I\'m trying to figure out on how to test internal (i.e. not exported) functions in nodejs (preferably with mocha or jasmine). And i have no idea!
Let say I have a mo
The trick is to set the NODE_ENV
environment variable to something like test
and then conditionally export it.
Assuming you've not globally installed mocha, you could have a Makefile in the root of your app directory that contains the following:
REPORTER = dot
test:
@NODE_ENV=test ./node_modules/.bin/mocha \
--recursive --reporter $(REPORTER) --ui bbd
.PHONY: test
This make file sets up the NODE_ENV before running mocha. You can then run your mocha tests with make test
at the command line.
Now, you can conditionally export your function that isn't usually exported only when your mocha tests are running:
function exported(i) {
return notExported(i) + 1;
}
function notExported(i) {
return i*2;
}
if (process.env.NODE_ENV === "test") {
exports.notExported = notExported;
}
exports.exported = exported;
The other answer suggested using a vm module to evaluate the file, but this doesn't work and throws an error stating that exports is not defined.
EDIT:
Loading a module using vm
can cause unexpected behavior (e.g. the instanceof
operator no longer works with objects that are created in such a module because the global prototypes are different from those used in module loaded normally with require
). I no longer use the below technique and instead use the rewire module. It works wonderfully. Here's my original answer:
Elaborating on srosh's answer...
It feels a bit hacky, but I wrote a simple "test_utils.js" module that should allow you to do what you want without having conditional exports in your application modules:
var Script = require('vm').Script,
fs = require('fs'),
path = require('path'),
mod = require('module');
exports.expose = function(filePath) {
filePath = path.resolve(__dirname, filePath);
var src = fs.readFileSync(filePath, 'utf8');
var context = {
parent: module.parent, paths: module.paths,
console: console, exports: {}};
context.module = context;
context.require = function (file){
return mod.prototype.require.call(context, file);};
(new Script(src)).runInNewContext(context);
return context;};
There are some more things that are included in a node module's gobal module
object that might also need to go into the context
object above, but this is the minimum set that I need for it to work.
Here's an example using mocha BDD:
var util = require('./test_utils.js'),
assert = require('assert');
var appModule = util.expose('/path/to/module/modName.js');
describe('appModule', function(){
it('should test notExposed', function(){
assert.equal(6, appModule.notExported(3));
});
});