@tapjs/reporter
v4.0.1
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Pretty test output reporters for tap
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@tapjs/reporter
A set of ink based reporters for tap, and utilities you can use to write your own.
The modern reincarnation of treport.
Reporters in Node-Tap
The following reporters are built into this module, and always available in node-tap.
base
--reporter=base
is the default. It provides a reasonable amount
of information about what's going on, without too much noise. If
you run tap with --passes
, then it'll show all the passing
assertions, though that's often excessive, so it's off by
default.
terse
As the name suggests, the terse
report shows much less
information than base
. But otherwise, they are very similar. If
tests pass, it shows a very brief summary. When tests fail, it
shows the same diffs, traces, and so on.
min
More terse than terse
. Shows information about failures and
todo
items, but no summaries, counts, etc. For successful test
runs, this is equivalent to silent
.
silent
The silent
report prints nothing at all to the terminal, but
still exits with an error status code if the tests did not pass.
tap
The --reporter=tap
option will output raw the TAP
content,
similar to just running the test programs directly.
junit
XML output format used by JUnit. The testmoapp/junitxml repo has a good description of the format.
json
A single JSON object, somewhat similar in shape to the XML produced by the
junit
reporter.
Suite
objects contain metadata about a test, and a list of
suites
and cases
(ie, test point assertions). Suites can
contain other suites.
jsonstream
The same data as the json
format, but streamed as
newline-delimited JSON.
Each line is an array with two members. The first is a string,
one of 'start'
, 'end'
, 'pass'
, 'fail'
, 'skip'
or
'todo'
. The second is a data object, as follows:
start
Initial metadata about a suite, before it has loaded any sub-suites or test cases.end
Final data about a suite, with counts and summary data.pass
,fail
,skip
,todo
A test point of the specified type.
markdown
Similar data as shown by the jsonstream
report, but formatted in
Markdown.
Other Reporters
The reporter
config option can also be set to:
- Any executable program - The TAP stream will be written to the program's standard input.
- A module that exports a Stream class - The class will be instantiated, and the TAP stream piped into it.
- A module that exports a React component - The component
will be rendered using
Ink, with the TAP object
provided as the
test
prop, and theLoadedConfig
as theconfig
prop.
Writing Custom Reporters
For streams and command-line reporters written in JavaScript, the tap-parser module is the best way to parse the incoming TAP stream. For other languages, there are many other TAP consumer libraries available.
For React component reporters, the components, hooks, and utilities in this package are likely very useful.
The easiest way to write a custom React reporter is as an
ESM-only module that default exports its Reporter
function on
the main package module. Then, users can do --reporter
<package-name>
in their configs to use it.
Another way, if a reporter comes along with some other plugin
functionality, is to add it to the default set via the API
presented here. However, some care must be taken in that case,
because @tapjs/reporter
is ESM-only, and plugins must be
compatible with both CommonJS and ESM. The @tapjs/dummy-plugin
package
contains an example of this.
@tapjs/reporter
API
The API available at import '@tapjs/reporter'
.
interface TapReportOpts
The options provided to reports.
interface TapReportOpts {
test: TestBase
config: LoadedConfig
}
type Reporter
Alias for React.FC<TapReportOpts>
types: Record<string, Reporter>
A record of all the known reporters, indexed by their config name.
addType(name: string, reporter: Reporter)
Add a reporter at the name provided, so that it can be used on
the --reporter
config.
report(Type: string | Reporter, tap: TAP, config: LoadedConfig)
Render the specified reporter with the tap
object and loaded
config.
Base
The --reporter=base
implementation
Terse
The --reporter=terse
implementation
hooks
Alias for the @tapjs/reporter/hooks
module
components
Alias for the @tapjs/reporter/components
module
utils
Alias for the @tapjs/reporter/utils
module
@tapjs/reporter/components
API
This provides a collection of useful components for building tap reports.
The relevant tags are listed here, but this module also exports several types and interfaces that they use for their property definitions.
BailedOut
<BailedOut test={tap} />
Print a bold red "Bailout!" message if the test bails out.
Diff
<Diff diff={diffString} />
Create a colorized diff from a patch string.
HangingIndent
<HangingIndent indent={4}>
Some very long string, which might wrap to multiple lines. Every
line after the first is indented.
</HangingIndent>
Indent every line after the first, useful when printing long stack frame lines.
Any ink Text
properties are allowed.
Log
<Log includeTests test={tap} config={loadedConfig} />
Creates an ink <Static />
component containing console output,
standard output, and (if includeTests
is set) tests as they
complete.
TestLogLine
The component used by <Log />
to show lines for each test as it
completes.
ConsoleLogLine
The component used by <Log />
to show console
output in the
runner process.
StdioLogLine
The component used by <Log />
to show stdio
output from child
test processes.
