10

I work on a large Angular App and initially we done a lot of our tests by using $provide to mock services. However we now have a lot of Jasmine Spies in our tests in order to stub and spy on services.

i.e

spyOn(myService, 'myMethod').andReturn 'myValue'

Should we really be using $provide for this or are there cases where spying on a service is the best approach?

In the Angular Tests they use spies for spying on Jquery which I would see as an external service.

spyOn(jq.prototype, 'on');

$provide seems to be used more for internal services.

  module(function($provide){
    $provide.provider('$exceptionHandler', $ExceptionHandlerProvider);
  });

There is also a Jasmine createSpy function but now I'm thinking that $provide should always take precedence over that.

Any insights or help in this would be appreciated.

1 Answer 1

8

From my own (limited) experience, I would say do whatever approach makes:

  • The test code simpler / clearer / shorter
  • Limits the assumptions about what the code your testing does internally.
  • Reduces its side-affects (like running actual Ajax requests)
  • Keeps the test as short as possible, in terms or run time.

Usually the spyOn approach works when, in order to do the above, I would like to stub a single method from a service / factory. If I need to mock an entire service / factory, then use $provide.

A few specific cases come to mind that require one or the other:

  • If you're testing a service, then to stub other methods from that service, you'll have to use spyOn

  • To ensure that extra dependencies aren't introduced later in the code under test, than $provide adds a bit more protection. Say, if you want to ensure that ServiceA only requires myMethod from ServiceB, then $provide I think would be the way to go, as if ServiceA calls any undefined methods from ServiceB during the test, errors would be raised.

    $provide.provider('ServiceB', {
        myMethod: function() {}
    });
    
  • If you want to mock a factory that returns a function, so:

    app.factory('myFactory', function() {
      return function(option) {
        // Do something here
      }
    });
    

    Which is used as:

    myFactory(option);
    

    Then to verify that some code calls myFactory(option) I think there is no alternative then to use $provide to mock the factory.

Just by the way, they're not mutually-exclusive options. You can use $provide and then still have spies involved. In the previous example, if you want to verify the factory was called with an option, you might have to:

var myFactorySpy = jasmine.createSpy();
$provide.provider('myFactory', myFactorySpy);

And then in the test at the appropriate point:

expect(myFactorySpy).toHaveBeenCalledWith(option);
1
  • 1
    That's helpful coming from another angle thanks. Regarding mocking a factory that returns a function - I think you can also do this using createSpy to return the function.
    – Asta
    Apr 9, 2014 at 12:48

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.