Borp is a typescript-aware test runner for node:test
.
It also support code coverage via c8.
Borp is self-hosted, i.e. Borp runs its own tests.
npm i borp --save-dev
borp --coverage
# with check coverage active
borp --coverage --check-coverage --lines 95
# with a node_modules located reporter
borp --reporter foo
# with a node_modules located reporter writing to stderr
borp --reporter foo:stderr
# with a local custom reporter
borp --reporter ./lib/some-reporter.mjs
Borp will automatically run all tests files matching *.test.{js|ts}
.
.
├── src
│ ├── lib
│ │ └── math.ts
│ └── test
│ └── math.test.ts
└── tsconfig.json
As an example, consider having a src/lib/math.ts
file
export function math (x: number, y: number): number {
return x + y
}
and a src/test/math.test.ts
file:
import { test } from 'node:test'
import { math } from '../lib/math.js'
import { strictEqual } from 'node:assert'
test('math', () => {
strictEqual(math(1, 2), 3)
})
and the following tsconfig.json
:
{
"$schema": "https://json.schemastore.org/tsconfig",
"compilerOptions": {
"outDir": "dist",
"sourceMap": true,
"target": "ES2022",
"module": "NodeNext",
"moduleResolution": "NodeNext",
"esModuleInterop": true,
"strict": true,
"resolveJsonModule": true,
"removeComments": true,
"newLine": "lf",
"noUnusedLocals": true,
"noFallthroughCasesInSwitch": true,
"isolatedModules": true,
"forceConsistentCasingInFileNames": true,
"skipLibCheck": true,
"lib": [
"ESNext"
],
"incremental": true
}
}
Note the use of incremental: true
, which speed up compilation massively.
-
--concurrency
or-c
, to set the number of concurrent tests. Defaults to the number of available CPUs minus one. -
--coverage
or-C
, enables code coverage -
--only
or-o
, only runnode:test
with theonly
option set -
--watch
or-w
, re-run tests on changes -
--timeout
or-t
, timeouts the tests after a given time; default is 30000 ms -
--no-timeout
, disables the timeout -
--coverage-exclude
or-X
, a list of comma-separated patterns to exclude from the coverage report. All tests files are ignored by default. -
--ignore
or-i
, ignore a glob pattern, and not look for tests there -
--expose-gc
, exposes the gc() function to tests -
--pattern
or-p
, run tests matching the given glob pattern -
--reporter
or-r
, set up a reporter, use a colon to set a file destination. Reporter may either be a module name resolvable by standardnode_modules
resolution, or a path to a script relative to the process working directory (must be an ESM script). Default:spec
. -
--no-typescript
or-T
, disable automatic TypeScript compilation iftsconfig.json
is found. -
--post-compile
or-P
, the path to a file that will be executed after each typescript compilation. -
--check-coverage
, enables c8 check coverage; default is false
-
--lines
, set the lines threshold when check coverage is active; default is 100 -
--functions
, set the functions threshold when check coverage is active; default is 100 -
--statements
, set the statements threshold when check coverage is active; default is 100 -
--branches
, set the branches threshold when check coverage is active; default is 100
Here are the available reporters:
-
gh
: emits::error
workflow commands for GitHub Actions to show inlined errors. Enabled by default when running on GHA. -
tap
: outputs the test results in the TAP format. -
spec
: outputs the test results in a human-readable format. -
dot
: outputs the test results in a compact format, where each passing test is represented by a ., and each failing test is represented by a X. -
junit
: outputs test results in a jUnit XML format
A limited set of options may be specified via a configuration file. The
configuration file is expected to be in the process's working directory, and
named either .borp.yaml
or .borp.yml
; it may also be specified by
defining the environment variable BORP_CONF_FILE
and setting it to the
full path to some yaml file.
The current supported options are:
-
files
(string[]): An array of test files to include. Globs are supported. -
reporters
(string[]): An array of reporters to use. May be relative path strings, or module name strings.
files:
- 'test/one.test.js'
- 'test/foo/*.test.js'
reporters:
- './test/lib/my-reporter.js'
- spec
- '@reporters/silent'
MIT