# React Inversion Of Control with Unit Tests using Jest and Enzyme ## Summary This web part is provided as an example of implementing an IoC (Inversion of Control) pattern, primarily to enable unit testing, in the context of a SharePoint Framework web part. Following this pattern greatly improves the modularity, maintainability, and testability of the code. The example includes 100% test coverage, using Jest and Enzyme, of .ts and .tsx files, excluding *WebPart.ts files. A dependency resolver class specific to a web part class is used to map web part properties to component properties and create any dependent services/providers. This pattern is implemented to separate testable logic from the untestable *WebPart.ts file and hence ensure that all relevant web part logic is tested. To this end, a Service class is paired with a ServiceExecutor class which should extract the actual service requests from other service logic ensuring that the Service class remains fully testable. *Executor classes are excluded from test coverage as they cannot be unit tested by design - as they are points integration. Included in the coverage is a cache and logger class, along with a service class that fetches data asynchronously using @pnp/sp 2.x The example also includes a pipeline definition .yaml file for Azure DevOps CI build pipeline (/pipelines/) which includes the build, running tests, and posting the test coverage results. ![Sample SPFx Web Part implementing IoC pattern](./assets/preview.jpg) ## Used SharePoint Framework Version ![drop](https://img.shields.io/badge/version-1.10.0-green.svg) ## Applies to * [SharePoint Framework](https://docs.microsoft.com/sharepoint/dev/spfx/sharepoint-framework-overview) * [Office 365 tenant](https://docs.microsoft.com/sharepoint/dev/spfx/set-up-your-development-environment) ## Solution Solution|Author(s) --------|--------- react-ioc-tests | Paul Ryan ## Version history Version|Date|Comments -------|----|-------- 1.0|March 20, 2019|Initial release ## Disclaimer **THIS CODE IS PROVIDED *AS IS* WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING ANY IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE, MERCHANTABILITY, OR NON-INFRINGEMENT.** --- ## Minimal Path to Awesome - Clone this repository - in the command line run: - `npm install` - `npm bundle` - *`npm test`* - `gulp serve` ## Features This web part is provided as an example of implementing an IoC (Inversion of Control) pattern in the context of a SharePoint Framework web part for maximising testability. This Web Part illustrates the following concepts on top of the SharePoint Framework: - Inversion of Control pattern - Unit testing with Jest and Enzyme - Azure DevOps CI Build Pipeline yaml definition file, includes running tests and checking code coverage ## References https://github.com/SharePoint/sp-dev-fx-webparts/tree/master/samples/react-jest-testing https://blog.velingeorgiev.com/unit-test-your-sharepoint-framework-solution-with-jest https://www.eliostruyf.com/sharepoint-framework-unit-tests-with-jest/ https://github.com/estruyf/spfx-testing-jest