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babel-plugin-rewire's Introduction

babel-plugin-rewire

A Babel plugin that adds the ability to rewire module dependencies.

Build Status Join the chat at https://gitter.im/speedskater/babel-plugin-rewire

It is inspired by rewire.js and transfers its concepts to es6 using babel.

It is useful for writing tests, specifically to mock the dependencies of the module under test.

Therefore for each module it adds and exports the methods __GetDependency__, __Rewire__, and __ResetDependency__. For compatibility reasons with rewire.js, the methods __get__ and __set__ are exported as well. These methods allow you to rewire the module under test. Furthermore in case of a default export these methods are assigned to the existing default export, except for default exports of primitive types (boolean, number, string, ...).

An additional object named __RewireAPI__ is exported as named export as well as a property of the default export. This object itself contains all the functions mentioned above as fields. This enables one to rewire members of the imported module itself without explicitly importing the module (see Handling of default exports below).

##ES6 Imports and React

Dependencies from import statements can be rewired

###Example

import ChildComponent from 'child-component-module';

export default class MyFancyWrapperComponent extends React.Component {

	render() {
		return (<div className="wrapper-style">
			<ChildComponent {...this.props} />
		</div>);
	}
}

Test Code

import ComponentToTest from 'my-fancy-wrapper-component-module';

ComponentToTest.__Rewire__('ChildComponent', React.createClass({
    render: function() { return <div {...this.props}></div>; }
}));
....

ComponentToTest.__ResetDependency__('ChildComponent');

##Node/browserify require() and top-level var support

Variables declared and initialised at the top level, such as those from require() calls, can be rewired

###Example

var Path = require('path');

var env = 'production';

module.exports = function(name) {
	return Path.normalise(name);
}

Test Code

var Normaliser = require('Normaliser');

Normaliser.__Rewire__('Path', {
  normalise: (name) => name;
});

Normaliser.__Rewire__('env', 'testing');
....

Normaliser.__ResetDependency__('Path');

Named and top level function rewiring

Besides top level variables also top level functions defined in the imported module can be rewired.

When exported functions of a module depend on each other it can be convenient to test them independently. Hence, babel-plugin-rewire allows you to rewire the internal dependencies to exported named functions as shown in the example below.

Be aware, that rewiring a named export does not influence imports of that same export in other modules!

Example

Asuming you have a module TodoOperations.js that internaly uses an asynchronous api to fetch some information

function fetchToDos() {
   ...
   return new Promise(...);
}

export function filterToDos( filterString ) {
   return fetchToDos().then( function( todos ) {
      // Highly fashioned filter function code ...
      return filteredToDos;
   });
}

export function filterAndSortToDos( filterString, sortOrder ) {
   return fetchToDos( filterString ).then( function( filteredToDos ) { 
      // Higly fashioned sort function
      return filteredAndSortedToDos;
   });
}

Test Code

In your test you can mock your API-calls to simply return static dummy data like this

import { filterToDos, filterAndSortToDos, __RewireAPI__ as ToDosRewireAPI } from 'TodoOperations.js';

describe('api call mocking', function() {
   it('should use the mocked api function', function(done) {
      ToDosRewireAPI.__Rewire__('fetchToDos', function() {
         return Promise.resolve(['Test more', 'Refine your tests', 'Tests first rocks']);
      });
      filterToDos('Test').then(function(filteredTodos) {
         //check results
         done();
      }).catch((e) => fail());
      ToDosRewireAPI.__ResetDependency__('fetchToDos');
   });
   
   it('should use the mocked filter function', function(done) {
      ToDosRewireAPI.__Rewire__('filterToDos', function() {
         return Promise.resolve( ['02 Test more', '01 Test even more' ] );
      });
      filterAndSortToDos('Test', 'asc').then(function(filteredAndSortedTodos) {
         //check results
         done();
      }).catch((e) => fail());
      ToDosRewireAPI.__ResetDependency__('filterToDos');
   });
});

Handling of default exports

If a non primitive default export is present in the imported module, it is enriched with the API-Functions and the API-Object. If no default export is present, the API-Object named __RewireAPI__ becomes the default export of the module.

