This is a quick & dirty hack to basically get jest-chrome working with vite. Use at someone else's risk.
Setup is essentially the same as for jest.
In your vitest config, add a setup file:
test: {
setupFiles: ['tests/vitest/setup.ts']
}
Then in your vitest setup file add:
import * as chrome from 'vitest-chrome/src';
Object.assign(global, chrome);
This should make chrome
and its types available.
A complete mock of the Chrome API for Chrome extensions, for use with Jest.
TypeScript support is built in. Each function and event is based
on the
@types/chrome
package.
npm i jest-chrome -D
Set chrome
in the global scope during setup so that it is
mocked in imported modules. Add a setup file to jest.config.js
:
// jest.config.js
module.exports = {
// Add this line to your Jest config
setupFilesAfterEnv: ['./jest.setup.js'],
}
Use the setup file to assign the mocked chrome
object to the
global
object:
// jest.setup.js
Object.assign(global, require('jest-chrome'))
Import chrome
from jest-chrome
for Intellisense and linting.
This is the same object as chrome
in the global scope.
import { chrome } from 'jest-chrome'
All of the following code blocks come from
tests/demo.test.ts
.
Each mocked Event has all the normal methods (addListener
,
hasListener
, hasListeners
, and removeListener
) plus two
more: callListeners
and clearListeners
.
callListeners
triggers a specific Event. Call callListeners
with the arguments you expect Chrome to pass to your event
listeners. Each event listener for that Event will be called with
those arguments.
clearListeners
removes all listeners for a specific Event.
test('chrome api events', () => {
const listenerSpy = jest.fn()
const sendResponseSpy = jest.fn()
chrome.runtime.onMessage.addListener(listenerSpy)
expect(listenerSpy).not.toBeCalled()
expect(chrome.runtime.onMessage.hasListeners()).toBe(true)
chrome.runtime.onMessage.callListeners(
{ greeting: 'hello' }, // message
{}, // MessageSender object
sendResponseSpy, // SendResponse function
)
expect(listenerSpy).toBeCalledWith(
{ greeting: 'hello' },
{},
sendResponseSpy,
)
expect(sendResponseSpy).not.toBeCalled()
})
Some Chrome API functions are synchronous. Use these like any mocked function:
test('chrome api functions', () => {
const manifest = {
name: 'my chrome extension',
manifest_version: 2,
version: '1.0.0',
}
chrome.runtime.getManifest.mockImplementation(() => manifest)
expect(chrome.runtime.getManifest()).toEqual(manifest)
expect(chrome.runtime.getManifest).toBeCalled()
})
Most Chrome API functions do something asynchronous. They use callbacks to handle the result. The mock implementation should be set to handle the callback.
Mocked functions have no default mock implementation!
test('chrome api functions with callback', () => {
const message = { greeting: 'hello?' }
const response = { greeting: 'here I am' }
const callbackSpy = jest.fn()
chrome.runtime.sendMessage.mockImplementation(
(message, callback) => {
callback(response)
},
)
chrome.runtime.sendMessage(message, callbackSpy)
expect(chrome.runtime.sendMessage).toBeCalledWith(
message,
callbackSpy,
)
expect(callbackSpy).toBeCalledWith(response)
})
When something goes wrong in a callback, Chrome sets
chrome.runtime.lastError
to an object with a message property.
If you need to test this, set and clear lastError
in the mock
implementation.
Remember that
lastError
is always undefined outside of a callback!
lastError
is an object with a
getter function
for the message
property. If message
is not checked, Chrome
will log the error to the console. To emulate this, simply set
lastError
to an object with a getter that wraps a mock, as seen
below:
test('chrome api functions with lastError', () => {
const message = { greeting: 'hello?' }
const response = { greeting: 'here I am' }
// lastError setup
const lastErrorMessage = 'this is an error'
const lastErrorGetter = jest.fn(() => lastErrorMessage)
const lastError = {
get message() {
return lastErrorGetter()
},
}
// mock implementation
chrome.runtime.sendMessage.mockImplementation(
(message, callback) => {
chrome.runtime.lastError = lastError
callback(response)
// lastError is undefined outside of a callback
delete chrome.runtime.lastError
},
)
// callback implementation
const lastErrorSpy = jest.fn()
const callbackSpy = jest.fn(() => {
if (chrome.runtime.lastError) {
lastErrorSpy(chrome.runtime.lastError.message)
}
})
// send a message
chrome.runtime.sendMessage(message, callbackSpy)
expect(callbackSpy).toBeCalledWith(response)
expect(lastErrorGetter).toBeCalled()
expect(lastErrorSpy).toBeCalledWith(lastErrorMessage)
// lastError has been cleared
expect(chrome.runtime.lastError).toBeUndefined()
})
The chrome
object is based on schemas from the Chromium
project, with thanks to
sinon-chrome
for
compiling the schemas.
Special thanks to @shellscape
for transferring the NPM package name jest-chrome
to us!