In Angular 2.0.0, I am unit testing a component that uses Router. However I get the \'Supplied parameters do not match any signature of call target.\' error. In Visual studi
Jasmine goes one better with full spy objects...
describe('Test using router', () => {
const router = jasmine.createSpyObj('Router', ['navigate']);
...
beforeEach(async(() => {
TestBed.configureTestingModule({
providers: [ { provide: Router, useValue: router } ],
...
});
});
You can also just use the RouterTestingModule and just spyOn the navigate function like this...
import { TestBed } from '@angular/core/testing';
import { RouterTestingModule } from '@angular/router/testing';
import { Router } from '@angular/router';
import { MyModule } from './my-module';
import { MyComponent } from './my-component';
describe('something', () => {
let fixture: ComponentFixture<LandingComponent>;
let router: Router;
beforeEach(() => {
TestBed.configureTestingModule({
imports: [
MyModule,
RouterTestingModule.withRoutes([]),
],
}).compileComponents();
fixture = TestBed.createComponent(MyComponent);
router = TestBed.get(Router);
});
it('should navigate', () => {
const component = fixture.componentInstance;
const navigateSpy = spyOn(router, 'navigate');
component.goSomewhere();
expect(navigateSpy).toHaveBeenCalledWith(['/expectedUrl']);
});
});
It's because the Route
has some dependencies it expects passed to its constructor.
If you're using Angular components, you shouldn't be trying to do isolated tests. You should use the Angular testing infrastructure to prepare the test environment. This means letting Angular create the component, letting it inject all the required dependencies, instead of you trying to create everything.
To get you started, you should have something like
import { TestBed } from '@angular/core/testing';
describe('Component: NavTool', () => {
let mockRouter = {
navigate: jasmine.createSpy('navigate')
};
beforeEach(() => {
TestBed.configureTestingModule({
declarations: [ NavToolComponent ],
providers: [
{ provide: Router, useValue: mockRouter },
ComponentComm
]
});
});
it('should click link', () => {
let fixture = TestBed.createComponent(NavToolComponent);
fixture.detectChanges();
let component: NavToolComponent = fixture.componentInstance;
component.clickLink('home');
expect(mockRouter.navigate).toHaveBeenCalledWith(['/home']);
});
});
Or something like that. You use the TestBed
to configure a module from scratch for the testing. You configure it pretty much the same way with an @NgModule
.
Here we are just mocking the router. Since we are just unit testing, we may not want the real routing facility. We just want to make sure that it is called with the right arguments. The mock and spy will be able to capture that call for us.
If you do want to use the real router, then you need to use the RouterTestingModule
, where you can configure routes. See an example here and here
See Also:
Here an axample if we inject Route service in our component controller:
import { TestBed, async } from '@angular/core/testing';
import { RouterTestingModule } from '@angular/router/testing'; // Because we inject service in our component
import { Router } from '@angular/router'; // Just if we need to test Route Service functionality
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
import { DummyLoginLayoutComponent } from '../../../testing/mock.components.spec'; // Because we inject service in your component
describe('AppComponent', () => {
let router: Router; // Just if we need to test Route Service functionality
beforeEach(async(() => {
TestBed.configureTestingModule({
declarations: [
AppComponent,
DummyLoginLayoutComponent // Because we inject service in our component
],
imports: [
RouterTestingModule.withRoutes([
{ path: 'login', component: DummyLoginLayoutComponent },
]) // Because we inject service in our component
],
}).compileComponents();
router = TestBed.get(Router); // Just if we need to test Route Service functionality
router.initialNavigation(); // Just if we need to test Route Service functionality
}));
it('should create the app', async(() => {
const fixture = TestBed.createComponent(AppComponent);
const app = fixture.debugElement.componentInstance;
expect(app).toBeTruthy();
}));
});
We can also test other functionalitites such as navigate()
. Just in case:
it('should call eventPage once with /register path if event is instanceof NavigationStart', fakeAsync(() => {
spyOn(analyticService, 'eventPage');
router.navigate(['register'])
.then(() => {
const baseUrl = window.location.origin;
const url = `${baseUrl}/register`;
expect(analyticService.eventPage).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1);
expect(analyticService.eventPage).toHaveBeenCalledWith(url);
});
}));
My file with all mock components (mock.components.specs.ts)
import { Component } from '@angular/core';
@Component({
selector: 'home',
template: '<div>Dummy home component</div>',
styleUrls: []
})
export class DummyHomeComponent { }