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simulating-webhooks | Testing |
Testing
We highly recommend working in the style of test-driven development when creating probot apps. It is frustrating to constantly create real GitHub events in order to test an app. Redelivering webhooks is possible and can be accessed in your app's settings page under the Advanced tab. We do offer the above documented receive
method to help make this easier; however, by writing your tests first, you can avoid repeatedly recreating actual events from GitHub to check if your code is working.
For our testing examples, we use jest, but there are other options that can perform similar operations. We also recommend using nock, a tool for mocking HTTP requests, which is often crucial to testing in Probot, considering how much of Probot depends on GitHub's APIs. Here's an example of creating an app instance and using nock to test that we correctly hit the GitHub API:
import nock from "nock";
// Requiring our app implementation
import myProbotApp from "../index.js";
import { Probot, ProbotOctokit } from "probot";
// Requiring our fixtures
import payload from "./fixtures/issues.opened.json" with { type: "json" };
const issueCreatedBody = { body: "Thanks for opening this issue!" };
describe("My Probot app", () => {
let probot;
beforeEach(() => {
nock.disableNetConnect();
probot = new Probot({
githubToken: "test",
// Disable throttling & retrying requests for easier testing
Octokit: ProbotOctokit.defaults({
retry: { enabled: false },
throttle: { enabled: false },
}),
});
myProbotApp(probot);
});
test("creates a passing check", async () => {
// Test that we correctly return a test token
nock("https://api.github.com")
.post("/app/installations/2/access_tokens")
.reply(200, { token: "test" });
// Test that a comment is posted
nock("https://api.github.com")
.post("/repos/hiimbex/testing-things/issues/1/comments", (body) => {
expect(body).toMatchObject(issueCreatedBody);
return true;
})
.reply(200);
// Receive a webhook event
await probot.receive({ name: "issues", payload });
});
afterEach(() => {
nock.cleanAll();
nock.enableNetConnect();
});
});
Testing log output
Probot is using pino for logging. A custom pino
instance can be passed to the Probot
constructor. You can write all log output into an array by passing a custom transport function:
import pino from "pino";
import Stream from "stream";
const streamLogsToOutput = new Stream.Writable({ objectMode: true });
streamLogsToOutput._write = (object, encoding, done) => {
output.push(JSON.parse(object));
done();
};
const probot = new Probot({
id: 1,
githubToken: "test",
// Disable throttling & retrying requests for easier testing
Octokit: ProbotOctokit.defaults({
retry: { enabled: false },
throttle: { enabled: false },
}),
log: pino(streamLogsToOutput),
});
probot.log.info("test");
// output is now:
// [ { level: 30, time: 1600619283012, pid: 44071, hostname: 'Gregors-MacBook-Pro.local', msg: 'test' } ]
Examples:
Using Jest
- Settings: probot/settings/test/integration/plugins/repository.test.js
- DCO: probot/dco/test/index.test.js
Using Tap
Using Mocha and Sinon