I'm submitting a network request in a test case, but this sometimes takes longer than 2 seconds (the default timeout).
How do I increase the timeout for a single test case?
Here you go: http://mochajs.org/#test-level
it('accesses the network', function(done){
this.timeout(500);
[Put network code here, with done() in the callback]
})
For arrow function use as follows:
it('accesses the network', (done) => {
[Put network code here, with done() in the callback]
}).timeout(500);
.timeout(500)
to end of it(...).timeout(500)
If you wish to use es6 arrow functions you can add a .timeout(ms)
to the end of your it
definition:
it('should not timeout', (done) => {
doLongThing().then(() => {
done();
});
}).timeout(5000);
At least this works in Typescript.
.timeout
is not included in the DefinitelyTyped typings for mocha: i.imgur.com/jQbWCn1.png - Using this.timeout(2000)
or this.slow(500)
with a regular old function works and compiles without errors
May 2, 2016 at 21:32
.timeout
is now included in DefinitelyTyped's Mocha typings at: Mocha.IRunnable
. However, if you're using the Webstorm IDE for running these tests, a note of caution: for whatever reason, WebStorm's Mocha integration plugin still does not recognise Mocha tests with .timeout()
appended (meaning that no 'run' button appears next to them), and thus I advocate avoiding arrow functions to allow use of this.timeout()
instead.
Aug 2, 2017 at 11:30
(since I ran into this today)
Be careful when using ES2015 fat arrow syntax:
This will fail :
it('accesses the network', done => {
this.timeout(500); // will not work
// *this* binding refers to parent function scope in fat arrow functions!
// i.e. the *this* object of the describe function
done();
});
EDIT: Why it fails:
As @atoth mentions in the comments, fat arrow functions do not have their own this binding. Therefore, it's not possible for the it function to bind to this of the callback and provide a timeout function.
Bottom line: Don't use arrow functions for functions that need an increased timeout.
this
binding on arrow functions - not the same way would suggest they have some kind of, just different. They only have lexical scopes. You can't bind non-existing this. That's why .bind
, .call
, etc. does not work with it.
this
is.
If you are using in NodeJS then you can set timeout in package.json
"test": "mocha --timeout 10000"
then you can run using npm like:
npm test
From command line:
mocha -t 100000 test.js
You might also think about taking a different approach, and replacing the call to the network resource with a stub or mock object. Using Sinon, you can decouple the app from the network service, focusing your development efforts.
For test navigation on Express
:
const request = require('supertest');
const server = require('../bin/www');
describe('navigation', () => {
it('login page', function(done) {
this.timeout(4000);
const timeOut = setTimeout(done, 3500);
request(server)
.get('/login')
.expect(200)
.then(res => {
res.text.should.include('Login');
clearTimeout(timeOut);
done();
})
.catch(err => {
console.log(this.test.fullTitle(), err);
clearTimeout(timeOut);
done(err);
});
});
});
In the example the test time is 4000 (4s).
Note: setTimeout(done, 3500)
is minor for than done
is called within the time of the test but clearTimeout(timeOut)
it avoid than used all these time.
This worked for me! Couldn't find anything to make it work with before()
describe("When in a long running test", () => {
it("Should not time out with 2000ms", async () => {
let service = new SomeService();
let result = await service.callToLongRunningProcess();
expect(result).to.be.true;
}).timeout(10000); // Custom Timeout
});