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Konacha is a Rails engine that allows you to test your JavaScript with the mocha test framework and chai assertion library. It is similar to Jasmine and Evergreen, but does not attempt to be framework agnostic. By sticking with Rails, Konacha can take full advantage of features such as the asset pipeline and engines.
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 Dependencies

Development

Runtime

< 5, >= 4.1
< 5, >= 4.1
< 4, >= 2
>= 0
 Project Readme

Konacha

Build Status Dependency Status

Konacha ([koh-NAH-cha], a type of green tea) is a Rails engine that allows you to test your JavaScript with the Mocha test framework and chai assertion library.

Konacha in action

It is similar to Jasmine and Evergreen, but does not attempt to be framework agnostic. By sticking with Rails, Konacha can take full advantage of features such as the asset pipeline and engines.

Installation

Add konacha to the :test and :development groups in the Gemfile and bundle install:

group :test, :development do
  gem 'konacha'
end

Usage

Create a spec/javascripts directory and name the files in it with a _spec (or _test) suffix. You can write the specs in either JavaScript or CoffeeScript, using a .js or .js.coffee extension respectively, like you would any other script asset.

Require the assets under test and any other dependencies using Sprockets directives. For example, suppose you wanted to test your cool JavaScript Array#sum method, which you placed in app/assets/javascripts/array_sum.js. Write the specs in JavaScript in the file spec/javascripts/array_sum_spec.js:

//= require array_sum

describe("Array#sum", function() {
  it("returns 0 when the Array is empty", function() {
    [].sum().should.equal(0);
  });

  it("returns the sum of numeric elements", function() {
    [1,2,3].sum().should.equal(6);
  });
});

Or, if you prefer CoffeeScript, in spec/javascripts/array_sum_spec.js.coffee:

#= require array_sum

describe "Array#sum", ->
  it "returns 0 when the Array is empty", ->
    [].sum().should.equal(0)

  it "returns the sum of numeric elements", ->
    [1,2,3].sum().should.equal(6)

Your tests are run inside an iframe. You have the entire <body> element to yourself, and it is automatically reset between tests.

Running (Rake Tasks)

In the Browser

To start a server for your tests, type:

$ bundle exec rake konacha:serve

Then open http://localhost:3500 in your browser, and you will see all your tests running. You can also go to a sub-page to run an individual spec file (e.g. http://localhost:3500/array_sum_spec), or a path to a subdirectory to run a subset of specs (e.g. http://localhost:3500/models).

This is the recommended mode for development, since you can simply hit refresh to reload all your test and asset files. To debug tests, use the debugger statement anywhere in a test to halt execution.

To run code in the JavaScript console, be sure to select the desired iframe first, so your code runs in the correct context.

Selecting the test-context frame in Chrome

You can also add the following to your config/routes.rb to see the specs run at /konacha:

Rails.application.routes.draw do
  mount Konacha::Engine, at: "/konacha" if defined?(Konacha)
end

Command-Line Runner

To run your tests from the command line, type:

$ bundle exec rake konacha:run

To run individual specs, pass a comma separated list of spec file names via the SPEC environment variable.

$ bundle exec rake konacha:run SPEC=foo_spec
$ bundle exec rake konacha:run SPEC=foo_spec,bar_spec,etc_spec

Konacha includes a default formatter modeled upon RSpec's ProgressFormatter. Additionally, Konacha's runner implements the same protocol as RSpec, so many RSpec formatters also work with Konacha.

To specify one or more formatters, provide a comma separated list of class names in the FORMAT environment variable. For example, you can run both Ruby and JavaScript specs with CI integration using ci_reporter:

$ bundle exec rake ci:setup:rspec spec konacha:run FORMAT=CI::Reporter::RSpec

You will need to require any formatters you use. It's a good idea to do this within a defined? check in your Konacha initializer.

To automatically trigger reruns when files change, try guard-konacha.

