19 KiB
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 and ComponentFixture classes are covered separately.
Here's a summary of the stand-alone functions, in order of likely utility:
<td>
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).
</td>
<td>
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).
</td>
<td>
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_.
<div class="alert is-helpful">
The curious, dedicated reader might enjoy this lengthy blog post,
["_Tasks, microtasks, queues and schedules_"](https://jakearchibald.com/2015/tasks-microtasks-queues-and-schedules/).
</div>
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).
</td>
<td>
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).
</td>
<td>
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.
</td>
<td>
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.
</td>
<td>
A provider token for a service that turns on [automatic change detection](guide/testing-components-scenarios#automatic-change-detection).
</td>
<td>
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.
</td>
Function | Description |
---|---|
async
|
|
fakeAsync
|
|
tick
|
|
inject
|
|
discardPeriodicTasks
|
|
flushMicrotasks
|
|
ComponentFixtureAutoDetect
|
|
getTestBed
|
{@a testbed-class-summary}
TestBed class summary
The TestBed
class is one of the principal Angular testing utilities.
Its API is quite large and can be overwhelming until you've explored it,
a little at a time. Read the early part of this guide first
to get the basics before trying to absorb the full API.
The module definition passed to configureTestingModule
is a subset of the @NgModule
metadata properties.
{@a metadata-override-object}
Each override method takes a MetadataOverride<T>
where T
is the kind of metadata
appropriate to the method, that is, the parameter of an @NgModule
,
@Component
, @Directive
, or @Pipe
.
{@a testbed-methods} {@a testbed-api-summary}
The TestBed
API consists of static class methods that either update or reference a global instance of the TestBed
.
Internally, all static methods cover methods of the current runtime TestBed
instance,
which is also returned by the getTestBed()
function.
Call TestBed
methods within a beforeEach()
to ensure a fresh start before each individual test.
Here are the most important static methods, in order of likely utility.
<td>
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.
</td>
<td>
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.
</td>
<td>
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.
</td>
<td>
Replace metadata for the given component class, which could be nested deeply
within an inner module.
</td>
<td>
Replace metadata for the given directive class, which could be nested deeply
within an inner module.
</td>
<td>
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):
<code-example path="testing/src/app/demo/demo.testbed.spec.ts" region="testbed-get-w-null" header="app/demo/demo.testbed.spec.ts"></code-example>
After calling `TestBed.inject`, the `TestBed` configuration is frozen for the duration of the current spec.
</td>
Methods | Description |
---|---|
configureTestingModule
|
|
compileComponents
|
|
createComponent
|
|
overrideModule
|
|
overrideComponent
|
|
overrideDirective
|
|
overridePipe
|
|
{@a testbed-inject}
inject
|
|
{@a testbed-initTestEnvironment}
initTestEnvironment
|
|
resetTestEnvironment
|
|
A few of the TestBed
instance methods are not covered by static TestBed
class methods.
These are rarely needed.
{@a component-fixture-api-summary}
The ComponentFixture
The TestBed.createComponent<T>
creates an instance of the component T
and returns a strongly typed ComponentFixture
for that component.
The ComponentFixture
properties and methods provide access to the component,
its DOM representation, and aspects of its Angular environment.
{@a component-fixture-properties}
ComponentFixture properties
Here are the most important properties for testers, in order of likely utility.
<td>
The instance of the component class created by `TestBed.createComponent`.
</td>
<td>
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).
</td>
<td>
The native DOM element at the root of the component.
</td>
<td>
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.
</td>
Properties | Description |
---|---|
componentInstance
|
|
debugElement
|
|
nativeElement
|
|
changeDetectorRef
|
{@a component-fixture-methods}
ComponentFixture methods
The fixture methods cause Angular to perform certain tasks on the component tree. Call these method to trigger Angular behavior in response to simulated user action.
Here are the most useful methods for testers.
<td>
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)`;
</td>
<td>
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`.
</td>
<td>
Do a change detection run to make sure there are no pending changes.
Throws an exceptions if there are.
</td>
<td>
If the fixture is currently _stable_, returns `true`.
If there are async tasks that have not completed, returns `false`.
</td>
<td>
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).
</td>
<td>
Trigger component destruction.
</td>
Methods | Description |
---|---|
detectChanges
|
|
autoDetectChanges
|
|
checkNoChanges
|
|
isStable
|
|
whenStable
|
|
destroy
|
{@a debug-element-details}
DebugElement
The DebugElement
provides crucial insights into the component's DOM representation.
From the test root component's DebugElement
returned by fixture.debugElement
,
you can walk (and query) the fixture's entire element and component subtrees.
Here are the most useful DebugElement
members for testers, in approximate order of utility:
<td>
The corresponding DOM element in the browser (null for WebWorkers).
</td>
<td>
Calling `query(predicate: Predicate<DebugElement>)` returns the first `DebugElement`
that matches the [predicate](#query-predicate) at any depth in the subtree.
</td>
<td>
Calling `queryAll(predicate: Predicate<DebugElement>)` returns all `DebugElements`
that matches the [predicate](#query-predicate) at any depth in subtree.
</td>
<td>
The host dependency injector.
For example, the root element's component instance injector.
</td>
<td>
The element's own component instance, if it has one.
</td>
<td>
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"`.
</td>
<td>
The immediate `DebugElement` children. Walk the tree by descending through `children`.
<div class="alert is-helpful">
`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.
</div>
</td>
<td>
The element tag name, if it is an element.
</td>
<td>
The callbacks attached to the component's `@Output` properties and/or the element's event properties.
</td>
<td>
This component's injector lookup tokens.
Includes the component itself plus the tokens that the component lists in its `providers` metadata.
</td>
<td>
Where to find this element in the source component template.
</td>
<td>
Dictionary of objects associated with template local variables (e.g. `#foo`),
keyed by the local variable name.
</td>
Member | Description |
---|---|
nativeElement
|
|
query
|
|
queryAll
|
|
injector
|
|
componentInstance
|
|
context
|
|
children
|
|
parent
|
|
name
|
|
triggerEventHandler
|
|
listeners
|
|
providerTokens
|
|
source
|
|
references
|
{@a query-predicate}
The DebugElement.query(predicate)
and DebugElement.queryAll(predicate)
methods take a
predicate that filters the source element's subtree for matching DebugElement
.
The predicate is any method that takes a DebugElement
and returns a truthy value.
The following example finds all DebugElements
with a reference to a template local variable named "content":
The Angular By
class has three static methods for common predicates:
By.all
- return all elements.By.css(selector)
- return elements with matching CSS selectors.By.directive(directive)
- return elements that Angular matched to an instance of the directive class.