I have this factory service (I am displaying the TypeScript code because it is easier to read)
module cockpit.services {
'use strict';
export class loginService {
static $inject = ['$http', 'baseUrl'];
constructor(private $http, private baseUrl: string) {
console.log(typeof this.$http);
}
getUserId(uName: string, pwd: string): number {
var userId = 0;
this.$http.put(this.baseUrl + '/login',
{userName: uName,password: pwd})
.success(function (data) {
console.log(data);
userId = data.userId;});
return userId;
}
}}
and I am using the following qUnit test to test it
module('serviceTests', {
setup: function() {
var appMocks = angular.module('appMocks', []);
appMocks.config(function($provide) {
$provide.decorator('$httpBackend',
angular.mock.e2e.$httpBackendDecorator);
$provide.constant('baseUrl', '');
});
injector = angular.injector(['ng', 'cockpit', 'appMocks']);
httpBackend = injector.get('$httpBackend');
},
teardown: function() {
httpBackend.verifyNoOutstandingExpectation();
httpBackend.verifyNoOutstandingRequest();
}});
test('loginService', function () {
var service;
httpBackend.whenPUT('/login').respond(200,{ userId: 23 });
service = injector.get('loginService');
var id = service.getUserId('easy', 'path');
equal(id, 23, 'returns a userId');
});
Everything works beautifully except the test statement itself. I can step through the code and watch the success callback get executed and the userId in the service gets populated correctly, but the value in the return statement isn't passed back to the id variable in the test and it fails. So the service is working fine. I just can't prove it.
I obviously have the test somehow wired up incorrectly, but I don't know how.