Spec Helper

Since Konacha integrates with the asset pipeline, using setup helpers in your specs is easy. Just create a spec_helper.js or spec_helper.js.coffee file in spec/javascripts and require it in your tests:

//= require spec_helper
//= require array_sum

describe("Array#sum", function() {
  ...
});

The spec_helper is a good place to set Mocha and Chai options as well, for instance:

// set the Mocha test interface
// see http://mochajs.org/#interfaces
mocha.ui('bdd');

// ignore the following globals during leak detection
mocha.globals(['YUI']);

// or, ignore all leaks
mocha.ignoreLeaks();

// set slow test timeout in ms
mocha.timeout(5);

// Show stack trace on failing assertion.
chai.config.includeStack = true;

Directives and Asset Bundling

We suggest that you explicitly require just the assets necessary for each spec. Konacha runs each spec file in isolation, and requiring things explicitly will help ensure your scripts don't accumulate hidden dependencies and tight coupling.

However, you are free to ignore this advice and require the entire application.js asset bundle in your specs or spec helper, or a bundled subset of assets. Requiring bundled assets works like it does in Rails development mode -- Konacha will detect the complete set of dependencies and generate a separate script tag for each one. You won't have to search through a many thousand line application.js bundle to debug a spec failure.

Configuration

Konacha can be configured in an initializer, e.g. config/initializers/konacha.rb:

Konacha.configure do |config|
  config.spec_dir     = "spec/javascripts"
  config.spec_matcher = /_spec\.|_test\./
  config.stylesheets  = %w(application)
  config.driver       = :selenium
end if defined?(Konacha)

The defined? check is necessary to avoid a dependency on Konacha in the production environment.

The spec_dir option tells Konacha where to find JavaScript specs. spec_matcher is an object responding to === (most likely a Regexp); it receives a filename and should return true if the file is a spec. The stylesheets option sets the stylesheets to be linked from the <head> of the test runner iframe. driver names a Capybara driver used for the run task. The values above are the defaults.

For PhantomJS support you can use the poltergeist driver. Require capybara/poltergeist in the configure block:

Konacha.configure do |config|
  require 'capybara/poltergeist'
  config.driver = :poltergeist
end if defined?(Konacha)

Test Interface and Assertions

Konacha includes a vendored copy of mocha.js and the chai assertion libraries. By default, it configures Mocha to use the "BDD" test interface, which provides describe(), it(), before(), after(), beforeEach(), and afterEach().

Konacha will make all three of chai's assertion styles available to you: expect, should, and assert. See the chai documentation for the details.

If you use jQuery, you may want to check out chai-jquery for some jQuery-specific assertions. There are a lot of interesting chai matchers out there, see the chai plugins page

To make all these available for your konacha environment, see the Konacha-chai-matchers gem

Templates / Fixtures

Konacha has no template (a.k.a. HTML fixture) support of its own. Instead, we suggest you use Sprocket's built in support for JavaScript template (.jst) files. Add a spec/javascripts/templates directory, place template files there (using any JS template language supported by Sprockets), require them in your spec or spec_helper, and render them into the <body>.

The following example uses EJS. You can use an alternative templating language, like ECO, but you need to add something to your Gemfile in order for Sprokets to define the JST function and make your templates available.

group :development, :test do
  gem "ejs"
end

For example, in spec/javascripts/templates/hello.jst.ejs:

<h1>Hello Konacha!</h1>

In spec_helper.js:

//= require_tree ./templates

And your spec:

//= require spec_helper

describe("templating", function() {
  it("is built in to Sprockets", function() {
    $('body').html(JST['templates/hello']());
    $('body h1').text().should.equal('Hello Konacha!');
  });
});

Upgrading from Konacha 3.x

The only backward-incompatible change in Konacha 4.0 is that Rails versions less than 4.1 are longer supported. Please upgrade to 4.1 or later.

Contributing

git clone git://github.com/jfirebaugh/konacha.git

Run bundle exec rake to run the test suite.

Contributing to Mocha and Chai

The Konacha repository includes the Mocha and Chai repositories as submodules, so you can hack on them directly:

cd mocha # or: cd chai
git checkout master
... hack-hack-hack ...
bundle exec rake assets # make and cp assets based on your changes

Assuming your app's Gemfile points at your Konacha checkout (gem 'konacha', :path => '~/path/to/konacha'), your changes to Mocha and Chai are live in localhost:3500 when you refresh your browser.

You can send pull requests to Mocha and Chai straight out of your submodules.

See Also

Prior art:

Similar projects: