When writing unit tests with MockFirebase, you'll typically want to focus on covering one of two scenarios:
- Your client receives data from Firebase by attaching a listener with
on
- Your client writes data to Firebase using a method like
set
orpush
While your application almost certainly does both reading and writing to Firebase, each test should try to cover as small a unit of functionality as possible.
In this example, our source code will listen for new people on a reference we provide and call a function each time a new one is added.
var ref;
var people = {
ref: function () {
if (!ref) ref = new Firebase('htttps://example.firebaseio.com/people');
return ref;
},
greet: function (person) {
console.log('hi ' + person.first);
},
listen: function () {
people.ref().on('child_added', function (snapshot) {
people.greet(snapshot.val());
});
}
};
In our tests, we'll override the greet
method to verify that it's being called properly.
MockFirebase.override();
people.listen();
var greeted = [];
people.greet = function (person) {
greeted.push(person);
};
ref.push({
first: 'Michael'
});
ref.push({
first: 'Ben'
});
ref.flush();
console.assert(greeted.length === 2, '2 people greeted');
console.assert(greeted[0].first === 'Michael', 'Michael greeted');
console.assert(greeted[1].first === 'Ben', 'Ben greeted');
We're calling MockFirebase.override
to replace the real Firebase
instance with MockFirebase. If you're loading Firebase using Node or Browserify, you need to use proxyquire instead.
Notice that we queued up multiple changes before actually calling ref.flush
. MockFirebase stores these changes in the order they were created and then performs local updates accordingly. You'll only need to flush
your changes when you need listeners, callbacks, and other asynchronous responses to be triggered.
Testing writes is especially easy with MockFirebase because it allows you to inspect the state of your data at any time. In this example, we'll add a new method to people
that creates a new person with the given name:
people.create = function (first) {
return people.ref().push({
first: first
});
};
var newPersonRef = people.create('James');
ref.flush();
var autoId = newPersonRef.key();
var data = ref.getData();
console.assert(data[autoId].first === 'James', 'James was created');