# Testing Utility APIs This page describes the most useful Angular testing features. The Angular testing utilities include the `TestBed`, the `ComponentFixture`, and a handful of functions that control the test environment. The [_TestBed_](#testbed-api-summary) and [_ComponentFixture_](#component-fixture-api-summary) classes are covered separately. Here's a summary of the stand-alone functions, in order of likely utility:
Function | Description |
---|---|
async
|
Runs the body of a test (`it`) or setup (`beforeEach`) function within a special _async test zone_. See [discussion above](guide/testing-components-scenarios#async). |
fakeAsync
|
Runs the body of a test (`it`) within a special _fakeAsync test zone_, enabling a linear control flow coding style. See [discussion above](guide/testing-components-scenarios#fake-async). |
tick
|
Simulates the passage of time and the completion of pending asynchronous activities
by flushing both _timer_ and _micro-task_ queues within the _fakeAsync test zone_.
The curious, dedicated reader might enjoy this lengthy blog post,
["_Tasks, microtasks, queues and schedules_"](https://jakearchibald.com/2015/tasks-microtasks-queues-and-schedules/).
Accepts an optional argument that moves the virtual clock forward
by the specified number of milliseconds,
clearing asynchronous activities scheduled within that timeframe.
See [discussion above](guide/testing-components-scenarios#tick).
|
inject
|
Injects one or more services from the current `TestBed` injector into a test function. It cannot inject a service provided by the component itself. See discussion of the [debugElement.injector](guide/testing-components-scenarios#get-injected-services). |
discardPeriodicTasks
|
When a `fakeAsync()` test ends with pending timer event _tasks_ (queued `setTimeOut` and `setInterval` callbacks), the test fails with a clear error message. In general, a test should end with no queued tasks. When pending timer tasks are expected, call `discardPeriodicTasks` to flush the _task_ queue and avoid the error. |
flushMicrotasks
|
When a `fakeAsync()` test ends with pending _micro-tasks_ such as unresolved promises, the test fails with a clear error message. In general, a test should wait for micro-tasks to finish. When pending microtasks are expected, call `flushMicrotasks` to flush the _micro-task_ queue and avoid the error. |
ComponentFixtureAutoDetect
|
A provider token for a service that turns on [automatic change detection](guide/testing-components-scenarios#automatic-change-detection). |
getTestBed
|
Gets the current instance of the `TestBed`. Usually unnecessary because the static class methods of the `TestBed` class are typically sufficient. The `TestBed` instance exposes a few rarely used members that are not available as static methods. |
Methods | Description |
---|---|
configureTestingModule
|
The testing shims (`karma-test-shim`, `browser-test-shim`) establish the [initial test environment](guide/testing) and a default testing module. The default testing module is configured with basic declaratives and some Angular service substitutes that every tester needs. Call `configureTestingModule` to refine the testing module configuration for a particular set of tests by adding and removing imports, declarations (of components, directives, and pipes), and providers. |
compileComponents
|
Compile the testing module asynchronously after you've finished configuring it. You **must** call this method if _any_ of the testing module components have a `templateUrl` or `styleUrls` because fetching component template and style files is necessarily asynchronous. See [above](guide/testing-components-scenarios#compile-components). After calling `compileComponents`, the `TestBed` configuration is frozen for the duration of the current spec. |
createComponent
|
Create an instance of a component of type `T` based on the current `TestBed` configuration. After calling `compileComponent`, the `TestBed` configuration is frozen for the duration of the current spec. |
overrideModule
|
Replace metadata for the given `NgModule`. Recall that modules can import other modules. The `overrideModule` method can reach deeply into the current testing module to modify one of these inner modules. |
overrideComponent
|
Replace metadata for the given component class, which could be nested deeply within an inner module. |
overrideDirective
|
Replace metadata for the given directive class, which could be nested deeply within an inner module. |
overridePipe
|
Replace metadata for the given pipe class, which could be nested deeply within an inner module. |
{@a testbed-inject}
inject
|
Retrieve a service from the current `TestBed` injector.
The `inject` function is often adequate for this purpose.
But `inject` throws an error if it can't provide the service.
What if the service is optional?
