A WebdriverIO plugin. Adapter for Mocha testing framework.
The easiest way is to keep wdio-mocha-framework as a devDependency in your package.json.
{
"devDependencies": {
"wdio-mocha-framework": "~0.5.9"
}
}You can simple do it by:
npm install wdio-mocha-framework --save-devInstructions on how to install WebdriverIO can be found here.
Following code shows the default wdio test runner configuration...
// wdio.conf.js
module.exports = {
// ...
framework: 'mocha',
mochaOpts: {
ui: 'bdd'
}
// ...
};Options will be passed to the Mocha instance. See the list of supported Mocha options here.
Note that interfaces supported are bdd, tdd and qunit. If you want to provide a custom interface, it should expose methods compatible with them and be named ending with -bdd, -tdd or -qunit accordingly.
The require option is useful when you want to add or extend some basic functionality.
For example, let's try to create an anonymous describe:
wdio.conf.js
{
suites: {
login: ['tests/login/*.js']
},
mochaOpts: {
require: './hooks/mocha.js'
}
}./hooks/mocha.js
import path from 'path';
let { context, file, mocha, options } = module.parent.context;
let { describe } = context;
context.describe = function (name, callback) {
if (callback) {
return describe(...arguments);
} else {
callback = name;
name = path.basename(file, '.js');
return describe(name, callback);
}
}./tests/TEST-XXX.js
describe(() => {
it('Login form', () => {
this.skip();
});
});Output
TEST-XXX
✓ Login form
Use the given module(s) to compile files. Compilers will be included before requires.
CoffeeScript and similar transpilers may be used by mapping the file extensions and the module name.
{
mochaOpts: {
compilers: ['coffee:foo', './bar.js']
}
}First of all,
npm iAll commands can be found in the package.json. The most important are:
Watch changes:
$ npm run watchRun tests:
$ npm test
# run test with coverage report:
$ npm run test:coverBuild package:
$ npm run buildFor more information on WebdriverIO see the homepage.