Fakes - Sinon.JS
Introduction
fake
was introduced with Sinon with v5. It simplifies and merges concepts from spies
and stubs
.
In Sinon, a fake
is a Function
that records arguments, return value, the value of this
and exception thrown (if any) for all of its calls.
It can be created with or without behavior; it can wrap an existing function.
A fake is immutable: once created, the behavior will not change.
Unlike sinon.spy
and sinon.stub
methods, the sinon.fake
API knows only how to create fakes, and doesn’t concern itself with plugging them into the system under test. To plug the fakes into the system under test, you can use the sinon.replace*
methods.
Creating a fake
// create a basic fake, with no behavior
var fake = sinon.fake();
fake();
console.log(fake.callCount);
// 1
Fakes with behavior
Fakes can be created with behavior, which cannot be changed once the fake has been created.
sinon.fake.returns(value);
Creates a fake that returns the value
argument
var fake = sinon.fake.returns('apple pie');
fake();
// apple pie
sinon.fake.throws(value);
Creates a fake that throws an Error
with the provided value as the message
property.
If an Error
is passed as the value
argument, then that will be the thrown value. If any other value is passed, then that will be used for the message
property of the thrown Error
.
var fake = sinon.fake.throws(new Error('not apple pie'));
fake();
// Error: not apple pie
sinon.fake.resolves(value);
Creates a fake that returns a resolved Promise
for the passed value.
sinon.fake.rejects(value);
Creates a fake that returns a rejected Promise
for the passed value.
If an Error
is passed as the value
argument, then that will be the value of the promise. If any other value is passed, then that will be used for the message
property of the Error
returned by the promise.
sinon.fake.yields(callback[, value1, ..., valueN]);
fake
expects the last argument to be a callback and will invoke it with the given arguments.
var fake = sinon.fake.yields('hello world');
fake(console.log);
// hello world
sinon.fake.yieldsAsync(callback[, value1, ..., valueN]);
fake
expects the last argument to be a callback and will invoke it asynchronously with the given arguments.
var fake = sinon.fake.yieldsAsync('hello world');
fake(console.log);
// hello world
sinon.fake(func);
Wraps an existing Function
to record all interactions, while leaving it up to the func
to provide the behavior.
This is useful when complex behavior not covered by the sinon.fake.*
methods is required or when wrapping an existing function or method.
Instance properties
f.callback
This property is a convenience to easily get a reference to the last callback passed in the last to the fake.
var f = sinon.fake();
var cb1 = function () {};
var cb2 = function () {};
f(1, 2, 3, cb1);
f(1, 2, 3, cb2);
f.callback === cb2;
// true
The same convenience has been added to spy calls:
f.getCall(1).callback === cb2;
// true
//
f.lastCall.callback === cb2;
// true
f.lastArg
This property is a convenient way to get a reference to the last argument passed in the last call to the fake.
var f = sinon.fake();
var date1 = new Date();
var date2 = new Date();
f(1, 2, date1);
f(1, 2, date2);
f.lastArg === date2;
// true
The same convenience has been added to spy calls:
f.getCall(0).lastArg === date1;
// true
f.getCall(1).lastArg === date2;
// true
f.lastCall.lastArg === date2;
// true
Adding the fake to the system under test
Unlike sinon.spy
and sinon.stub
, sinon.fake
only knows about creating fakes, not about replacing properties in the system under test.
To replace a property, you can use the sinon.replace
method.
var fake = sinon.fake.returns('42');
sinon.replace(console, 'log', fake);
console.log('apple pie');
// 42
When you want to restore the replaced properties, simply call the sinon.restore
method.
// restores all replaced properties set by sinon methods (replace, spy, stub)
sinon.restore();