Are there any good Node.js (server-side JavaScript) unit testing frameworks currently out there?
I'm looking for something a little deeper than the provided Assert module.
I ended up using Nodeunit and am really happy with it.
I was using Expresso originally, but the fact that it runs tests in parallel caused a few problems. (For example, using database fixtures doesn't work well in this situation.)
.done()
imho.
.done()
to accommodate asynchronous testing. I agree it can be a little unwieldy at times, but it has a mighty fine reason for doing it this way.
I was also looking for a decent test framework for node and found Mocha. It is the official successor to Expresso and seems very mature.
It allows to plug-in different assertion libraries, it offers reporters for code coverage and other things (you can plug-in your own). It can run synchronously or asynchronously and it has a concise API.
I will give it a try and report back...
After an incredible amount of time dedicated to other projects I finally came back to a JavaScript project and had time to play around with mocha. I can seriously recommend using it. The tests read very nicely, integration with Gulp.js is great and tests run very fast. I was able to setup automatic standalone as well as in-browser (Browserify) test runs and corresponding code coverage reports in about half a day (most of the time spent on understanding how to use Browserify from Gulp.js). To me, Mocha seems a very good choice for a testing framework.
I am still very convinced about Mocha. Integration with Chai allows to plugin different assertion styles. You can checkout a working setup in this GitHub project. I am using it with karma now, integrating code coverage report, automatic watchers and good integration with IntelliJ IDEA.
Personally I've stuck with Expresso, but there are a bunch of different frameworks out there, accommodating most testing styles.
Joyent has an extensive list; give that a go.
vows is a solid unit testing library for Node.js, but the syntax is tedious.
I've written a thin abstraction called vows-fluent which makes the API chainable.
And I've written another abstraction, [vows-is] which builds on vows-fluent and exposes a BDD style syntax.
An example would be
var is = require("vows-is");
is.suite("testing is fun").batch()
.context("is testing fun?")
.topic.is("yes")
.vow.it.should.equal("yes")
.suite().run({
reporter: is.reporter
});
I think among various testing frameworks available, Mocha is the most latest, and very simple to implement. Here is a wonderful tutorial about how to use it:
How to build and test your Rest API with Node.js, Express and Mocha
If you are familiar with QUnit, you could use node-qunit which is a sort of a node wrapper around QUnit's existing framework.
test-studio is an npm package that provides a powerful, web based front end for unit testing. It supports things like executing individual or groups of tests and stepping node-inspector into individual tests. It currently supports mocha and more frameworks will be supported in future given demand.
Read more about it here.
Disclaimer: I am the author.
Originally made for Node.js, deadunit is a JavaScript unit testing library for Node.js and the browser. Some of its unique attributes:
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assertion that makes dealing with expected exceptions and asynchronous asserts easyI just uploaded a project I am using to unit test Node.js with Karma and Jasmine: Narma.
Your Node.js modules get loaded into a node-webkit browser, so you can execute Node.js modules and use libraries like jQuery in the same heap.