Two useful ways to easily run a single test using Jest

Two useful ways to easily run a single test using Jest

Jest has been the tool of choice for writing tests in JavaScript for years now. This guide will teach you how to run a single test using Jest. Let’s get going!

How to run a single test using Jest

Table of contents #

Example tests #

For this tutorial, the example will have tests for two modules books.js and helper.js in two respective test files. The script calls the Open library API’s Subjects endpoint and logs the titles of the books for a given subject. You can view the code in this GitHub repository. The same example was also used for the Jest toHaveBeenCalledWith blog post.

This repo has 2 test files. First one is for the books.js module. And the second one is, Jest tests for the helper.js that plucks the books’ titles from the given data found at test/helper.spec.js. The contents of this file is as follows:

const helper = require('../src/helper');

describe('Helper', () => {
describe('pluckTitles', () =>
it('should return book titles for given data', () =>
const data =
name: 'javascript',
works: [
title: 'JavaScript: The Good Parts',
,
title: 'JavaScript: The Definitive Guide',
]
;
const titles = helper.pluckTitles(data);
expect(titles.length).toBe(2);
expect(titles).toEqual(['JavaScript: The Good Parts', 'JavaScript: The Definitive Guide']);
);

it('should return empty array if no data is found', () =>
const data =
name: 'asdfj',
works: []
;
const titles = helper.pluckTitles(data);
expect(titles).toEqual([]);
);
);
});

The first task is to run a single test within a file, you will learn how to do it in the next part.

Using only on the test #

If you are in the IDE and want to run only a single test be it a describe or it, it can be done by adding a .only after the describe or the it. The caveat here is that only will only apply in the context of that file. For instance, in the above example of test/helper.spec.js a .only can be added to the last test titled should return an empty array if no data is found as:

it.only('should return empty array if no data is found', () => {

When the full test suite is run with npm test -- --verbose, it will yield the following output:

npm test -- --verbose

> [email protected] test
> jest "--verbose"

PASS test/books.spec.js
Books
getTitlesBySubject
✓ should return book titles for given subject (3 ms)
✓ should log error if any error occurs while getting books for given subject (3 ms)

PASS test/helper.spec.js
Helper
pluckTitles
✓ should return empty array if no data is found (1 ms)
○ skipped should return book titles for given data

Test Suites: 2 passed, 2 total
Tests: 1 skipped, 3 passed, 4 total
Snapshots: 0 total
Time: 0.199 s, estimated 1 s
Ran all test suites.

The --verbose CLI parameter is used to show a verbose output with the test names. The -- parameter after npm test passes the CLI params to the original jest command defined in the package.json test script.

The other test in the same file helper.spec.js titled should return book titles for given data has been skipped and the test that has the .only added has only run. Still, the two other tests from the books.spec.js have run. Hence it proves that adding the .only works on in the file’s scope not the context of the full test suite.

To make it run a single test with Jest having more specific control, the tests can be run for only that file with

npm test -- test/helper.spec.js --verbose

The above command is equivalent to npm test -- --testPathPattern test/helper.spec.js --verbose where the testPathPattern parameter available in Jest CLI is used. It does a regexp pattern match of paths before running tests, so other tests are ignored and only the tests for test/helper.spec.js is executed which yields:

npm test -- test/helper.spec.js --verbose

> [email protected] test
> jest "test/helper.spec.js" "--verbose"

PASS test/helper.spec.js
Helper
pluckTitles
✓ should return empty array if no data is found (1 ms)
○ skipped should return book titles for given data

Test Suites: 1 passed, 1 total
Tests: 1 skipped, 1 passed, 2 total
Snapshots: 0 total
Time: 0.153 s, estimated 1 s

With the combination of it.only and --testPathPattern you learned how to run a single test in Jest. Consequently an easier way will be unraveled to get the same output without changing the test file.

Using -t when running tests #

Another easier way to run a specific or single test with Jest without changing the code is by using the testNamePattern CLI parameter. It has an alias of -t to run only tests with a name that matches the given regex pattern.

Again, let’s target the same test with the name should return empty array if no data is found without adding the .only to the test code. It can be done with:

npm test -- -t 'should return empty array if no data is found' --verbose

Running the above command will show the following output:

npm test -- -t 'should return empty array if no data is found' --verbose

> [email protected] test
> jest "-t" "should return empty array if no data is found" "--verbose"

PASS test/helper.spec.js
Helper
pluckTitles
✓ should return empty array if no data is found (1 ms)
○ skipped should return book titles for given data

Test Suites: 1 skipped, 1 passed, 1 of 2 total
Tests: 3 skipped, 1 passed, 4 total
Snapshots: 0 total
Time: 0.239 s, estimated 1 s
Ran all test suites with tests matching "should return empty array if no data is found".