The `TestBed.inject()` method takes an optional second parameter,
the object to return if Angular can't find the provider
(`null` in this example):
|
{@a testbed-initTestEnvironment}
initTestEnvironment
|
Initialize the testing environment for the entire test run.
The testing shims (`karma-test-shim`, `browser-test-shim`) call it for you
so there is rarely a reason for you to call it yourself.
You may call this method _exactly once_. If you must change
this default in the middle of your test run, call `resetTestEnvironment` first.
Specify the Angular compiler factory, a `PlatformRef`, and a default Angular testing module.
Alternatives for non-browser platforms are available in the general form
`@angular/platform- |
resetTestEnvironment
|
Reset the initial test environment, including the default testing module. |
Properties | Description |
---|---|
componentInstance
|
The instance of the component class created by `TestBed.createComponent`. |
debugElement
|
The `DebugElement` associated with the root element of the component. The `debugElement` provides insight into the component and its DOM element during test and debugging. It's a critical property for testers. The most interesting members are covered [below](#debug-element-details). |
nativeElement
|
The native DOM element at the root of the component. |
changeDetectorRef
|
The `ChangeDetectorRef` for the component. The `ChangeDetectorRef` is most valuable when testing a component that has the `ChangeDetectionStrategy.OnPush` method or the component's change detection is under your programmatic control. |
Methods | Description |
---|---|
detectChanges
|
Trigger a change detection cycle for the component. Call it to initialize the component (it calls `ngOnInit`) and after your test code, change the component's data bound property values. Angular can't see that you've changed `personComponent.name` and won't update the `name` binding until you call `detectChanges`. Runs `checkNoChanges` afterwards to confirm that there are no circular updates unless called as `detectChanges(false)`; |
autoDetectChanges
|
Set this to `true` when you want the fixture to detect changes automatically. When autodetect is `true`, the test fixture calls `detectChanges` immediately after creating the component. Then it listens for pertinent zone events and calls `detectChanges` accordingly. When your test code modifies component property values directly, you probably still have to call `fixture.detectChanges` to trigger data binding updates. The default is `false`. Testers who prefer fine control over test behavior tend to keep it `false`. |
checkNoChanges
|
Do a change detection run to make sure there are no pending changes. Throws an exceptions if there are. |
isStable
|
If the fixture is currently _stable_, returns `true`. If there are async tasks that have not completed, returns `false`. |
whenStable
|
Returns a promise that resolves when the fixture is stable. To resume testing after completion of asynchronous activity or asynchronous change detection, hook that promise. See [above](guide/testing-components-scenarios#when-stable). |
destroy
|
Trigger component destruction. |
Member | Description |
---|---|
nativeElement
|
The corresponding DOM element in the browser (null for WebWorkers). |
query
|
Calling `query(predicate: Predicate |
queryAll
|
Calling `queryAll(predicate: Predicate |
injector
|
The host dependency injector. For example, the root element's component instance injector. |
componentInstance
|
The element's own component instance, if it has one. |
context
|
An object that provides parent context for this element. Often an ancestor component instance that governs this element. When an element is repeated within `*ngFor`, the context is an `NgForRow` whose `$implicit` property is the value of the row instance value. For example, the `hero` in `*ngFor="let hero of heroes"`. |
children
|
The immediate `DebugElement` children. Walk the tree by descending through `children`.
`DebugElement` also has `childNodes`, a list of `DebugNode` objects.
`DebugElement` derives from `DebugNode` objects and there are often
more nodes than elements. Testers can usually ignore plain nodes.
|
parent
|
The `DebugElement` parent. Null if this is the root element. |
name
|
The element tag name, if it is an element. |
triggerEventHandler
|
Triggers the event by its name if there is a corresponding listener in the element's `listeners` collection. The second parameter is the _event object_ expected by the handler. See [above](guide/testing-components-scenarios#trigger-event-handler). If the event lacks a listener or there's some other problem, consider calling `nativeElement.dispatchEvent(eventObject)`. |
listeners
|
The callbacks attached to the component's `@Output` properties and/or the element's event properties. |
providerTokens
|
This component's injector lookup tokens. Includes the component itself plus the tokens that the component lists in its `providers` metadata. |
source
|
Where to find this element in the source component template. |
references
|
Dictionary of objects associated with template local variables (e.g. `#foo`), keyed by the local variable name. |