How do I run Jasmine tests on Node.js from command line? I have installed jasmine-node via npm and written some tests. I want to run tests inside the spec
directory and get results in the terminal, is this possible?
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2Try this as well github.com/jasmine-contrib/grunt-jasmine-node– DalorzoJan 27, 2014 at 22:23
4 Answers
This should get you going quickly:
- install Node.js (obviously).
Next install Jasmine. Open a command prompt and run:
npm install -g jasmine
Next, cd to any directory and set up an example 'project':
jasmine init
jasmine examples
Now run your unit tests:
jasmine
If your jasmine.json file is somewhere else besides spec/support/jasmine.json, simply run:
jasmine JASMINE_CONFIG_PATH=relative/path/to/your/jasmine.json
For more info see:
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3This info should definitely be more prominently included on the jasmine homepage. At the moment you only find out if you go to the github project. Mar 6, 2016 at 15:54
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3Doing exactly this on a blank "npm init" project still yields no results for me. Sep 1, 2016 at 12:16
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3
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I think that last link wants to point here now: jasmine.github.io/setup/nodejs.html– ruffinMay 12 at 16:25
EDIT
It seems this is no longer the current best answer as the package is unmaintained. Please see the answer below
You can do this
from your test directory
sudo npm install jasmine-node
This installs jasmine into ../node_modules/jasmine-node
then
../node_modules/jasmine-node/bin/jasmine-node --verbose --junitreport --noColor spec
which from my demo does this
Player - 5 ms
should be able to play a Song - 2 ms
when song has been paused - 1 ms
should indicate that the song is currently paused - 0 ms
should be possible to resume - 0 ms
tells the current song if the user has made it a favorite - 1 ms
#resume - 0 ms
should throw an exception if song is already playing - 0 ms
Player - 5 ms
should be able to play a Song - 2 ms
when song has been paused - 1 ms
should indicate that the song is currently paused - 0 ms
should be possible to resume - 0 ms
tells the current song if the user has made it a favorite - 1 ms
#resume - 0 ms
should throw an exception if song is already playing - 0 ms
Finished in 0.01 seconds
5 tests, 8 assertions, 0 failures, 0 skipped
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17To those arriving via google:
jasmine-node
has had no new commits since 2014, only runs jasmine 1.3, and appears to have been abandoned. The officialjasmine
CLI in user64141's answer below is more up to date. May 10, 2016 at 23:56 -
2Avoid installing NPM packages with
sudo
. Only when really necessary, happens rarely. Oct 19, 2016 at 18:30
The easiest way is to run the command in your project root:
$ npx humile
It founds all your specs which name ends with .spec.js
.
If you think humile is fine for your project, just install it as dev dependency. It speeds up the command.
$ npm install -D humile
Try Karma (formerly Testacular), it is a testing library agnostic test runner done by Angular.js team
http://karma-runner.github.io/0.12/index.html
Jasmine support is well baked.
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6Karma doesn't run the tests in Node. See stackoverflow.com/questions/16660670/….– mik01ajMar 13, 2015 at 11:23