@harelpls/pusher-js-mock

Mock Pusher.js in your JavaScript tests

Usage no npm install needed!

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pusher-js-mock

Mock Pusher.js in your JavaScript tests with ease

Installing ⏬

Using yarn:

yarn add --dev pusher-js-mock

Or using npm:

npm install -D pusher-js-mock

Usage 🛠

For more detailed examples, check out examples directory inside the project!

Also, you can check out the Docs for even more information.

Emitting an event in tests

If you need to mock a Pusher object in your tests that can subscribe to channel, it's best to use PusherMock.

import { PusherMock } from "pusher-js-mock";

// initializing PusherMock
const pusher = new PusherMock();

// subscribing to a Pusher channel
const channel = pusher.subscribe("my-channel");

// emitting an event
channel.emit("event-name");

Stubbing Pusher when imported from pusher-js package

If you're using Pusher in your code in this or similar manner:

import Pusher from "pusher-js";

You will need to mock Pusher in a specific way.

I suggest you use Jest to test your code. To do this in Jest, you'll need something like this:

jest.mock("pusher-js", () => {
  const Pusher = require("pusher-js-mock").PusherMock;
  return Pusher;
});

If you have tips on how to mock this using other testing frameworks, please submit an issue or a pull request.

Stubbing Pusher when used as a global variable

This shows how to stub a pusher if you're attaching it to window object in your project. If you're attaching a PusherFactory to a window object like this in your code:

window.PusherFactory = {
  pusherClient: function(pusherKey) {
    return new Pusher(pusherKey);
  },
};

It's best for you to use PusherFactoryMock.

import { PusherFactoryMock } from "pusher-js-mock";

// initialize instance of PusherFactoryMock
const pusherFactoryMock = new PusherFactoryMock();
// replace it with the object that is attached to a window
window.PusherFactory = pusherFactoryMock;

// get the Pusher client reference
pusher = pusherFactoryMock.pusherClient();

This way you'll just replace your PusherFactory with PusherFactoryMock.

Using presence channels

This package also supports using presence channels for multiple clients. The mock will automatically detect when presence- is in the channel name and return a presence channel with channel.members filled out as expected. You can pass in IDs and info via a custom authorizer, just as you would with the real package.

Unfortunately due to the nature of async testing in jest, there are a few rules:

  1. Return an object {id, info} where the auth key would normally go in the callback, i.e.
authorize: (socketId, callback) => callback(false, { id, info });
  1. If your authorizer is async, you'll have to wrap your assertions in process.nextTick to allow the promise to resolve and set the ID & info.
// given this Pusher config with async auth
{
  authorizer: () => ({
    authorize: async (socketId, callback) =>
    Promise.resolve().then(() => callback(false, { id, info }))
  })
}

// do this in your tests
const channel = client.subscribe("presence-channel")
process.nextTick(() => {
  expect(channel.members.myID).toBe("my-id")
})
...
  1. If you're using an syncronous authorizer, you can put await new Promise(setImmediate) above your assertions to flush internal promises and apply your id & info to the client:
// given this Pusher config with sync auth
{
  authorizer: () => ({
    authorize: (socketId, callback) => callback(false, { id, info }),
  });
}

// do this in your tests
const channel = client.subscribe("presence-channel");
await new Promise(setImmediate);
expect(channel.members.myID).toBe("my-id");

If you're using React, you'll have to wrap it further in act:

await act(async () => await new Promise(setImmediate));

Here's an example:

// create-client.js
import Pusher from "pusher-js";
import { getAuthSomehow } from "./getAuthSomehow";

export const createClient = ({ id, info }) =>
  new Pusher("APP_KEY", {
    cluster: "APP_CLUSTER",
    // see https://github.com/pusher/pusher-js#authorizer-function
    authorizer: ({ name }) => ({
      authorize: async (socketId, callback) => {
        const auth = await getAuthSomehow(id, info);
        callback(false, auth);
      },
    }),
  });

export default createClient;
// create-client.spec.js
import createClient from "../create-client";

// mock the authorize function and pusher
jest.mock("pusher-js", () => require("pusher-js-mock"));
jest.mock("../getAuthSomehow", () => ({
  // async auth result resolves to { id, info } object, which gets set in the client
  getAuthSomehow: (id, info) => Promise.resolve({ id, info }),
}));

it("should create a presence channel", async () => {
  // arrange: create pusher client
  const pusher = createClient({ id: "my-id", info: { role: "moderator" } });

  // act: required to ensure pusher events are called, i.e. pusher:member_added
  const presenceChannel = await pusher.subscribe("presence-channel");

  // process.nextTick wraps our assertions to ensure the promise has resolved.
  process.nextTick(() => {
    // assert: presenceChannel has the properties we expect it to.
    expect(presenceChannel.members.myID).toBe("my-id");
    expect(presenceChannel.members.me).toEqual({
      id: "my-id",
      info: { role: "moderator" },
    });
    expect(presenceChannel.members.members).toEqual({
      "my-id": { role: "moderator" },
    });
  });
});

Check out a code example of using presence channels

Code of Conduct

Contributing

Credits

Photo by Octavian Rosca on Unsplash