โ๏ธ๐น Run Mocha tests anywhere - get reporting in your terminal ๐นโ๏ธ
I wanted to run a single Mocha test suite across multiple environments (Node.js, Electron and React-Native) with ideally no changes to the test suite. I found running the tests inside an Electron or a React-Native app, was difficult - it was hard to control it, start / stop external services and get reporting on which tests pass or fail.
I would appreciate a shout-out on Twitter @kraenhansen if you're actually using this or have suggestions on how to improve the library and its interface.
Install the client in the package that will be running tests. This will probably be an example app in a particular environment (React Native, Electron, Web app etc.) from which you want to run your tests.
npm install mocha-remote-client --save
Create an instance of the client and add tests.
import { Client } from "mocha-remote-client";
// Create a client, which will automatically connect to the server on the default port (8090)
const client = new Client({
// Called when the server asks the client to run
tests: () => {
// write your tests here or require a package that calls the mocha globals
describe("my thing", () => {
it("works", () => {
// yay!
});
});
},
});
By default, the client automatically (re)connects to the server and disconnects once its testing has ended.
Install the Mocha Remote CLI into your project.
npm install mocha-remote-cli --save-dev
To start the server, simply run the Mocha Remote CLI from your terminal
npx mocha-remote
The CLI takes a couple of runtime parameters, run the CLI with --help
to get an overview.
> npx mocha-remote --help
__ __
____ ___ ____ _____/ /_ ____ _ ________ ____ ___ ____ / /____
/ __ `__ \/ __ \/ ___/ __ \/ __ `/ / ___/ _ \/ __ `__ \/ __ \/ __/ _ \
/ / / / / / /_/ / /__/ / / / /_/ / / / / __/ / / / / / /_/ / /_/ __/
/_/ /_/ /_/\____/\___/_/ /_/\__,_/ /_/ \___/_/ /_/ /_/\____/\__/\___/
Options:
-H, --hostname Network hostname to use when
listening for clients
[default: "0.0.0.0"]
-P, --port Network port to use when listening
for clients [default: 8090]
-I, --id Connections not matching this will
be closed [default: "default"]
-g, --grep Only run tests matching this string
or regexp [string]
-i, --invert Inverts --grep matches
[boolean] [default: false]
-w, --watch Keep the server running after a test
has ended [boolean] [default: false]
-c, --context Runtime context sent to client when
starting a run (<k=v,[k1=v1,..]>)
[array] [default: []]
-R, --reporter Specify reporter to use
[default: "spec"]
-O, --reporter-option, Reporter-specific options
--reporter-options (<k=v,[k1=v1,..]>)
[array] [default: []]
-s, --silent Print less to stdout
[boolean] [default: false]
-e, --exit-on-error Exit immediately if an error occurs
[boolean] [default: false]
-v, --version Show version number & exit [boolean]
-h, --help Show help [boolean]
The default behavior of the CLI is to listen for a client connecting, ask the client to run its tests and then exit with the number of failures as exit code, once the connected client ends the run.
The CLI takes an optional sub-command as positional runtime argument, which will be spawned when the server has started and killed when the CLI exits. Additionally, the server will kill itself if the sub-command exits.
npx mocha-remote -- node ./start-client.js
This can be used to "wrap" a command that starts and runs the client-side of the tests (such as the React Native Metro bundler and the command to start the iOS simulator - see the MochaRemoteExample app).
If you want to iterate your test suite or implementation, use the --watch
flag. This will ask clients to run their tests as they connect but keep the server process running until it gets interrupted (pressing Ctrl + C).
As an alternative, run with environment variable MOCHA_REMOTE_WATCH=true
to enable watch mode by default.
The --hostname
and --port
arguments controls the TCP settings of the underlying WebSocket Server. The default --hostname
of 0.0.0.0
makes the socket listen on all network interfaces and the default port is 8090
. Setting the port to 0 (zero) will assign the first available port, this is useful if you want to run multiple instances of the CLI / Server without having to worry about picking available ports for each.
