JSDOM is a JavaScript based headless browser that can be used to create a realistic testing environment.
Since enzyme's mount
API requires a DOM, JSDOM is required in order to use
mount
if you are not already in a browser environment (ie, a Node environment).
For the best experience with enzyme, it is recommended that you load a document into the global scope before requiring React for the first time. It is very important that the below script gets run before React's code is run.
As a result, a standalone script like the one below is generally a good approach:
/* setup.js */
var jsdom = require('jsdom').jsdom;
var exposedProperties = ['window', 'navigator', 'document'];
global.document = jsdom('');
global.window = document.defaultView;
Object.keys(document.defaultView).forEach((property) => {
if (typeof global[property] === 'undefined') {
exposedProperties.push(property);
global[property] = document.defaultView[property];
}
});
global.navigator = {
userAgent: 'node.js'
};
In previous versions of enzyme, there was a public describeWithDOM
API which loaded in a new
JSDOM document into the global namespace before every test, ensuring that tests were deterministic
and did not have side-effects.
This approach is no longer recommended. React's source code makes several assumptions about the
environment it is running in, and one of them is that the global.document
that is found at
"require time" is going to be the one and only document it ever needs to worry about. As a result,
this type of "reloading" ends up causing more pain than it prevents.
It is important, however, to make sure that your tests using the global DOM APIs do not have leaky side-effects which could change the results of other tests. Until there is a better option, this is left to you to ensure.
When testing with JSDOM, the setup.js
file above needs to be run before the test suite runs. If
you are using mocha, this can be done from the command line using the --require
option:
mocha --require setup.js --recursive path/to/test/dir
Jsdom requires node 4 or above. As a result, if you want to use it with mount
, you will need to
make sure node 4 or iojs is on your machine. If you are stuck using an older version of Node, you
may want to try using a browser-based test runner such as Karma.
Some times you may need to switch between different versions of node, you can use a CLI tool called
nvm
to quickly switch between node versions.
To install NVM:
brew install nvm
nvm install 4
Now your machine will be running Node 4. You can use the nvm use
command to switch between the two
environments:
nvm use 0.12
nvm use 4