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I am trying to mock console.warn/error but I can't. I use a third-party-library which calls console.warn inside it. I need to test was it called or wasn't. In my test case I was trying to stub console.warn but it didn't help. After that I was trying to mock console manually it didn't work out either.

console.warn = jest.fn();
testSchema('/app/components/Users/UserItem/UserItemContainer.js');
expect(console.warn).toBeCalled();

didn't work

console.warn = jest.fn();
testSchema('/app/components/Users/UserItem/UserItemContainer.js');
console.warn('error');
expect(console.warn).toBeCalled();

did work.

But I still see console.warn node_modules/babel-relay-plugin/lib/getBabelRelayPlugin.js:138 in the terminal.

0

4 Answers 4

201

You have to use global to access objects in the global context

global.console = {warn: jest.fn()}
expect(console.warn).toBeCalled()

or use jest.spyOn added in 19.0.0

jest.spyOn(global.console, 'warn')
13
  • 3
    Yes guys it works. But one thing is that you have to require the lib after you declare global.console. I did it wrong. I required my lib and after that declared global. Thank you.
    – Errorpro
    Dec 19, 2016 at 15:14
  • 3
    Interesting how this is not documented anywhere on Jest's website. I am searching and can't find anything explaining this.
    – Leonardo
    May 23, 2017 at 12:43
  • 2
    with typescript: error TS2322: Type '{ warn: Mock<{}>; }' is not assignable to type 'Console'. Jul 19, 2017 at 12:31
  • 8
    just so that everyone's aware. global.console = {...} will suppress the error while jest.spyOn(...) will not. You decide if you want errors suppressed or not in your tests.
    – a11smiles
    May 2, 2018 at 2:10
  • 57
    I prefer jest.spyOn(...) because it is easier to clean up and I'm using TypeScript but also wanted to suppress errors in the output as @a11smiles mentions. So I used jest.spyOn(global.console, "warn").mockImplementation(() => {}) which prevents the spy calling through to the underlying console.warn
    – djskinner
    Jun 7, 2018 at 9:18
161

Use jest.spyOn() and mockRestore().

const consoleWarnMock = jest.spyOn(console, 'warn').mockImplementation();
...
consoleWarnMock.mockRestore();

The accepted answer does not restore the original console.warn() and will "compromise" the other tests inside the same file (if console.warn() is used inside the other tests or the code being tested).

FYI if you use console.warn = jest.fn() in a test file, it won't affect other test files (e.g console.warn will be back to its original value in the other test files).

Advice: you can call consoleWarnMock.mockRestore() inside afterEach()/afterAll() to be sure that even if a test crashes, it won't compromise the other tests from the same file (e.g ensures the tests inside the same file are fully isolated).

Full example:

const consoleWarnMock = jest.spyOn(console, 'warn').mockImplementation();
console.warn('message1'); // Won't be displayed (mocked)
console.warn('message2'); // Won't be displayed (mocked)
expect(console.warn).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(2);
expect(consoleWarnMock).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(2); // Another syntax
expect(console.warn).toHaveBeenLastCalledWith('message2');
expect(consoleWarnMock).toHaveBeenLastCalledWith('message2'); // Another syntax
expect(consoleWarnMock.mock.calls).toEqual([['message1'], ['message2']]);
expect(console.warn.mock.calls).toEqual([['message1'], ['message2']]);
consoleWarnMock.mockRestore(); // IMPORTANT
//console.warn.mockRestore(); // Another syntax

console.warn('message3'); // Will be displayed (not mocked anymore)
expect(consoleWarnMock).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(0); // Not counting anymore
expect(consoleWarnMock.mock.calls).toEqual([]);
//expect(console.warn.mock.calls).toEqual([]); // Crash

You cannot write

console.warn = jest.fn().mockImplementation();
... 
console.warn.mockRestore();

because it won't restore the original console.warn().

/!\ With mockImplementationOnce() you will still need to call consoleWarnMock.mockRestore():

// /!\
const consoleWarnMock = jest.spyOn(console, 'warn').mockImplementationOnce(() => {});
console.warn('message1'); // Won't be displayed (mocked)
expect(console.warn).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1);
expect(consoleWarnMock).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1); // Another syntax
expect(console.warn).toHaveBeenLastCalledWith('message1');
expect(consoleWarnMock).toHaveBeenLastCalledWith('message1'); // Another syntax
expect(consoleWarnMock.mock.calls).toEqual([['message1']]);
expect(console.warn.mock.calls).toEqual([['message1']]);

console.warn('message2'); // Will be displayed (not mocked anymore)
// /!\
expect(console.warn).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(2); // BAD => still counting
expect(consoleWarnMock.mock.calls).toEqual([['message1'], ['message2']]);
expect(console.warn.mock.calls).toEqual([['message1'], ['message2']]);

consoleWarnMock.mockRestore(); // IMPORTANT
//console.warn.mockRestore(); // Another syntax
console.warn('message3'); // Will be displayed (not mocked anymore)
expect(consoleWarnMock).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(0); // Not counting anymore
expect(consoleWarnMock.mock.calls).toEqual([]);
//expect(console.warn.mock.calls).toEqual([]); // Crash

You can also write:

const assert = console.assert;
console.assert = jest.fn();
...
console.assert = assert;
5
  • This solution is not working for me; jest 25.5.4. It just doesn't mock the console method. The number of calls is zero and the original method(console.error for me) still gets called.
    – cst1992
    Mar 8, 2021 at 9:39
  • @cst1992 hey , did you find any other way to test it , if so please let us know that would be great , i am also stuck with this issue . Mar 9, 2021 at 13:22
  • @SakthiSureshAnand No luck yet :(
    – cst1992
    Mar 10, 2021 at 9:43
  • @cst1992 oh no :( me too , could not find yet Mar 10, 2021 at 9:50
  • I was going to suggest spying on globalThis.console instead of just console, which worked for me, but now I find that plain console is also working for me (Jest 26.6) so maybe I'm just lucky? :( Good luck! Mar 18, 2021 at 17:09
7

You could try the following, test and pleae make sure to have clearMocks to true in your jest config file.

test('it should console warn a message', ()=>{
    jest.spyOn(global.console, 'warn').mockImplementation();

    console.warn('my error');
    expect(console.warn).toBeCalledTimes(1)
    expect(console.warn).toBeCalledWith('my error');
})
module.exports = {
    ...
    clearMocks: true,
    ...
}
0

To stop the logs from appearing in your test execution first create a consoleMocks file and add it to the jest configuration

setupFiles: ['./test/consoleMock.js'],

In the consoleMocks file add the following:

global.console = {
  ...global.console,
  log: jest.fn(),
  warn: jest.fn(),
}

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