Manual Mocks
Manual mocks are used to stub out functionality with mock data. For example, instead of accessing a remote resource like a website or a database, you might want to create a manual mock that allows you to use fake data. This ensures your tests will be fast and not flaky.
Manual mocks are defined by writing a module in a __mocks__/
subdirectory
immediately adjacent to the module. For example, to mock a module called
user
in the models
directory, create a file called user.js
and
put it in the models/__mocks__
directory. If the module you are mocking is
a node module (eg: fs
), the mock should be placed in the same parent
directory as the node_modules
folder. Eg:
node_modules __mocks__ fs.js __tests__ models __mocks__ user.js user.js views config
When a manual mock exists for a given module, Jest's module system will use that module when explicitly calling jest.mock('moduleName')
. However, manual mocks will take precedence over node modules even if jest.mock('moduleName')
is not called. To opt out of this behavior you will need to explicitly call jest.unmock('moduleName')
in tests that should use the actual module implementation.
Here's a contrived example where we have a module that provides a summary of all the files in a given directory.
// FileSummarizer.js 'use strict'; const fs = require('fs'); function summarizeFilesInDirectorySync(directory) { return fs.readdirSync(directory).map(fileName => ({ fileName, directory, })); } exports.summarizeFilesInDirectorySync = summarizeFilesInDirectorySync;
Since we'd like our tests to avoid actually hitting the disk (that's pretty
slow and fragile), we create a manual mock for the fs
module by extending an
automatic mock. Our manual mock will implement custom versions of the fs
APIs
that we can build on for our tests:
// __mocks__/fs.js 'use strict'; const path = require('path'); const fs = jest.genMockFromModule('fs'); // This is a custom function that our tests can use during setup to specify // what the files on the "mock" filesystem should look like when any of the // `fs` APIs are used. let mockFiles = Object.create(null); function __setMockFiles(newMockFiles) { mockFiles = Object.create(null); for (const file in newMockFiles) { const dir = path.dirname(file); if (!mockFiles[dir]) { mockFiles[dir] = []; } mockFiles[dir].push(path.basename(file)); } } // A custom version of `readdirSync` that reads from the special mocked out // file list set via __setMockFiles function readdirSync(directoryPath) { return mockFiles[directoryPath] || []; } fs.__setMockFiles = __setMockFiles; fs.readdirSync = readdirSync; module.exports = fs;
Now we write our test:
// __tests__/FileSummarizer-test.js 'use strict'; jest.mock('fs'); describe('listFilesInDirectorySync', () => { const MOCK_FILE_INFO = { '/path/to/file1.js': 'console.log("file1 contents");', '/path/to/file2.txt': 'file2 contents', }; beforeEach(() => { // Set up some mocked out file info before each test require('fs').__setMockFiles(MOCK_FILE_INFO); }); test('includes all files in the directory in the summary', () => { const FileSummarizer = require('../FileSummarizer'); const fileSummary = FileSummarizer.summarizeFilesInDirectorySync( '/path/to' ); expect(fileSummary.length).toBe(2); }); });
The example mock shown here uses jest.genMockFromModule
to generate an automatic mock, and overrides its default behavior. This is the
recommended approach, but is completely optional. If you do not want to use the
automatic mock at all, you can simply export your own functions from the mock
file. One downside to fully manual mocks is that they're manual –
meaning you have to manually update them any time the module they are mocking
changes. Because of this, it's best to use or extend the automatic mock when it
works for your needs.
To ensure that a manual mock and its real implementation stay in sync, it might be useful to require the real module using require.requireActual(moduleName)
in your manual mock and amending it with mock functions before exporting it.
The code for this example is available at examples/manual_mocks.
Using with ES module imports #
If you're using ES module imports
then you'll normally be inclined to put your import
statements at the top of
the test file. But often you need to instruct Jest to use a mock before modules
use it. For this reason, Jest will automatically hoist jest.mock
calls to the
top of the module (before any imports). To learn more about this and see it in
action, see this repo.