$ gnpm install @tapjs/after
@tapjs/after
A default tap plugin providing t.after()
and t.teardown()
.
This plugin is installed with tap by default. If you had
previously removed it, you can tap plugin add @tapjs/after
to
bring it back.
import t from 'tap'
t.after(() => {
// this will run after all the tests in this file are done
})
The method can be called as either t.teardown()
or t.after()
.
In an earlier version of tap, these had slightly different
behaviors, but they are now the same.
If the method returns a promise, it will be awaited before moving on to the next test.
So, this test:
import t from 'tap'
t.test('first test', t => {
t.teardown(async () => {
// this will wait before moving on
await new Promise(res => setTimeout(res, 100))
console.error('end of first test teardown')
})
console.error('in first test')
t.end()
})
t.test('second test', t => {
console.error('in second test')
t.end()
})
will print:
in first test
end of first test teardown
in second test
If multiple teardown methods are assigned to a single test, they
will be run in reverse order of how they are assigned. This is
a change from earlier versions of tap, and provides symmetry with
t.before()
.
In practice, it can make things more straightforward, by keeping cleanup methods close to their associated setup logic. For example:
const connection = await connectToDB()
t.ok(connection, 'connected to database')
t.teardown(() => disconnectFromDB(connection))
const user1 = await createUser(connection)
t.ok(user1, 'created user 1')
t.teardown(() => deleteUser(connection, user1))
const user2 = await createUser(connection)
t.ok(user2, 'created user 2')
t.teardown(() => deleteUser(connection, user2))
If we delete the connection created in the first step before deleting the user records, then we can't use that connection to delete the user records.
This can also be accomplished with subtests, and a single teardown in each section:
t.test('user db tests', async t => {
const connection = await connectToDB()
t.ok(connection, 'connected to database')
t.teardown(() => disconnectFromDB(connection))
t.test('user 1', async t => {
const user1 = await createUser(connection)
t.ok(user1, 'created user 1')
t.teardown(() => deleteUser(connection, user1))
})
t.test('user 2', async t => {
const user2 = await createUser(connection)
t.ok(user2, 'created user 2')
t.teardown(() => deleteUser(connection, user2))
})
})
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