This extends Jasmine 4.6+ by making it easy to create nested, reusable namespaces for test suites.
Typically, a large codebase using Jasmine will split tests into multiple files,
each with a describe()
call wrapping the file's tests. This works fine for
small sets of tests, but on a larger codebase, it leaves much to be desired.
There's no way to organize tests across files under a common suite, or to
limit the test run to those tests.
Namespaced suites solve this by taking a namespaced path (something like
projectname/mysuite/component
) and automatically generating test suites for
each component of the namespace.
It will also merge any tests in that refer to the same parts of the namespace from other files.
Switching to namespaced suites is really easy. Instead of doing this:
describe('projectname/mysuite/component', function() {
...
});
or:
describe('projectname', function() {
describe('mysuite', function() {
describe('component', function() {
...
});
});
});
You can instead do:
suite('projectname/mysuite/component', function() {
...
});
You can reuse any part of that namespace in as many files as you like. Their tests will be combined into the suites.
For example, say you have the following:
// tests1.js
suite('projectname/models/MyModel', function() {
...
});
suite('projectname/views/MyView', function() {
...
});
// tests2.js
suite('projectname/views/AnotherView', function() {
...
});
Jasmine will end up laying out the tests like:
projectname
models
views
MyView
AnotherView
We use jasmine-suites at Beanbag for our Review Board and RBCommons products.
If you use jasmine-suites, let us know and we'll add you to a shiny new list on this page.
Jasmine Suites is under the MIT license.