Setup and Teardown
Often while writing tests you have some setup work that needs to happen before tests run, and you have some finishing work that needs to happen after tests run. Jest provides helper functions to handle this.
Repeating Setup For Many Tests #
If you have some work you need to do repeatedly for many tests, you can use beforeEach
and afterEach
.
For example, let's say that several tests interact with a database of cities. You have a method initializeCityDatabase()
that must be called before each of these tests, and a method clearCityDatabase()
that must be called after each of these tests. You can do this with:
beforeEach(() => { initializeCityDatabase(); }); afterEach(() => { clearCityDatabase(); }); test('city database has Vienna', () => { expect(isCity('Vienna')).toBeTruthy(); }); test('city database has San Juan', () => { expect(isCity('San Juan')).toBeTruthy(); });
beforeEach
and afterEach
can handle asynchronous code in the same ways that tests can handle asynchronous code - they can either take a done
parameter or return a promise. For example, if initializeCityDatabase()
returned a promise that resolved when the database was initialized, we would want to return that promise:
beforeEach(() => { return initializeCityDatabase(); });
One-Time Setup #
In some cases, you only need to do setup once, at the beginning of a file. This can be especially bothersome when the setup is asynchronous, so you can't just do it inline. Jest provides beforeAll
and afterAll
to handle this situation.
For example, if both initializeCityDatabase
and clearCityDatabase
returned promises, and the city database could be reused between tests, we could change our test code to:
beforeAll(() => { return initializeCityDatabase(); }); afterAll(() => { return clearCityDatabase(); }); test('city database has Vienna', () => { expect(isCity('Vienna')).toBeTruthy(); }); test('city database has San Juan', () => { expect(isCity('San Juan')).toBeTruthy(); });
Scoping #
By default, the before
and after
blocks apply to every test in a file. You can also group tests together using a describe
block. When they are inside a describe
block, the before
and after
blocks only apply to the tests within that describe
block.
For example, let's say we had not just a city database, but also a food database. We could do different setup for different tests:
// Applies to all tests in this file beforeEach(() => { return initializeCityDatabase(); }); test('city database has Vienna', () => { expect(isCity('Vienna')).toBeTruthy(); }); test('city database has San Juan', () => { expect(isCity('San Juan')).toBeTruthy(); }); describe('matching cities to foods', () => { // Applies only to tests in this describe block beforeEach(() => { return initializeFoodDatabase(); }); test('Vienna <3 sausage', () => { expect(isValidCityFoodPair('Vienna', 'Wiener Schnitzel')); }); test('San Juan <3 plantains', () => { expect(isValidCityFoodPair('San Juan', 'Mofongo')); }); });
General Advice #
If a test is failing, one of the first things to check should be whether the test is failing when it's the only test that runs. In Jest it's simple to run only one test - just temporarily change that test
command to a test.only
:
test.only('this will be the only test that runs', () => { expect(true).toBe(false); }); test('this test will not run', () => { expect('A').toBe('A'); });
If you have a test that often fails when it's run as part of a larger suite, but doesn't fail when you run it alone, it's a good bet that something from a different test is interfering with this one. You can often fix this by clearing some shared state with beforeEach
. If you're not sure whether some shared state is being modified, you can also try a beforeEach
that just logs data.