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Version: v4.17

Unit Testing

WebdriverIO makes it easy to unit test components and app utility functions in the browser. Unit tests validate the code in isolation. Well written tests are fast, repeatable, and easy to reason about. It tries to follow a simple guiding principle: the more your tests resemble the way your software is used, the more confidence they can give you.

Test Setup

For a test to resemble as much as possible how your component is used in an actual application we need to render it into an actual DOM tree. WebdriverIO provides a helper package for this that you can use called @wdio/browser-runner/stencil. It exports a render method that allows us to mount our component to the DOM.

For example, given the following component:

/src/components/my-component/my-component.tsx
loading...

We import the component into our test to render it in the browser:

/src/components/my-component/my-component.test.tsx
loading...

If your component under test uses other Stencil components make sure you add these to the components list as well. For example, let's say ComponentA uses ComponentB which also imports ComponentC and ComponentD. In this case you will have to import and pass in all components you'd like to have rendered, e.g.:

render({
components: [ComponentA, ComponentB, ComponentC, ComponentD],
template: () => <component-a first="Stencil" last="'Don't call me a framework' JS" />
});

While this seems tedious at first, it gives you the flexibility to leave out components that are not relevant for your test, or have side effects that can cause flakiness.

Find more information about the render method option and its return object in the WebdriverIO documentation.

Handling Asynchronicity

Instead of directly working on DOM objects, with WebdriverIO you interact with references to DOM nodes through asynchronous WebDriver commands. Make sure you always use an await to ensure that all commands and assertion are executed sequentially.

info

Missing an await can be a simple oversight and can cause us long hours of debugging. To avoid this and ensure promises are handled properly, it is recommended to use an ESLint rule called require-await.

Matchers

WebdriverIO provides their own matchers to make various assertions about an element. We recommend these over synchronous matchers like toBe or toEqual as they allow for retries and make your tests more resilient against flakiness.

For example, instead of asserting the content of a component like this:

expect(await $('my-component').getText())
.toBe(`Hello, World! I'm Stencil 'Don't call me a framework' JS`)

It is better to use WebdriverIOs matchers for asserting text:

await expect($('my-component'))
.toHaveText(`Hello, World! I'm Stencil 'Don't call me a framework' JS`)

You can read more about WebdriverIOs specific matchers, in the project documentation.