183

I am setting a configuration to run my tests in a create-react-app + typescript app (from which I have ejected). I am using jest + enzyme. In my tsconfig.json I have set baseUrl='./src' so I can use absolute paths when I import modules. For example this is a typical import statement in one of my files:

import LayoutFlexBoxItem from 'framework/components/ui/LayoutFlexBoxItem';

You can see that the path is absolute (from /src folder) and not relative. This works fine when I run in debug mode ( yarn start )

But when I run my test ( yarn test ), I get this error:

 Cannot find module 'framework/components/Navigation' from 'index.tsx'

So it looks like jest is not able to resolve this absolute path although I have set it up in my tsconfig.json. This is my tsconfig.json:

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "outDir": "dist",
    "module": "esnext",
    "target": "es5",
    "lib": ["es6", "dom"],
    "sourceMap": true,
    "allowJs": true,
    "jsx": "react",
    "moduleResolution": "node",
    "rootDir": "src",
    "forceConsistentCasingInFileNames": true,
    "noImplicitReturns": true,
    "noImplicitThis": true,
    "noImplicitAny": true,
    "strictNullChecks": true,
    "suppressImplicitAnyIndexErrors": true,
    "noUnusedLocals": true,
    "baseUrl": "./src"    
  },
  "exclude": [
    "node_modules",
    "build",
    "dist",
    "config",    
    "scripts",
    "acceptance-tests",
    "webpack",
    "jest",
    "src/setupTests.ts"
  ]
}

Now I can see that there is a generated tsconfig.test.json at the root of my project. This is the ts configuration used for test. And here is its content:

{
  "extends": "./tsconfig.json",
  "compilerOptions": {
    "module": "commonjs"
  }
}

As you can see the "module" is commonjs here whereas in the default configuration it is esnext. Could this be one reason?

Has any one been able to unit test his typescript project with Jest and absolute path? or is this a known bug? Since I have ejected from default configuration, are there some settings to put in my webpack configuration?

Thanks for your input and suggestion.

22 Answers 22

223

I was struggling with the same problem and actually it turns out that a simple change seems to do the trick.

I just updated the moduleDirectories field in jest.config.js.

Before

moduleDirectories: ['node_modules']

After

moduleDirectories: ['node_modules', 'src']
9
  • 4
    I added this inside package.json, under jest. Mar 6, 2021 at 11:12
  • 34
    This may be obvious, but if you include src path in imports like "... from 'src/...'", add this: moduleDirectories: ['node_modules', '.'] instead. Oct 25, 2021 at 9:36
  • I added package.json then its works! Thanks Mar 8, 2022 at 22:01
  • My issues was in a sub-project of an aws-cdk typescript project. My jest.config.ts had no moduleDirectories line, but when I added the line in your answer, it worked.
    – Shorn
    Apr 9, 2022 at 0:02
  • 1
    @redcartel add this line to your .vscode/settings.json or change the setting in the UI: "javascript.preferences.importModuleSpecifier": "non-relative"
    – Archibald
    Apr 19, 2022 at 15:42
104

As many here pointed out moduleNameMapper in jest.config.js needs to define paths specified in tsconfig.json. For example, if you have paths in tsconfig.json defined as follows

// tsconfig.json
{
 ...
 "baseUrl": "src",
 "paths": {
    "@alias/*": [ 'path/to/alias/*' ]
 }
 ...
}

then your jest.config.js needs to provide those paths in moduleNameMapper in the following format:

// jest.config.js
module.exports = {
    'roots': [
        '<rootDir>/src'
    ],
    'transform': {
        '^.+\\.tsx?$': 'ts-jest'
    },
    'moduleNameMapper': {
         '@alias/(.*)': '<rootDir>/src/path/to/alias/$1'
    }
};

Having that we can improve our jest.config.js to convert paths defined in tsconfig.json automatically. Here is a Gist code snippet for that:

// jest.config.js

function makeModuleNameMapper(srcPath, tsconfigPath) {
    // Get paths from tsconfig
    const {paths} = require(tsconfigPath).compilerOptions;

    const aliases = {};

