Unit testing AJAX requests with QUnit

James Allardice picture James Allardice · Feb 24, 2012 · Viewed 12.6k times · Source

We are trying to implement QUnit JavaScript tests for a JS-heavy web app. We are struggling to find a way to successfully test methods that involve jQuery AJAX requests. For example, we have the following constructor function (obviously this is a very simplistic example):

var X = function() {
    this.fire = function() {
        $.ajax("someURL.php", {
            data: {
                userId: "james"
            },
            dataType: "json",
            success: function(data) {
                //Do stuff
            }
        });
    };
};
var myX = new X();
myX.fire();

We are trying to find a way to test the fire method, preferably with a stubbed URL instead of the real someURL.php.

The only obvious solution to me at the moment is add the URL, and the success callback, as arguments to the constructor function. That way, in the test, we can create a new instance of X and pass in the stub URL, and a callback to run when the stub returns a response. For example:

test("Test AJAX function", function() {
    stop();
    var myX = new X();
    //Call the AJAX function, passing in the stub URL and success callback
    myX.fire("stub.php", function(data) {
        console.log(data);
        start();
    });
});

However, this doesn't seem like a very nice solution. Is there a better way?

Answer

Flambino picture Flambino · Feb 24, 2012

With jQuery, you can use the xhr object that .ajax() returns as a promise, so you can add more handlers (see below) than just the single success, complete and error ones you define in the options. So if your async function can return the xhr object, you can add test-specific handlers.

As for the URL, that's a little trickier. I've sometimes set up a very simple Node server on localhost, which just serves canned responses that were copied from the real server. If you run your test suite off that same server, your URLs just need to be absolute paths to hit the test server instead of the production server. And you also get a record of the requests themselves, as a server sees them. Or you can have the test server send back errors or bad responses on purpose, if you want to see how the code handles it.

But that's of course a pretty complex solution. The easier one would be to define your URLs in a place where you can redefine them from the test suite. For instance:

/* in your code */
var X = function () {
    this.fire = function () {
        return $.ajax({ url: this.constructor.url, ... });
    };
};
X.url = "someURL.php"; // the production url

/* in your tests */
X.url = "stub.php"; // redefine to the test url

Also, QUnit has an asyncTest function, which calls stop() for you. Add a tiny helper to keep track of when to start again, and you've got a pretty good solution.

Here's what I've done before

// create a function that counts down to `start()`
function createAsyncCounter(count) {
    count = count || 1; // count defaults to 1
    return function () { --count || start(); };
}

// ....

// an async test that expects 2 assertions
asyncTest("testing something asynchronous", 2, function() {
    var countDown = createAsyncCounter(1), // the number of async calls in this test
        x = new X;

    // A `done` callback is the same as adding a `success` handler
    // in the ajax options. It's called after the "real" success handler.
    // I'm assuming here, that `fire()` returns the xhr object
    x.fire().done(function(data, status, jqXHR) {
        ok(data.ok);
        equal(data.value, "foobar");
    }).always(countDown); // call `countDown` regardless of success/error
});

Basically countDown is a function that counts down to zero from whatever you specify, and then calls start(). In this case, there's 1 async call, so countDown will count down from that. And it'll do so when the ajax call finishes, regardless of how it went, since it's set up as an always callback.
And because the asyncTest is told to expect 2 assertions, it'll report an error if the .done() callback is never called, since no assertions will be run. So if the call completely fails, you'll know that too. If you want to log something on error, you can add a .fail() callback to the promise chain.