result) return true
}
return false
},
})
This project is maintained by Valentin Hervieu.
This project was originally part of @ricardo-ch organisation because I (Valentin) was working at Ricardo. After leaving this company, they gracefully accepted to transfer the project to me. ❤️
Most of the logic is taken from React's setupTests file.