    // Iterate over paths and convert them into moduleNameMapper format
    Object.keys(paths).forEach((item) => {
        const key = item.replace('/*', '/(.*)');
        const path = paths[item][0].replace('/*', '/$1');
        aliases[key] = srcPath + '/' + path;
    });
    return aliases;
}

const TS_CONFIG_PATH = './tsconfig.json';
const SRC_PATH = '<rootDir>/src';

module.exports = {
    'roots': [
        SRC_PATH
    ],
    'transform': {
        '^.+\\.tsx?$': 'ts-jest'
    },
    'moduleNameMapper': makeModuleNameMapper(SRC_PATH, TS_CONFIG_PATH)
};
5
  • Thanks. How does that cope with multiple locations defined for an alias (like "/opt/*": ["first/*", "second/*"])?
    – morgler
    Feb 16, 2021 at 17:00
  • 1
    doesn'twork for me ` Could not locate module @/c/utils/http mapped as: `Update: works with only <rootDir> not <rootDir>/src Mar 21, 2022 at 16:54
  • How about in a monorepo, where the project root is used to launch the tests, but the tsconfig and jest config are in one of the subdirs (such as frontend)? Still getting not found errors. I think it is related to <rootDir> resolving. Sep 15, 2022 at 15:27
  • I like the makeModuleNameMapper function, but I don't think we should do that honestly. Just my personal opinion. The reason is that it is another code in the code base and even it is simple it may confuse some other developer who will deal with potential future issue. I'm for convention over configuration, but this is the config file. Sep 25, 2022 at 5:37
  • 2
    Thank you so much! I've been struggling for hours with this Oct 6, 2022 at 15:05
62

Here is how I got moduleNameMapper working.

With the below config in my tsconfig:

    "paths": {
      "@App/*": [
        "src/*"
      ],
      "@Shared/*": [
        "src/Shared/*"
      ]
    },

Here's the moduleNameMapper:

"moduleNameMapper": {
  "@App/(.*)": "<rootDir>/src/$1",
  "@Shared/(.*)": "<rootDir>/src/Shared/$1"
}
0
50

Add this following section in your package.json. after you made the changes don't forget to restart your test watchers.

  "jest": {
    "moduleDirectories": [
      "node_modules",
      "src"
    ],
    "moduleFileExtensions": [
      "js",
      "json",
      "ts"
    ],
    "roots": [
      "src"
    ],
    "testRegex": ".spec.ts$",
    "transform": {
      "^.+\\.(t|j)s$": "ts-jest"
    },
    "coverageDirectory": "../coverage",
    "testEnvironment": "node",
    "moduleNameMapper": {
      "src/(.*)": "<rootDir>/src/$1"
    }
  }
7
  • 7
    Worked for me when I was running into this issue with the nestjs framework. I made the edit to the package.json and am now able to run my tests with absolute paths.
    – gian848396
    Mar 23, 2020 at 3:43
  • After making the changes don't forget to restart your test watcher Aug 20, 2020 at 15:00
  • As mentioned, if using NEST framework, this works wonderfully.
    – lucaswxp
    Mar 18, 2021 at 8:45
  • This one also helped me using NestJS, thanks! Mar 24, 2021 at 6:45
  • Is this still a working solution for you?
    – Norfeldt
    Apr 28, 2021 at 22:33
29

For me, I just needed to add

"modulePaths": ["<rootDir>/src"],

to my jest.config.js file.

Following answer to modify moduleDirectories resulted in this error:

Jest encountered an unexpected token

Jest failed to parse a file. This happens e.g. when your code or its dependencies use non-standard JavaScript syntax, or when Jest is not configured to support such syntax.

Out of the box Jest supports Babel, which will be used to transform your files into valid JS based on your Babel configuration.

By default "node_modules" folder is ignored by transformers.

Here's what you can do:
 • If you are trying to use ECMAScript Modules, see https://jestjs.io/docs/ecmascript-modules for how to enable it.
 • To have some of your "node_modules" files transformed, you can specify a custom "transformIgnorePatterns" in your config.
 • If you need a custom transformation specify a "transform" option in your config.
 • If you simply want to mock your non-JS modules (e.g. binary assets) you can stub them out with the "moduleNameMapper" config option.

You'll find more details and examples of these config options in the docs:
https://jestjs.io/docs/configuration
For information about custom transformations, see:
https://jestjs.io/docs/code-transformation

Using:

modulePaths: ["node_modules", "<rootDir>/src"],

From reading the docs it appears that this a list of additional directories and so node_modules is unnecessary.

