8

Why does mocha timeout when an assertion fails inside a Q future? You also don't get to see the assertion failure when this happens. This does not happen if I just use callbacks. How should I write this while still using futures but get to see the assertion error instead of a timeout?

var Q = require('q');
function hack() {
  var ret = Q.defer();
  ret.resolve(true);
  return ret.promise;
}

it('test', function(done) {
  hack().then(function(bool) {
    assert(false);
    done();
  });
});
3
  • Is the assertion even being reached? Mocha should definitely report a failed assertion. If it times out, that usually means the code isn't being run in the first place.
    – greim
    Jun 2, 2014 at 2:49
  • Removing the assert(false); statement ends up with a pass, so I'm pretty sure it's being reached.
    – Verhogen
    Jun 2, 2014 at 4:23
  • Oh haha, just realized, your assertion exception is being caught by Q, per the spec.
    – greim
    Jun 2, 2014 at 5:14

3 Answers 3

10

The assertion call throws an exception, which is caught by Q in order to properly conform to the promises spec. So mocha never reaches done(), nor does it see an exception thrown. You could do something like this:

it('test', function(done) {
  hack().then(function(bool) {
    assert(false);
    done();
  }).catch(function(err){
    done(err);
  });
});

[edit] Alternatively, you can omit the done argument altogether and just return the promise directly from the test function, in which case mocha will pass/fail the test based on the outcome of the returned promise:

it('test', function() {
  return hack().then(function(bool) {
    assert(false);
  });
});

...which is a nice way to simplify your test functions. Props to Taytay elsewhere in this thread for pointing this out.

1
  • Thanks! Good catch. Alternatively just use hack().done(...), although it looks kind of weird due to the done parameter.
    – Verhogen
    Jun 2, 2014 at 12:38
3

Mocha now supports promises in unit tests, so you can just return the promise instead of relying upon calling (done) from a then handler. It's easier and safer (because you won't forget to call done)

So you could just write:

it('test', function() {
  return hack().then(function(bool) {
    assert(false);
  });
});

That would fail because the promise would fail, and Mocha would detect it.

This is from the Mocha docs in the section "Working with Promises": https://mochajs.org/

1
  • 1
    This should probably be the accepted answer now that Mocha supports promises.
    – twiz
    Jan 5, 2016 at 14:48
1

Improving on greim's answer including what callumacrae added in a comment, you can do it like this:

it('test', function(done) {
  hack().then(function(bool) {
    assert(false);
    done();
  }).catch(done);
});

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