Unfortunately, Sinon doesn't have a function that checks what you're looking for, especially if you don't know or care about the order of calls ahead of time. However, it does let you inspect each time that a function was called individually. As a result, although it's a bit inelegant, you can count the number of times the function was called with the expected arguments yourself.
Use spy.getCalls()
to get an array of the spy's calls, which are instances of spy call objects. Each call lets you access an array of the arguments passed to the spy with call.args
(not call.args()
).
test('spy', () => {
const spy = sinon.spy();
spy(1, 2);
spy(1, 2);
spy(3, 4);
const wantedCalls = spy.getCalls().filter(
(call) => call.args.length === 2 && call.args[0] === 1 && call.args[1] === 2
);
expect(wantedCalls.length).toEqual(2);
});
A bit more cleanly, as Brian Adams points out, you can call call.calledWithExactly()
to check the arguments a specific call received:
test('spy', () => {
const spy = sinon.spy();
spy(1, 2);
spy(1, 2);
spy(3, 4);
const wantedCalls = spy.getCalls().filter(
(call) => call.calledWithExactly(1, 2)
);
expect(wantedCalls.length).toEqual(2);
});