6
  • 3
    Unsure why this answer got downvoted - this is a clean answer that works perfectly with newer versions of jest at the very least (I'm on v27+ here) and is the recommended solution to this issue in the docs itself. The only thing is you don't actually need the <rootDir> part in most cases where your jest config is at your project root, src works fine too.
    – xyzen
    Sep 7, 2021 at 5:57
  • That's it, thank you been scratching my head for the last hour! Dec 21, 2021 at 8:10
  • @xyzen Thank you ./src works as well but not src Dec 21, 2021 at 8:11
  • This saved me a ton of time! Thank you so much! Jan 20, 2022 at 13:40
  • 1
    Nice! For me it's "modulePaths": ["<rootDir>"], since I like to start my abs paths with src/
    – Dominic
    Jul 27, 2022 at 16:43
21

For those using an absolute path but not using named mappings, this worked for me:

# jsconfig.json
{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "baseUrl": ".",
  }
}

# jest.config.js
const config = {
  moduleDirectories: ['node_modules', '<rootDir>'],
};

1
  • This is what I needed
    – idiglove
    Feb 10, 2022 at 11:10
11

Solution using the best practice

This error occurs because of using absolute paths in the import statements of our TypeScript/Nest.js/Angular projects while using Jest. Fixing it with moduleDirectories and moduleNameMapper options may solve your problem temporarily but it creates issues with other packages such as this TypeORM issue. Also, the creator of the Nest.js framework suggests here and here that using absolute paths is a bad practice. TypeScript's official documentation recommends using relative paths for our own modules.


Absolute path vs Relative path

import statement with absolute path looks like:

import { AuthService } from 'src/auth/auth.service'

import statement with relative path looks like:

import { AuthService } from '../auth/auth.service'

VS Code Setting

VS Code by default uses absolute path as shown above, when we auto-import using code completion or Command/Ctrl + .. We need to change this default setting to use relative paths.

Go to VS Code settings and search for a setting: Import Module Specifier. Change it from shortest to relative.

Now from here on, VS Code will automatically import using the relative paths.


Fixing imports in the project

Now in the project files, look for the absolute paths in the imports that look like the example above and delete them. You will see errors for the packages that you deleted. Simply use the auto-import suggestions and import them back. This time they will be imported using the relative paths. This step may be tedious depending on the size of your project but it's worth it in the long run.


Hope that works out! Cheers!

0
6

ts-jest can resolve this problem perfectly!
https://kulshekhar.github.io/ts-jest/docs/getting-started/paths-mapping#jest-config-with-helper
just modify jest.config.js like this:

    const { pathsToModuleNameMapper } = require('ts-jest/utils');
    const { compilerOptions } = require('./tsconfig.json');
    module.exports = {
        // preset is optional, you don't need it in case you use babel preset typescript
        preset: 'ts-jest',
        // note this prefix option
        moduleNameMapper: pathsToModuleNameMapper(compilerOptions.paths, /* { prefix: '<rootDir>/' } */)
    }
5

Here is what worked for me:

npm i -D jest typescript
npm i -D ts-jest @types/jest
npx ts-jest config:init

Then in jest.config.js, here's my setup

module.exports = {
  preset: "ts-jest",
  testEnvironment: "node",
  modulePaths: ["node_modules", "<rootDir>/src"],
};

in my case, I do not have any paths in tsconfig.json but I have baseUrl set to src

5

If you have intalled ts-jest you can use an util function called pathsToModuleNameMapper to convert the path inside tsconfig.json to your jest.config file:

My jest.config.js file:

const { join } = require('path');
const { pathsToModuleNameMapper } = require('ts-jest')
const { compilerOptions } = require('./tsconfig.json')

/** @type {import('ts-jest/dist/types').InitialOptionsTsJest} */

module.exports = {
 rootDir: __dirname,
 setupFilesAfterEnv: ['<rootDir>/jest.setup.ts'],
 setupFiles: ['<rootDir>/src/config/env.ts'],

 collectCoverageFrom: ["<rootDir>/src/modules/**/*UseCase.ts"],
 coverageProvider: "v8",
 coverageThreshold: {
   global: {
    lines: 40
   }
 },

 bail: true,
 clearMocks: true,
 displayName: 'unit-tests',
 testMatch: ["<rootDir>/src/modules/**/*.spec.ts"],

 preset: 'ts-jest',
 testEnvironment: 'node',

 modulePaths: ["<rootDir>/src"],
 moduleNameMapper: pathsToModuleNameMapper(compilerOptions.paths, {
  prefix: join('<rootDir>', compilerOptions.baseUrl)
 })
};
2
  • Should use resetMocks not clearMocks
    – Jeremy
    Apr 26, 2022 at 7:19
  • I was getting the error ` Cannot find module '~/routes' from 'src/server.ts'` in my integration test directory (outside my src dir) and this solution worked perfectly for me. Thanks
    – Stretch0
    Sep 2, 2022 at 11:01
5

