38

I am using mocha/supertest/should.js to test REST Service

GET /files/<hash> returns file as stream.

How can I assert in should.js that file contents are the same?

it('should return file as stream', function (done) {
    var writeStream = fs.createWriteStream('test/fixtures/tmp.json');
    
    var req = api.get('/files/676dfg1430af3595');
    req.on('end', function(){
       var tmpBuf = fs.readFileSync('test/fixtures/tmp.json');
       var testBuf = fs.readFileSync('test/fixtures/test.json');
    
       // How to assert with should.js file contents are the same (tmpBuf == testBuf )
       // ...
    
       done();
    });
});

6 Answers 6

55

Surprisingly, no one has suggested Buffer.equals. That seems to be the fastest and simplest approach and has been around since v0.11.

So your code would become tmpBuf.equals(testBuf)

2
  • The best solutions are the easiest
    – hellboy
    Oct 24, 2018 at 8:33
  • 1
    But what if the file size larger than RAM size? Apr 29, 2023 at 2:56
4

You have 3 solutions:

First:

Compare the result strings

tmpBuf.toString() === testBuf.toString();

Second:

Using a loop to read the buffers byte by byte

var index = 0,
    length = tmpBuf.length,
    match = true;

while (index < length) {
    if (tmpBuf[index] === testBuf[index]) {
        index++;
    } else {
        match = false;
        break;
    }
}

match; // true -> contents are the same, false -> otherwise

Third:

Using a third-party module like buffertools and buffertools.compare(buffer, buffer|string) method.

0
4

In should.js you can use .eql to compare Buffer's instances:

> var buf1 = new Buffer('abc');
undefined
> var buf2 = new Buffer('abc');
undefined
> var buf3 = new Buffer('dsfg');
undefined
> buf1.should.be.eql(buf1)
...
> buf1.should.be.eql(buf2)
...
> buf1.should.be.eql(buf3)
AssertionError: expected <Buffer 61 62 63> to equal <Buffer 64 73 66 67>
    ...
> 
3

Solution using file-compare and node-temp:

it('should return test2.json as a stream', function (done) {
    var writeStream = temp.createWriteStream();
    temp.track();

    var req = api.get('/files/7386afde8992');

    req.on('end', function() {
        comparator.compare(writeStream.path, TEST2_JSON_FILE, function(result, err) {
            if (err) {
                return done(err);
            }

            result.should.true;
            done();
        });
    });

    req.pipe(writeStream);
});
3

for comparing large files e.g. images when asserting file uploads a comparison of buffers or strings with should.eql takes ages. i recommend asserting the buffer hash with the crypto module:

const buf1Hash = crypto.createHash('sha256').update(buf1).digest();
const buf2Hash = crypto.createHash('sha256').update(buf2).digest();
buf1Hash.should.eql(buf2Hash);

an easier approach is asserting the buffer length like so:

buf1.length.should.eql(buf2.length)

instead of using shouldjs as assertion module you can surely use a different tool

3
  • 5
    Please do not use hashes. Hashes are usually, but not always unique due to the Pigeon Hole principle. Further, the computations required in order to generate the hash are far more expensive than simply comparing the original content.
    – Jack G
    Sep 21, 2019 at 20:55
  • 6
    Dude, sha256 is a cryptographically secure hash function. The probability of having 2 different files with the hash are so tiny that it is ridiculous to ever mention it.
    – zarak
    Mar 20, 2020 at 14:31
  • 3
    The crypto lib has to go through all bytes to compute the hash. If you are already keeping both buffers entirely in memory, there's no point in computing their hashes. Directly comparing their contents is not only easier to read, but also faster (because you can skip the hash calculations). Hashes would be useful here only if the files are so big you can't keep them in memory to run the direct comparison. Jun 18, 2021 at 17:32
1

I think that you should use non-blocking calls in JavaScript to get a better performance, at least to prevent from blocking other operations:

Blocking is when the execution of additional JavaScript in the Node.js process must wait until a non-JavaScript operation completes. This happens because the event loop is unable to continue running JavaScript while a blocking operation is occurring.

In Node.js, JavaScript that exhibits poor performance due to being CPU intensive rather than waiting on a non-JavaScript operation, such as I/O, isn't typically referred to as blocking. Synchronous methods in the Node.js standard library that use libuv are the most commonly used blocking operations. Native modules may also have blocking methods.

So, I would change the Sync calls with something like the following code. Also, I would use the method equals that Max suggest to compare both files:

const fs = require('fs')

fs.readFile('file1', (err, data1) => {
    if (err) throw err;
    fs.readFile('file2', (err, data2) => {
        if (err) throw err;
        if (data1.equals(data2)) {
            console.log('EQUAL')
        } else {
            console.log('NON EQUAL')
        }

    });
});

Though for a small and a single script the result would be almost the same

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