To avoid cross-talk when running multiple clients that might potentially connect back, use an --id
to reject connections from clients using an unexpected WebSocket protocol / id.
The connection URL, port and ID is exposed to the sub-command as environment variables:
MOCHA_REMOTE_URL=ws://0.0.0.0:8090
MOCHA_REMOTE_PORT=8090
MOCHA_REMOTE_ID=default
Run the CLI with environment variables MOCHA_REMOTE_HOST
, MOCHA_REMOTE_PORT
, MOCHA_REMOTE_ID
to provide alternative default values.
In the case where you need your client-side tests to know information which is only available when you're running the tests, such as the URL of a backend server or secret that you don't want to embed into the client applications source-code, you can specify a --context
(can be repeated) parameter with key=value pairs (separated by comma) which is sent to the client and exposed when tests are loaded.
npx mocha-remote --context backendUrl=http://localhost:1234 --context secret=very-secure-indeed
The client can now read these values of the context when loading the tests:
new Client({
tests: context => {
// Construct something from the values provided by the context
const app = new MyApp({
backendUrl: context.backendUrl,
secret: context.secret,
});
// Use that something in the tests
describe("my app", () => {
it("connects", async () => {
await app.connect();
});
});
}
});
Run with environment variable MOCHA_REMOTE_CONTEXT=secret=very-secure-indeed
to provide a default context.
See the "grep" section of the Mocha documentation: https://mochajs.org/#-grep-regexp-g-regexp
Cause Mocha to only run tests matching the given regexp, which is internally compiled to a RegExp.
Run with environment variable MOCHA_REMOTE_GREP=whatever
to provide a default grep expression.
See the "invert" section of the Mocha documentation: https://mochajs.org/#-invert
Use the inverse of the match specified by --grep
Run with environment variable MOCHA_REMOTE_INVERT=true
to invert grep by default.
See the "reporters" section of the Mocha documentation for more information on these: https://mochajs.org/#reporters
Run with environment variable MOCHA_REMOTE_REPORTER=min
to provide a default reporter (in this case "min").
If an error occurs client-side, while loading tests, you might want to ensure your CI job fails instead of simply reporting "0 passing". To get this behavior, run with --exit-on-error
(or MOCHA_REMOTE_EXIT_ON_ERROR=true
).
The mocha-remote-react-native
package implements React Native components which wraps the Client
from mocha-remote-client
:
mocha-remote/examples/expo/App.tsx
Lines 1 to 49 in 38dbf3b
Install the server in the package from where you want reporting, probably a simple JavaScript run by Node.js.
npm install mocha-remote-server --save-dev
Create an instance of the server, start it, start your client (somehow), run the tests remote and exit appropriately.
// Import if the platform supports it
import { Server } from "mocha-remote-server";
// 1. Create an instance of the server
const server = new Server();
// 2. Start the server
server.start().then(() => {
console.log(`Mocha Remote server is listening on ${server.getUrl()}`);
// 3. Do whatever you need to start the client ...
// 4. Ask the server to run the remote tests
server.run((failures) => {
// 5. Optionally kill the server process with an appropriate status code
process.exit(failures > 0 ? 1 : 0);
});
}, (err) => {
console.error(`Failed to start the server: ${err.stack}`);
process.exit(1);
});
- If you only need to run your tests in browsers, the Karma test runner could be a good alternative to this package. If you're developing a library that must work in other JavaScript environments, such as React Native, I haven't found any other alternatives.
- I need help to move this forward, please create an issue (or even better a PR) if you have trouble using it.
- Not all reporters behave exactly the same on the server side as if they were running without this library. Currently the integration tests are running with "base", "dot", "doc", "spec", "list", "tap", "min" and "nyan". See the integration tests for a detailed description on why and how severely other reporters are failing.
Attributions for the logo:
- Original Mocha logo by Dick DeLeon ddeleon@decipherinc.com and Christopher Hiller boneskull@boneskull.com.
- Hand pointing by creative outlet from the Noun Project.
- Wireless by Piotrek Chuchla from the Noun Project