I use "baseUrl": "./" without any aliases in tsconfig.json

moduleDirectories: ['node_modules', '<rootDir>'] in jest.config.ts worked for me.

Now I can import local modules e.g import { Hello } from "src/modules/hello" without any problems.

jest.config.ts

/*
 * For a detailed explanation regarding each configuration property and type check, visit:
 * https://jestjs.io/docs/configuration
 */
export default {
  clearMocks: true,
  collectCoverageFrom: ['**/*.(t|j)s'],
  coverageDirectory: 'coverage',
  coverageProvider: 'v8',
  moduleDirectories: ['node_modules', '<rootDir>'],
  moduleFileExtensions: ['js', 'json', 'ts'],
  roots: ['src', 'test'],
  setupFiles: ['dotenv/config'],
  testRegex: ['.*\\.spec\\.ts$'],
  transform: {
    '^.+\\.(t|j)s$': 'ts-jest',
  },
};

tsconfig.json

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "module": "commonjs",
    "declaration": true,
    "removeComments": true,
    "emitDecoratorMetadata": true,
    "experimentalDecorators": true,
    "allowSyntheticDefaultImports": true,
    "target": "es2017",
    "sourceMap": true,
    "outDir": "./dist",
    "baseUrl": "./",
    "esModuleInterop": true,
    "incremental": true,
    "skipLibCheck": true,
    "strictNullChecks": false,
    "noImplicitAny": false,
    "strictBindCallApply": false,
    "forceConsistentCasingInFileNames": false,
    "noFallthroughCasesInSwitch": false,
    "resolveJsonModule": true
  },
  "include": ["src/**/*", "src/**/*.json", "test/**/*"]
}
4

I've using React with Typescript, I removed react-scripts-ts test --env=jsdom from npm test and added jest --watch as my default test, after I added jest.config.js to my project following these instructions https://basarat.gitbooks.io/typescript/docs/testing/jest.html

and I used the the configuration mentioned by @Antonie Laffargue (add/edit property moduleDirectories: ['node_modules', 'src']), it works perfectly.

4

I had a similar problem. I hope this could help to spare time for some of you.

My problem:

  • using create-react-app with typescript
  • using absolute paths (src/MyComp) to import components inside other components (e.g. App.tsx)
  • it was working on compile/run/build
  • it was not working on test

I found that the error was due to a different value of the NODE_PATH. So I set it on tests run.

I recreated the issue and the fix in here: https://github.com/alessandrodeste/...

I'm not sure if this could bring side effects on tests. Let me know if you have feedback ;)

0
3

You probably want moduleNameMapper feature of jest config. It will map your custom import namespaces to real module locations.

see official documentation here:

https://facebook.github.io/jest/docs/en/configuration.html#modulenamemapper-object-string-string

4
  • 1
    Thanks for your answer. I tried to use moduleNameMapper like this: moduleNameMapper: { ".": "./src" } But now my test hangs with this message: Determining test suites to run... It looks like moduleNameMapper is used when I have mapped my paths. But in my case I have not mapped any path. I just specified a baseUrl
    – TheSoul
    May 4, 2018 at 10:12
  • 3
    I'm having the same issue. Has anyone found a solution? I tried "moduleDirectories": ["src"], but it doesn't work.
    – harry
    Jun 7, 2018 at 3:42
  • A lot of try-hard here, but I found the solution with moduleNameMapper.
    – C0ZEN
    Nov 7, 2021 at 14:31
  • This one worked for me '^src/(.*)': '<rootDir>/src/$1',
    – alayor
    Feb 10, 2022 at 6:30
3

Adding the following to my jest config in package.json resolved this problem for me.

