Testing
NOTE
The following documentation comes directly from the vuex.vuejs.org.
The main parts we want to unit test in Vuex are mutations and actions.
Testing Mutations
Mutations are very straightforward to test, because they are just functions that completely rely on their arguments. One trick is that if you are using ES2015 modules and put your mutations inside your store.js
file, in addition to the default export, you should also export the mutations as a named export:
const state = { ... }
// export `mutations` as a named export
export const mutations = { ... }
export default new Vuex.Store({
state,
mutations
})
Example testing a mutation using Mocha + Chai (you can use any framework/assertion libraries you like):
// mutations.js
export const mutations = {
increment: state => state.count++
}
// mutations.spec.js
import { expect } from 'chai'
import { mutations } from './store'
// destructure assign `mutations`
const { increment } = mutations
describe('mutations', () => {
it('INCREMENT', () => {
// mock state
const state = { count: 0 }
// apply mutation
increment(state)
// assert result
expect(state.count).to.equal(1)
})
})
Testing Actions
Actions can be a bit more tricky because they may call out to external APIs. When testing actions, we usually need to do some level of mocking - for example, we can abstract the API calls into a service and mock that service inside our tests. In order to easily mock dependencies, we can use webpack and inject-loader to bundle our test files.
Example testing an async action:
// actions.js
import shop from '../api/shop'
export const getAllProducts = ({ commit }) => {
commit('REQUEST_PRODUCTS')
shop.getProducts(products => {
commit('RECEIVE_PRODUCTS', products)
})
}
// actions.spec.js
// use require syntax for inline loaders.
// with inject-loader, this returns a module factory
// that allows us to inject mocked dependencies.
import { expect } from 'chai'
const actionsInjector = require('inject-loader!./actions')
// create the module with our mocks
const actions = actionsInjector({
'../api/shop': {
getProducts (cb) {
setTimeout(() => {
cb([ /* mocked response */ ])
}, 100)
}
}
})
// helper for testing action with expected mutations
const testAction = (action, payload, state, expectedMutations, done) => {
let count = 0
// mock commit
const commit = (type, payload) => {
const mutation = expectedMutations[count]
try {
expect(type).to.equal(mutation.type)
if (payload) {
expect(payload).to.deep.equal(mutation.payload)
}
} catch (error) {
done(error)
}
count++
if (count >= expectedMutations.length) {
done()
}
}
// call the action with mocked store and arguments
action({ commit, state }, payload)
// check if no mutations should have been dispatched
if (expectedMutations.length === 0) {
expect(count).to.equal(0)
done()
}
}
describe('actions', () => {
it('getAllProducts', done => {
testAction(actions.getAllProducts, null, {}, [
{ type: 'REQUEST_PRODUCTS' },
{ type: 'RECEIVE_PRODUCTS', payload: { /* mocked response */ } }
], done)
})
})
If you have spies available in your testing environment (for example via Sinon.JS), you can use them instead of the testAction
helper:
describe('actions', () => {
it('getAllProducts', () => {
const commit = sinon.spy()
const state = {}
actions.getAllProducts({ commit, state })
expect(commit.args).to.deep.equal([
['REQUEST_PRODUCTS'],
['RECEIVE_PRODUCTS', { /* mocked response */ }]
])
})
})
Testing Getters
If your getters have complicated computation, it is worth testing them. Getters are also very straightforward to test for the same reason as mutations.
Example testing a getter:
// getters.js
export const getters = {
filteredProducts (state, { filterCategory }) {
return state.products.filter(product => {
return product.category === filterCategory
})
}
}
// getters.spec.js
import { expect } from 'chai'
import { getters } from './getters'
describe('getters', () => {
it('filteredProducts', () => {
// mock state
const state = {
products: [
{ id: 1, title: 'Apple', category: 'fruit' },
{ id: 2, title: 'Orange', category: 'fruit' },
{ id: 3, title: 'Carrot', category: 'vegetable' }
]
}
// mock getter
const filterCategory = 'fruit'
// get the result from the getter
const result = getters.filteredProducts(state, { filterCategory })
// assert the result
expect(result).to.deep.equal([
{ id: 1, title: 'Apple', category: 'fruit' },
{ id: 2, title: 'Orange', category: 'fruit' }
])
})
})
Running Tests
If your mutations and actions are written properly, the tests should have no direct dependency on Browser APIs after proper mocking. Thus you can simply bundle the tests with webpack and run it directly in Node. Alternatively, you can use mocha-loader
or Karma + karma-webpack
to run the tests in real browsers.
Running in Node
Create the following webpack config (together with proper .babelrc
):
// webpack.config.js
module.exports = {
entry: './test.js',
output: {
path: __dirname,
filename: 'test-bundle.js'
},
module: {
loaders: [
{
test: /\.js$/,
loader: 'babel-loader',
exclude: /node_modules/
}
]
}
}
Then:
webpack
mocha test-bundle.js
Running in Browser
- Install
mocha-loader
. - Change the
entry
from the webpack config above to'mocha-loader!babel-loader!./test.js'
. - Start
webpack-dev-server
using the config. - Go to
localhost:8080/webpack-dev-server/test-bundle
.
Running in Browser with Karma + karma-webpack
Consult the setup in vue-loader documentation.