As the last line of the output says, Jest has only run specific tests that matched the given test pattern. This technique can also run unwanted tests if two or more tests have been named the same, follow the same pattern, or have the same beginning. Therefore to make sure only a single test or one specific test is run, it can be done by adding the --testPathPattern parameter to the CLI.

The above example after adding the --testPathPattern will look like this:

npm test -- -t 'should return empty array if no data is found' --testPathPattern helper.spec.js --verbose

It will also show the same output as above because in this small example there is no test name clash. In case you have a large test suite of 10s or even 100s of tests, names of tests being similar or even the same can be a common occurrence.

The main catch here is the more specific the Jest CLI command is run with the right mix of parameters, it will most likely run a single test. In the next section, as a bonus to this learning, you will understand how to show the test coverage even when running specific tests.

Code Coverage for a single file and specific tests #

The code coverage of the whole test suite for all the source files can be seen by running:

npm test -- --coverage --verbose

The above command yields output like the below:

npm test -- --coverage --verbose

> [email protected] test
> jest "--coverage" "--verbose"

PASS test/helper.spec.js
Helper
pluckTitles
✓ should return book titles for given data (1 ms)
✓ should return empty array if no data is found (1 ms)

PASS test/books.spec.js
Books
getTitlesBySubject
✓ should return book titles for given subject (2 ms)
✓ should log error if any error occurs while getting books for given subject (3 ms)

-----------|---------|----------|---------|---------|-------------------
File | % Stmts | % Branch | % Funcs | % Lines | Uncovered Line
-----------|---------|----------|---------|---------|-------------------
All files | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
books.js | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
helper.js | 100 | 100 | 100 | 100 |
-----------|---------|----------|---------|---------|-------------------
Test Suites: 2 passed, 2 total
Tests: 4 passed, 4 total
Snapshots: 0 total
Time: 0.237 s, estimated 1 s
Ran all test suites.

Generally, as you are writing a test for a specific module, class, or even a function the need is to know how much code coverage is this particular test adding. That is why the command below gives you a better understanding of the code coverage improvement achieved by the specific test you are writing:

npm test --  --coverage --collectCoverageFrom src/helper.js ----testPathPattern helper.spec.js -t 'should return empty array if no data is found' --verbose

The above command when run will give the following output:

npm test --  --coverage --collectCoverageFrom src/helper.js ----testPathPattern helper.spec.js -t 'should return empty array if no data is found' --verbose

> [email protected] test
> jest "--coverage" "--collectCoverageFrom" "src/helper.js" "----testPathPattern" "helper.spec.js" "-t" "should return empty array if no data is found" "--verbose"

PASS test/helper.spec.js
Helper
pluckTitles
✓ should return empty array if no data is found (1 ms)
○ skipped should return book titles for given data

-----------|---------|----------|---------|---------|-------------------
File | % Stmts | % Branch | % Funcs | % Lines | Uncovered Line
-----------|---------|----------|---------|---------|-------------------
All files | 60 | 75 | 50 | 75 |
helper.js | 60 | 75 | 50 | 75 | 6
-----------|---------|----------|---------|---------|-------------------
Test Suites: 1 passed, 1 total
Tests: 1 skipped, 1 passed, 2 total
Snapshots: 0 total
Time: 0.195 s, estimated 1 s
Ran all test suites matching /helper.spec.js/i with tests matching "should return empty array if no data is found".

So, the single test ran with the name should return an empty array if no data is found within helper.spec.js to get coverage from src/helper.js covers all lines of the helper.js module except line 6. Line no. 6 is covered by another test in the same file.

Here, you learned about the –collectCoverageFrom CLI parameter of Jest which tells Jest to match the files from where coverage information should be collected relative to the root directory.

If you think the commands are long, you can create a helper script on package.json like:

"test:pat": "npm test -- --runInBand --verbose --t"

Pat is short for pattern, and run it like:

npm run test:pat 'should return empty array if no data is found'

It will run the tests that match the given pattern without the need to type all that long command. Similarly, you can slap in a --watch after the above command to make it run on each file save, which is very helpful while writing tests.

Conclusion #

In this tutorial, you learned how to run single or specific tests with Jest by using either .only or -t CLI parameter. Both those options can be used too. After that, the --testPathPattern Jest CLI parameter was discussed to target tests written on a specific file.

Subsequently, the --coverage and --collectCoverageFrom Jest CLI parameters were used to not only run a single test with just but also report code coverage from a single file while running specific tests.

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