Mocha has built-in Promise support as of version 1.18.0 (March 2014). You can return a promise from a test case, and Mocha will wait for it:
it('does something asynchronous', function() { // note: no `done` argument
return getSomePromise().then(function(value) {
expect(value).to.equal('foo');
});
});
Don't forget the return
keyword on the second line. If you accidentally omit it, Mocha will assume your test is synchronous, and it won't wait for the .then
function, so your test will always pass even when the assertion fails.
If this gets too repetitive, you may want to use the chai-as-promised library, which gives you an eventually
property to test promises more easily:
it('does something asynchronous', function() {
return expect(getSomePromise()).to.eventually.equal('foo');
});
it('fails asynchronously', function() {
return expect(getAnotherPromise()).to.be.rejectedWith(Error, /some message/);
});
Again, don't forget the return
keyword!
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