ResultDetailList
<ResultDetailList
test={tap}
filter={t =>
!!t.counts.fail ||
!!t.counts.skip ||
!!t.counts.todo ||
!t.parser.ok
}
Banner={
<Box>
<Text>tests complete</Text>
</Box>
}
/>
When the test suite is completed, this prints the Banner
if
provided, and then the detailed results of all tests that pass the filter.
By default, passing tests are excluded from this report.
ResultDetails
<ResultDetails result={result} />
Print detailed information about a test point's diagnostics.
Runs
<Runs test={tap} />
Print a line for each test in progress, removing the line when it completes.
Source
<Source source={result.diag.source} at={result.diag.at} />
Pass in a test result.diag that has a source and callsite, and it'll return a prettied up source line with the callsite highlighted.
Stack
<Stack stack={stackString} />
Print a stack string nicely.
Long lines are given a hanging indent, and local filenames are highlighted.
SuiteSummary
<SuiteSummary test={tap} />
The 10 pass 3 fail 2 skip of 18 complete
lines at the bottom
of the test run.
Also prints Bailout!
and Timeout
messages.
TestBadge
<TestBadge test={subtest} />
The PASS
, FAIL
, etc. badges for a subtest.
TestResultsList
<TestResultsList test={subtest} details />
Show the list of results for a completed test. (Shows nothing if the test is not yet complete.)
details
is set in the display in the final test summary,
false
when used in the log.
TestSummary
<TestSummary test={subtest} details omitPassing />
Show the summary for a completed test with its test badge, result details, and so on.
The details
flag will cause it to print the full diagnostic
output for failing test points. It is set false when printing in
the log, true when printing in the final test results report.
TimedOut
<TimedOut test={tap} />
Print a bold red Timeout
message when the suite times out.
@tapjs/reporter/hooks
API
Hook functions that can be used in components providing helpful test information that updates at the appropriate times.
useAssertTotals(test: TestBase)
An up to date
test.assertTotals
useBailedOut(test: Base)
true
or the bailout reason if/when the test bails out. false
otherwise.
useCleanup(effect: CleanupEffect, deps: any[])
The CleanupEffect
type is a function that may take an array of
cleanup methods as its first argument, and a doCleanup
function
as its second, and can optionally return a cleanup function as
well.
By pushing onto the array, or returning a cleanup function of its own, the effect will be properly disposed as needed.
Useful in cases where you need to listen to multiple events, and clean them all up at the appropriate time.
Example:
import { useCleanup } from '@tapjs/reporter/hooks'
import { listenCleanup } from '@tapjs/reporter/utils'
const useMyHook = emitter => {
const [firsts, updateFirsts] = useState([])
const [seconds, updateSeconds] = useState([])
useCleanup((list, doCleanup) => {
// these event handlers will be cleaned up properly now
list.push(
listenCleanup(emitter, 'first', f =>
updateFirsts(firsts.concat([f])),
),
)
list.push(
listenCleanup(emitter, 'second', f =>
updateSeconds(seconds.concat([f])),
),
)
}, emitter)
return [firsts, seconds]
}
useComments(test: Base) => string[]
Returns a list of the comments made by the test.
useCountsLists(test: Base) => [Counts, Lists]
Up to date t.counts
and t.lists
properties.
useIsDone(test: Base)
True if the test is done, false otherwise.
useLog(test: TestBase, config: LoadedConfig, includeTests: boolean)
Returns an array of LogEntry
items describing each entry in the
log.
useSubtests(test: TestBase, which: 'active'|'finished'|'all') => Base[]
Return an array of all subtests meeting the which
criteria.
active
Tests that have started, but not completed.finished
Tests that have completed.all
All of the above.
useSuiteTotals(test: Base) => Counts
Return a
Counts
object describing the suites in the test run.
useTestTime(test: Base, interval: MILLISECONDS = 247) => number
The time this test has taken to complete, updated every
interval
milliseconds. 247
chosen as a default because it's
fast and un-round enough to feel organic, without taxing the
system with excessive time checks.
useTimedOut(t: Base): undefined | Extra
If the test has not timed out, returns undefined
.
Otherwise, returns the
Extra
object describing the timeout failure. (Typically, extra.signal
is the thing to care about.)
@tapjs/reporter/utils
API
Some helpful utilities that are useful to have when creating reports.
assertName(r: Result, t: Base)
Returns the appropriate full result name, including the test name, without repeating it.
listenCleanup(e: EventEmitter, ev: string, fn: Function) => cleanupMethod
Add the function as an event listener, returning a function that
will remove the listener, for use with useEffect
and
useLayoutEffect
hooks.
ms(n: number)
A slightly more granular form of the ms
module from npm.
Very small float values are printed in µs, and only 3 digits of precision are ever shown.