 "moduleDirectories": [
  "node_modules",
  "src"
]
3

If this happens to you in monorepo here's what fixed the problem for me:

Inside jest.config.js

roots: ["<rootDir>packages"],
moduleNameMapper: {
  '@monopre/(.+)$': '<rootDir>packages/$1/src',
},

Assuming you have in tsconfig.json

"paths": {
  "@monopre/*": ["packages/*/src"],
}
3

On my side this worked for me:

I defined my paths in tsconfig.json:

"paths": { "@example/*": ["src/example/*"] }

After that, jest can't import this modules when a test is runned.

You must add in your jest.config.json the moduleNameMppaer:

"moduleNameMapper": {"^@example/(.*)$": [
        "<rootDir>/example/$1"
],}

This is the way that I had to follow.

1

Using Svelte Kit, my solution was:

import { readFileSync } from 'fs';
import pkg from 'ts-jest/utils/index.js';
const { pathsToModuleNameMapper } = pkg;

const { compilerOptions } = JSON.parse(readFileSync('./tsconfig.json'))

export default {
    preset: 'ts-jest',
    testEnvironment: 'node',
    testMatch: ['<rootDir>/**/*.test.ts'],
    testPathIgnorePatterns: ['/node_modules/'],
    coverageDirectory: './coverage',
    coveragePathIgnorePatterns: ['node_modules'],
    globals: { 'ts-jest': { diagnostics: false } },
    transform: {},
    moduleNameMapper: pathsToModuleNameMapper(compilerOptions.paths, { prefix: '<rootDir>/' }),
}
1

In my case the problem was resolved using the moduleNameMapper parameter in jest.config.ts

TEST failed with error:

● Test suite failed to run

Cannot find module 'entities/*some_module*' from '*some_path*'

Added a line to the jest.config.ts file:

moduleNameMapper: {
    ...
    'entities/(.*)': "<rootDir>/src/entities/$1"
    ...
}

Project settings for this case:

tsconfig.json with absolut path

...
"baseUrl": ".",
"paths": {
    "*": [
        "./src/*"
    ]
},
...

Project tree:

...
src
 |- app
 |- entities
    |-*some_mudule*
       |- ...
       |- index.ts
 |- featues
 |- widgets
...
.jest.config.ts
.tsconfig.json
...
0

I had the same problem using StitchesJS, the module was not found, the solution was to put this in my jest.config.js

  moduleNameMapper: {
"stitches.config": "<rootDir>/node_modules/@stitches/react/dist/index.cjs"}

You can adapt according to the module you want.

0

If you have a monorepo where each project has its own tsconfig.json that extends from the base (root) tsconfig.json, and each project has its own jest.config.js, and you launch tests from the project root, you should add your moduleNameMapper to the jest.config.js in the project root.

Eg.

backend/
 - tsconfig.json
 - jest.config.js

frontend/
 - tsconfig.json
 - jest.config.js

/
- tsconfig.json
- jest.config.js

And your problem is in the jest tests frontend/ and it has a tsconfig like:

{
  "compilerOptions": {
    "jsx": "react-native",
    "paths": {
      "src/*": ["client/src/*"]
    },
    "noEmit": true
  },
  "extends": "../tsconfig.json"
}

Then adding this to the root jest.config should fix the issue:

  moduleNameMapper: {
    'src/(.*)': '<rootDir>/client/src/$1',
  },

So in total, something like:

module.exports = {
  testEnvironment: 'node',
  testRegex: '(/__tests__/.*|(\\.|/)(test|spec))\\.(jsx?|tsx?)$',
  testPathIgnorePatterns: ['cdk.out/'],
  transform: {
    '^.+\\.tsx?$': 'ts-jest',
  },
  modulePathIgnorePatterns: ['tests'],
  globals: {
    'ts-jest': {
      isolatedModules: true,
    },
  },
  moduleNameMapper: {
    'src/(.*)': '<rootDir>/client/src/$1',
  },
};

Sort of obvious, but adding this answer since I didn't see this case in the other answers, and monorepos are still a thing :)

0

Kind of an old thread but recently, on top of the other suggestions of adding the paths on "moduleNameMapper": on jest.config.js and "paths": on tsconfig.json, I also had to include my test folder so the compiler could recognize it.

So on tsconfig.json, add:

...
"include": ["src", "__tests__"],
...

Hope it helps on someone googling for it 😉

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