$ npm install @tapjs/filter
@tapjs/filter
A default tap plugin providing only
and grep
functionality.
Occasionally, you just want to run a small subset of the tests in a file, without the trouble of going into the file itself and commenting out all the other ones.
This plugin gives you a handy way to do that.
This plugin is installed with tap by default. If you had
previously removed it, you can tap plugin add @tapjs/filter
to
bring it back.
grep
Imagine if you had a test like this:
// test.mts
import t from 'tap'
import { MyThing } from '../src/my-thing.ts'
t.test('foo the bars', async t => {
const mt = new MyThing()
// this takes a while...
await mt.foo(mt.bars)
for (const b of mt.bars) {
t.equal(b.foo, true)
}
})
t.test('bar all the foos', async t => {
const mt = new MyThing()
// this takes a while...
await mt.bar(mt.foos)
for (const f of mt.foos) {
t.equal(f.bar, true)
}
})
Things are great, and my module seems to work, but then someone
finds a case where the mt.bar
function throws an error. While
working on fixing this issue, I can run just the second test by
doing this:
$ tap --grep 'bar all the foos' test.mts
The --grep
argument can be specified multiple times on the
command line (or as an array in a config file), to grep through a
series of child tests.
// test.mts
import t from 'tap'
t.test('parent test', t => {
t.test('child one', () => {
t.test('subtest a', t => t.end())
t.test('the b test', t => t.end())
t.end()
})
t.test('child two', () => {
t.test('subtest a', t => t.end())
t.test('the b test', t => t.end())
t.end()
})
t.end()
})
If you run tap -g parent -g one -g a
then it will run only
subtest a
under child one
.
You can specify grep flags by writing the argument as a JavaScript RegExp literal.
// test.mts
// run with `-g /foo/i` to run both foo and FOO tests, but not bar
import t from 'tap'
t.test('foo', t => t.end())
t.test('FOO', t => t.end())
t.test('bar', t => t.end())
Specify the --grep-invert
(or -i
) flag to invert the matches.
That is, then the things matching the pattern will not be run,
and other tests will be.
only
Another way, if you don't mind editing the file a little bit, is to
put { only: true }
in the subtest options, like this:
t.test('bar all the foos', { only: true }, async t => {
const mt = new MyThing()
// this takes a while...
await mt.bar(mt.foos)
for (const f of mt.foos) {
t.equal(f.bar, true)
}
})
Or, you can use the t.only()
function instead of t.test
:
t.only('bar all the foos', async t => {
const mt = new MyThing()
// this takes a while...
await mt.bar(mt.foos)
for (const f of mt.foos) {
t.equal(f.bar, true)
}
})
Then, run tap --only test.mts
, and it will only run tests
marked with only
.
In order to make this work, a runOnly
flag is added in the test
options and on the test object itself, which you can set
explicitly as well. This is handy if you want the only
filtering happening in just one test file, or just one subtest in
a file:
import t from 'tap'
t.runOnly = true
t.only('this will run', t => t.end())
t.test('this will be skipped', t => t.end())
Or, in a subtest:
import t from 'tap'
t.test('parent test', { runOnly: true }, async t => {
t.only('this will run', t => t.end())
t.test('this will be skipped', t => t.end())
})
t.test('this will run', t => t.end())
You can also explicitly disable only
behavior, even if it's
set on the command line, by setting runOnly
explicitly to
false.
import t from 'tap'
// override the --only flag
t.runOnly = false
t.only('this will run', t => t.end())
t.test('so will this, even with --only', t => t.end())
--filter-quietly
By default, when a test is skipped with --grep
or --only
, a
skip message is applied, indicating why it was omitted.
This is often desireable, but can be noisy. The
--filter-quietly
config flag will disable this reporting,
making filtered tests look like empty passing assertions.
Since a skip message will cause failures when --fail-skip
is
set, in that case --filter-quietly
will be enabled by default.
Presumably, if you tell tap "fail on skipped tests", you don't
also mean for it to fail on tests that you have told it to skip
in that very same command with --grep
or --only
.
If you do mean to have it fail on intentionally skipped tests,
then you can set --no-filter-quietly
(or filter-quietly: false
in a .taprc
file) along with --fail-skip
.
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