I assume you have a basic understanding of jest and unit-testing. I will not explain the meaning of the hooks. This is more of cheat-sheet/reference type of post.
At first jest seems to do stuff magically. What gets executed when? But if you think about it for a minute it gets obvious less confusing.
Maybe these simple "rules" help:
console.log("./<start>"); beforeAll(() => { console.log("./beforeAll"); }) beforeEach(() => { console.log("./beforeEach"); }) afterAll(() => { console.log("./afterAll"); }) afterEach(() => { console.log("./afterEach"); }) describe("foo", () => { console.log("./describe(foo)/<start>"); beforeAll(() => { console.log("./describe(foo)/beforeAll"); }) beforeEach(() => { console.log("./describe(foo)/beforeEach"); }) afterAll(() => { console.log("./describe(foo)/afterAll"); }) afterEach(() => { console.log("./describe(foo)/afterEach"); }) test("testFoo", () => { console.log("./describe(foo)/test(testFoo)"); }) console.log("./describe(foo)/<end>"); }) describe("bar", () => { console.log("./describe(bar)/<start>"); beforeAll(() => { console.log("./describe(bar)/beforeAll"); }) beforeEach(() => { console.log("./describe(bar)/beforeEach"); }) afterAll(() => { console.log("./describe(bar)/afterAll"); }) afterEach(() => { console.log("./describe(bar)/afterEach"); }) test("testBar", () => { console.log("./describe(bar)/test(testBar)"); }) test("testOtherBar", () => { console.log("./describe(bar)/test(testOtherBar)"); }) console.log("./describe(bar)/<end>"); }) console.log("./<end>");
This is the result (after I removed other output):
./<start> ./describe(foo)/<start> ./describe(foo)/<end> ./describe(bar)/<start> ./describe(bar)/<end> ./<end> ./beforeAll ./describe(foo)/beforeAll ./beforeEach ./describe(foo)/beforeEach ./describe(foo)/test(testFoo) ./describe(foo)/afterEach ./afterEach ./describe(foo)/afterAll ./describe(bar)/beforeAll ./beforeEach ./describe(bar)/beforeEach ./describe(bar)/test(testBar) ./describe(bar)/afterEach ./afterEach ./beforeEach ./describe(bar)/beforeEach ./describe(bar)/test(testOtherBar) ./describe(bar)/afterEach ./afterEach ./describe(bar)/afterAll ./afterAll
Everything on the top-level and in describe callbacks is executed immediately:
./<start> ./describe(foo)/<start> ./describe(foo)/<end> ./describe(bar)/<start> ./describe(bar)/<end> ./<end> [...]
beforeAll and afterAll on the top-level are a "brace" around all tests. Each executed only once.
[...] ./beforeAll [...] ./afterAll
./describe(*)/beforeAll and ./describe(*)/afterAll are a brace around all tests in that describe callback. Each executed only once.
[...] ./describe(foo)/beforeAll [...] ./describe(foo)/afterAll ./describe(bar)/beforeAll [...] ./describe(bar)/afterAll [...]
beforeEach and afterEach are a braces around each test. The top-level is the outer brace. The describe level is the inner brace.
[...] ./beforeEach ./describe(*)/beforeEach [...] ./describe(*)/afterEach ./afterEach [...]
This is an advanced example with a nested describe block. It produces XMLish results to emphasize the hierarchical nature of the execution steps.
console.log("<top-level>"); beforeAll(() => { console.log("<all>"); }) beforeEach(() => { console.log("<each>"); }) afterAll(() => { console.log("</all>"); }) afterEach(() => { console.log("</each>"); }) describe("foo", () => { console.log("<describe id=\"foo\">"); beforeAll(() => { console.log("<all in=\"foo\">"); }) beforeEach(() => { console.log("<each in=\"foo\">"); }) afterAll(() => { console.log("</all> <!-- in=\"foo\" -->"); }) afterEach(() => { console.log("</each> <!-- in=\"foo\" -->"); }) test("testFoo", () => { console.log("<test in=\"foo\" id=\"testFoo\" />"); }) console.log("</describe> <!-- id=\"foo\" -->"); }) describe("bar", () => { describe("barinner", () => { console.log("<describe id=\"barinner\">"); beforeAll(() => { console.log("<all in=\"barinner\">"); }) beforeEach(() => { console.log("<each in=\"barinner\">"); }) afterAll(() => { console.log("</all> <!-- in=\"barinner\" -->"); }) afterEach(() => { console.log("</each> <!-- in=\"barinner\" -->"); }) test("testBarInner", () => { console.log("<test in=\"barinner\" id=\"testBarInner\" />"); }) console.log("</describe> <!-- id=\"barinner\" -->"); }) console.log("<describe id=\"bar\">"); beforeAll(() => { console.log("<all in=\"bar\">"); }) beforeEach(() => { console.log("<each in=\"bar\">"); }) afterAll(() => { console.log("</all> <!-- in=\"bar\" -->"); }) afterEach(() => { console.log("</each> <!-- in=\"bar\" -->"); }) test("testBar", () => { console.log("<test in=\"bar\" id=\"testBar\" />"); }) test("testOtherBar", () => { console.log("<test in=\"bar\" id=\"testOtherBar\" />"); }) console.log("</describe> <!-- id=\"bar\" -->"); }) console.log("</top-level>");
This is the output after some cleanup and formatting:
<top-level> <describe id="foo"> </describe> <!-- id="foo" --> <describe id="barinner"> </describe> <!-- id="barinner" --> <describe id="bar"> </describe> <!-- id="bar" --> </top-level> <all> <all in="foo"> <each> <each in="foo"> <test in="foo" id="testFoo" /> </each> <!-- in="foo" --> </each> </all> <!-- in="foo" --> <all in="bar"> <all in="barinner"> <each> <each in="bar"> <each in="barinner"> <test in="barinner" id="testBarInner" /> </each> <!-- in="barinner" --> </each> <!-- in="bar" --> </each> </all> <!-- in="barinner" --> <each> <each in="bar"> <test in="bar" id="testBar" /> </each> <!-- in="bar" --> </each> <each> <each in="bar"> <test in="bar" id="otherBar" /> </each> <!-- in="bar" --> </each> </all> <!-- in="bar" --> </all>
That's all there is to know about the execution order.
The above is the detailed content of Jest Recap: What Runs When?. For more information, please follow other related articles on the PHP Chinese website!