I'm trying to do some testing in Jest but getting stuck with a mock/spy. I've managed to get the test working but only by changing my implementation (which I feel dirty about).
Here's the test:
import * as postmark from 'postmark';
jest.mock('postmark');
const mockGetServers = jest.fn();
const AccountClient = jest.fn(() => {
return {
getServers: mockGetServers
};
});
postmark.AccountClient = AccountClient;
import accountApi from './account-api';
describe('account-api', () => {
describe('listServers', () => {
it('calls postmark listServers', async () => {
await accountApi.listServers();
expect(mockGetServers).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1);
});
});
});
Here's the working implementation:
import * as postmark from 'postmark';
const accountToken = 'some-token-number';
const listServers = async () => {
try {
const accountClient = postmark.AccountClient(accountToken);
const servers = await accountClient.getServers();
return servers;
} catch (e) {
console.log('ERROR', e);
}
};
export default {
listServers
}
Here's the original implementation:
import * as postmark from 'postmark';
const accountToken = 'some-token-number';
const accountClient = postmark.AccountClient(accountToken);
const listServers = async () => {
try {
const servers = await accountClient.getServers();
return servers;
} catch (e) {
console.log('ERROR', e);
}
};
export default {
listServers
}
The only change is where in the code the accountClient is created (either inside or outside of the listServers function). The original implementation would complete and jest would report the mock hadn't been called.
I'm stumped as to why this doesn't work to start with and guessing it's something to do with context of the mock. Am I missing something about the way jest works under the hood? As the implementation of accountApi will have more functions all using the same client it makes sense to create one for all functions rather than per function. Creating it per function doesn't sit right with me.
What is different about the way I have created the accountClient that means the mock can be spied on in the test? Is there a way I can mock (and spy on) the object that is created at class level not at function level?
Thanks