You're correct that it's related to ngMock. The ngMock module is automatically loaded for every Angular test, and it initializes the mock $httpBackend
to handle any use of the $http
service, which includes template fetching. The template system tries to load the template through $http
and it becomes an "unexpected request" to the mock.
What you need a way to pre-load the templates into the $templateCache
so that they're already available when Angular asks for them, without using $http
.
The Preferred Solution: Karma
If you're using Karma to run your tests (and you should be), you can configure it to load the templates for you with the ng-html2js preprocessor. Ng-html2js reads the HTML files you specify and converts them into an Angular module that pre-loads the $templateCache
.
Step 1: Enable and configure the preprocessor in your karma.conf.js
// karma.conf.js
preprocessors: {
"path/to/templates/**/*.html": ["ng-html2js"]
},
ngHtml2JsPreprocessor: {
// If your build process changes the path to your templates,
// use stripPrefix and prependPrefix to adjust it.
stripPrefix: "source/path/to/templates/.*/",
prependPrefix: "web/path/to/templates/",
// the name of the Angular module to create
moduleName: "my.templates"
},
If you are using Yeoman to scaffold your app this config will work
plugins: [
'karma-phantomjs-launcher',
'karma-jasmine',
'karma-ng-html2js-preprocessor'
],
preprocessors: {
'app/views/*.html': ['ng-html2js']
},
ngHtml2JsPreprocessor: {
stripPrefix: 'app/',
moduleName: 'my.templates'
},
Step 2: Use the module in your tests
// my-test.js
beforeEach(module("my.templates")); // load new module containing templates
For a complete example, look at this canonical example from Angular test guru Vojta Jina. It includes an entire setup: karma config, templates, and tests.
A Non-Karma Solution
If you do not use Karma for whatever reason (I had an inflexible build process in legacy app) and are just testing in a browser, I have found that you can get around ngMock's takeover of $httpBackend
by using a raw XHR to fetch the template for real and insert it into the $templateCache
. This solution is much less flexible, but it gets the job done for now.
// my-test.js
// Make template available to unit tests without Karma
//
// Disclaimer: Not using Karma may result in bad karma.
beforeEach(inject(function($templateCache) {
var directiveTemplate = null;
var req = new XMLHttpRequest();
req.onload = function() {
directiveTemplate = this.responseText;
};
// Note that the relative path may be different from your unit test HTML file.
// Using `false` as the third parameter to open() makes the operation synchronous.
// Gentle reminder that boolean parameters are not the best API choice.
req.open("get", "../../partials/directiveTemplate.html", false);
req.send();
$templateCache.put("partials/directiveTemplate.html", directiveTemplate);
}));
Seriously, though. Use Karma. It takes a little work to set up, but it lets you run all your tests, in multiple browsers at once, from the command line. So you can have it as part of your continuous integration system, and/or you can make it a shortcut key from your editor. Much better than alt-tab-refresh-ad-infinitum.