This object basically supports all the rewire API-Functions as described in the introduction above and allows one to rewire the module without explicitly importing the module itself.

Example

Asuming your imported module does not have a default export specified like in this simple example

function message() {
   return 'Hello world';
}

export function foo() {
   return message();
}

Test Code

In your test you would use the default exported API-Object to rewire the function message of the imported module like this

import FooModule from 'foo.js';
import { foo, __RewireAPI__ as FooModuleRewireAPI } from 'foo.js';

describe('module default export test', function() {
   it('should demonstrate the default exported rewire api', function() {
      expect( foo() ).to.equal('Hello world');
      FooModule.__Rewire__('message', function() {
         return 'my message';
      });
      expect( foo() ).to.equal('my message');
      FooModule.__ResetDependency__('message');
   });
   
   it('should demonstrate the rewire apis named export', function() {
      expect( foo() ).to.equal('Hello world');
      FooModuleRewireAPI.__Rewire__('message', function() {
         return 'my message';
      });
      expect( foo() ).to.equal('my message');
      FooModuleRewireAPI.__ResetDependency__('message');
   });
});

Handling of async functions

Rewiring of async functions works as one would expect using the same API as for other rewires for both default exports and named exports.

Example

Assuming your imported module consists of the following.

// api.js
export default async function asyncApiDefault() {
   return await asyncApi();
};

export async function asyncApi() {
   return await api();
};

function api() {
  // Some async API call
  return Promise.resolve('API Response');
};

Test Code

In your test you would use the default exported API-Object to rewire the function asyncApiDefault and asyncApi of the imported module like this.

import { default as asyncApiDefault, asyncApi,  __RewireAPI__ as AsyncApiRewireAPI } from 'api.js';
describe('async function export test', function() {
 it('should be able to rewire default async function', function() {
    return asyncApiDefault().then(response => {
      expect(response).to.equal('API Response');

      AsyncApiRewireAPI.__set__('asyncApi', function() {
        return Promise.resolve('Mock API Response');
      });

      return asyncApiDefault().then(response => {
        expect(response).to.equal('Mock API Response');
        AsyncApiRewireAPI.__ResetDependency__('asyncApi');
      });
    });
  });

  it('should be able to rewire non default async function', function() {
    return asyncApi().then(response => {
      expect(response).to.equal('API Response');

      AsyncApiRewireAPI.__set__('api', function() {
        return Promise.resolve('Mock API Response');
      });

      return asyncApi().then(response => {
        expect(response).to.equal('Mock API Response');
        AsyncApiRewireAPI.__ResetDependency__('api');
      });
    });
  });
});

Installation

$ npm install babel babel-plugin-rewire

Usage

To use the plugin identify it by its long name "babel-plugin-rewire" or by its abbreviation "rewire". In case you are using rewire.js in the same project you must use the unabbreviated plugin name. Otherwise babel is trying to load rewire.js as a plugin which will cause an error.

###Commandline abbreviated:

$ babel --plugins rewire ..

full plugin name:

$ babel --plugins babel-plugin-rewire ..

With babelrc

You can also specify plugins via the babelrc file:

{
  "plugins": ["rewire"]
}

Whether you're using the command line, JS API, or require hook, this file is honored by babel.

JavaScript API

abbreviated:

require("babel").transform("code", { plugins: ["rewire"] });

full plugin name:

require("babel").transform("code", { plugins: ["babel-plugin-rewire"] });

Require Hook

require('babel/register')({
  plugins: ['babel-plugin-rewire']
})

Webpack

abbreviated:

{test: /src\/js\/.+\.js$/, loader: 'babel-loader?plugins=rewire' }

full plugin name:

{test: /src\/js\/.+\.js$/, loader: 'babel-loader?plugins=babel-plugin-rewire' }

Browserify/Babelify

full plugin name:

var appBundler = browserify({
    entries: [test.src], // Only need initial file, browserify finds the rest
}).transform(
    babelify.configure({
        plugins: [require('babel-plugin-rewire')]
    })
);

Combining with other plugins/tools

There are some things to consider when using babel-plugin-rewire together with isparta. Since isparta runs Babel itself it's important to remember to add the same configuration options to it as you would do with Babel. If you forget this you will in some cases see unexpected errors.

