rewire ====== **Easy monkey-patching for node.js unit tests** [![](https://img.shields.io/npm/v/rewire.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/rewire) [![](https://img.shields.io/npm/dm/rewire.svg)](https://www.npmjs.com/package/rewire) [![Dependency Status](https://david-dm.org/jhnns/rewire.svg)](https://david-dm.org/jhnns/rewire) [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/jhnns/rewire.svg?branch=master)](https://travis-ci.org/jhnns/rewire) [![Coverage Status](https://img.shields.io/coveralls/jhnns/rewire.svg)](https://coveralls.io/r/jhnns/rewire?branch=master) rewire adds a special setter and getter to modules so you can modify their behaviour for better unit testing. You may - inject mocks for other modules or globals like `process` - inspect private variables - override variables within the module. **Please note:** The current version of rewire is only compatible with CommonJS modules. See [Limitations](https://github.com/jhnns/rewire#limitations).
Installation ------------ `npm install rewire`
Introduction ------------ Imagine you want to test this module: ```javascript // lib/myModule.js // With rewire you can change all these variables var fs = require("fs"), path = "/somewhere/on/the/disk"; function readSomethingFromFileSystem(cb) { console.log("Reading from file system ..."); fs.readFile(path, "utf8", cb); } exports.readSomethingFromFileSystem = readSomethingFromFileSystem; ``` Now within your test module: ```javascript // test/myModule.test.js var rewire = require("rewire"); var myModule = rewire("../lib/myModule.js"); ``` rewire acts exactly like require. With just one difference: Your module will now export a special setter and getter for private variables. ```javascript myModule.__set__("path", "/dev/null"); myModule.__get__("path"); // = '/dev/null' ``` This allows you to mock everything in the top-level scope of the module, like the fs module for example. Just pass the variable name as first parameter and your mock as second. ```javascript var fsMock = { readFile: function (path, encoding, cb) { expect(path).to.equal("/somewhere/on/the/disk"); cb(null, "Success!"); } }; myModule.__set__("fs", fsMock); myModule.readSomethingFromFileSystem(function (err, data) { console.log(data); // = Success! }); ``` You can also set multiple variables with one call. ```javascript myModule.__set__({ fs: fsMock, path: "/dev/null" }); ``` You may also override globals. These changes are only within the module, so you don't have to be concerned that other modules are influenced by your mock. ```javascript myModule.__set__({ console: { log: function () { /* be quiet */ } }, process: { argv: ["testArg1", "testArg2"] } }); ``` `__set__` returns a function which reverts the changes introduced by this particular `__set__` call ```javascript var revert = myModule.__set__("port", 3000); // port is now 3000 revert(); // port is now the previous value ``` For your convenience you can also use the `__with__` method which reverts the given changes after it finished. ```javascript myModule.__with__({ port: 3000 })(function () { // within this function port is 3000 }); // now port is the previous value again ``` The `__with__` method is also aware of promises. If a thenable is returned all changes stay until the promise has either been resolved or rejected. ```javascript myModule.__with__({ port: 3000 })(function () { return new Promise(...); }).then(function () { // now port is the previous value again }); // port is still 3000 here because the promise hasn't been resolved yet ```
Limitations ----------- **Babel's ES module emulation**
During the transpilation step from ESM to CJS modules, Babel renames internal variables. Rewire will not work in these cases (see [#62](https://github.com/jhnns/rewire/issues/62)). Other Babel transforms, however, should be fine. Another solution might be switching to [babel-plugin-rewire](https://github.com/speedskater/babel-plugin-rewire). **Variables inside functions**
Variables inside functions can not be changed by rewire. This is constrained by the language. ```javascript // myModule.js (function () { // Can't be changed by rewire var someVariable; })() ``` **Modules that export primitives**
rewire is not able to attach the `__set__`- and `__get__`-method if your module is just exporting a primitive. Rewiring does not work in this case. ```javascript // Will throw an error if it's loaded with rewire() module.exports = 2; ``` **Globals with invalid variable names**
rewire imports global variables into the local scope by prepending a list of `var` declarations: ```javascript var someGlobalVar = global.someGlobalVar; ``` If `someGlobalVar` is not a valid variable name, rewire just ignores it. **In this case you're not able to override the global variable locally**. **Special globals**
Please be aware that you can't rewire `eval()` or the global object itself.
API --- ### rewire(filename: String): rewiredModule Returns a rewired version of the module found at `filename`. Use `rewire()` exactly like `require()`. ### rewiredModule.__set__(name: String, value: *): Function Sets the internal variable `name` to the given `value`. Returns a function which can be called to revert the change. ### rewiredModule.__set__(obj: Object): Function Takes all enumerable keys of `obj` as variable names and sets the values respectively. Returns a function which can be called to revert the change. ### rewiredModule.__get__(name: String): * Returns the private variable with the given `name`. ### rewiredModule.__with__(obj: Object): Function<callback: Function> Returns a function which - when being called - sets `obj`, executes the given `callback` and reverts `obj`. If `callback` returns a promise, `obj` is only reverted after the promise has been resolved or rejected. For your convenience the returned function passes the received promise through.
Caveats ------- **Difference to require()**
Every call of rewire() executes the module again and returns a fresh instance. ```javascript rewire("./myModule.js") === rewire("./myModule.js"); // = false ``` This can especially be a problem if the module is not idempotent [like mongoose models](https://github.com/jhnns/rewire/issues/27). **Globals are imported into the module's scope at the time of rewiring**
Since rewire imports all gobals into the module's scope at the time of rewiring, property changes on the `global` object after that are not recognized anymore. This is a [problem when using sinon's fake timers *after* you've called `rewire()`](http://stackoverflow.com/questions/34885024/when-using-rewire-and-sinon-faketimer-order-matters/36025128). **Dot notation**
Although it is possible to use dot notation when calling `__set__`, it is strongly discouraged in most cases. For instance, writing `myModule.__set__("console.log", fn)` is effectively the same as just writing `console.log = fn`. It would be better to write: ```javascript myModule.__set__("console", { log: function () {} }); ``` This replaces `console` just inside `myModule`. That is, because rewire is using `eval()` to turn the key expression into an assignment. Hence, calling `myModule.__set__("console.log", fn)` modifies the `log` function on the *global* `console` object.
webpack ------- See [rewire-webpack](https://github.com/jhnns/rewire-webpack)
CoffeeScript ------------ Good news to all caffeine-addicts: rewire works also with [Coffee-Script](http://coffeescript.org/). Note that in this case you need to install the `coffeescript` package.
## License MIT