For new mocha versions :
You can now return a promise to mocha, and mocha will wait for it to complete before proceeding. For example, the following test will pass :
let a = 0;
before(() => {
return new Promise((resolve) => {
setTimeout(() => {
a = 1;
resolve();
}, 200);
});
});
it('a should be set to 1', () => {
assert(a === 1);
});
You can find the documentation here
For older mocha versions :
If you want your asynchronous request to be completed before everything else happens, you need to use the done
parameter in your before request, and call it in the callback.
Mocha will then wait until done
is called to start processing the following blocks.
before(function (done) {
db.collection('user').remove({}, function (res) { done(); }); // It is now guaranteed to finish before 'it' starts.
})
it('test spec', function (done) {
// execute test
});
after(function() {});
You should be careful though, as not stubbing the database for unit testing may strongly slow the execution, as requests in a database may be pretty long compared to simple code execution.
For more information, see the Mocha documentation.
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