If you use .babelrc it's advised that you run your tests with a specific ENV, for example "test", and add the following to your .babelrc.

"env": {
  "test": {
    "plugins": ["rewire"]
  }
}

If you are using isparta together with Webpack you could also do something like this.

loader: 'isparta?{ babel: { plugins: ["rewire"] } }'

istanbul

Initially isparta was created to solve the problem of using istanbul with Babel. However work has been done recently on istanbul to support Babel generated code with sourcemaps.

At the moment of this writing this is still part of an alpha version (1.0.0-alpha.2, see #212 for details). You need to use the sourcemaps option with the inline value (see this for an example).

Because istanbul doesn't run babel by itself, you need to make sure that your code goes through babel. If you're running it through webpack it should be no different than what's shown on the webpack section, but if you're running it through the node cli, you need to use babel-node and specify the plugin via the cli argument or babelrc.

A small quirk is that you need to run the actual istanbul cli file, rather than the istanbul command, such as:

babel-node ./node_modules/istanbul/lib/cli.js cover test/run-tests.js

See the istanbul sample-babel-node project for a full working example.

Examples projects

Release History

  • 0.1.0 Initial release
  • 0.1.1 Bugfix: moved to peer dependencies
  • 0.1.2 Added __set__ and __get__ to provide compatibility with rewire.js
  • 0.1.3 Added handling for the export of named declarations like classes or functions
  • 0.1.4 Fixed variable handling and used renaming of scope variables. Further removed global identifiers to prevent memory leaks.
  • 0.1.5 Fixed regression
  • 0.1.6 Support for rewiring top level variables. Added module.exports for non-es6 modules.
  • 0.1.7 Fixed regressions from 0.1.6.
  • 0.1.8 Ignores destructuring assignments to prevent errors.
  • 0.1.9 Removed issues with TDZ and es6.spec.blockScoping optional transformer.
  • 0.1.10 Fixed tests.
  • 0.1.11 Fixed issues with for-of loops.
  • 0.1.12 Updated Plugin Format.
  • 0.1.13 Changed rewire specific properties on default export to non-enumerable properties.
  • 0.1.14 Added handling for non-enumerable properties to commonjs support. Support for mixed es6 and commonjs support. Handling for primitive types.
  • 0.1.15 Added functionality to rewire functions.
  • 0.1.16 Fixed variable scope for rewired functions.
  • 0.1.17 Fixed variable scoping for var variable declarations.
  • 0.1.18 Fixed function scope for rewired functions.
  • 0.1.19 Removed debug statements.
  • 0.1.20 Added rewiring named exported functions and variables.
  • 0.1.21 Improved default export handling, fixed commonjs default exporting, fixed ast nodes resource leaks, improved README.
  • 0.1.22 Added support for asynchronous functions
  • 0.1.23-beta Improved flow compatibility, Added functionality to work with cyclic dependencies.
  • 1.0.0-beta-1 Added support for babel 6, added support for rewiring classes, added support for flow types, added support for rewire.js compatible _with_
  • 1.0.0-beta-2 Removed rewire of Object, require
  • 1.0.0-beta-3 Removed support for rewiring of globals. Added support for rewiring in combination with assignment and update expressions.
  • 1.0.0-beta-4 Updates jsx support in combination with babel 6 but has a regression
  • 1.0.0-beta-5 Fixes rewiring of jsx elements. Readme improvements. Test for pass-through like modules.
  • 1.0.0-rc-1 Fixes rewiring of switch statements. Readme improvements. Wildcard imports and tdz issues.

Contributors

speedskater - author and creator of initial release Peet - module.exports and top-level var support TheSavior - support for non-enumerable rewire properties PSpSynedra - support for named export and function rewiring and improvements of default imports Gustaf Dalemar - support for asynchronous functions Spencre Leichty - support for named wildcard exports Zhanzhan He - support for wildcard imports

License

The ISC License (ISC)

Copyright (c) 2015, Robert Binna [email protected]

Permission to use, copy, modify, and/or distribute this software for any purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.

babel-plugin-rewire's People

Contributors

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