wasm-bindgen-test
Read the "Testing with wasm-bindgen-test
" section of the
guide!
Components
The test harness is made of three separate components, but you typically don't have to worry about most of them. They're documented here for documentation purposes!
wasm-bindgen-test-macro
This crate, living at crates/test-macro
, is a procedural macro that defines
the #[wasm_bindgen_test]
macro. The normal #[test]
cannot be used and will
not work. Eventually it's intended that the #[wasm_bindgen_test]
attribute
could gain arguments like "run in a browser" or something like a minimum Node
version.
For now though the macro is pretty simple and reexported from the next crate,
wasm-bindgen-test
.
wasm-bindgen-test
This is the runtime support needed to execute tests. This is basically the same
thing as the test
crate in the Rust repository, and one day it will likely use
the test
crate itself! For now though it's a minimal reimplementation that
provides the support for:
- Printing what test cases are running
- Collecting
console.log
andconsole.error
output of each test case for printing later - Rendering the failure output of each test case
- Catching JS exceptions so tests can continue to run after a test fails
- Driving execution of all tests
This is the crate which you actually link to in your Wasm test and through which
you import the #[wasm_bindgen_test]
macro. Otherwise this crate provides a
console_log!
macro that's a utility like println!
only using console.log
.
This crate may grow more functionality in the future, but for now it's somewhat bare bones!
wasm-bindgen-test-runner
This is where the secret sauce comes into play. We configured Cargo to execute
this binary instead of directly executing the *.wasm
file (which Cargo would
otherwise try to do). This means that whenever a test is executed it executes
this binary with the Wasm file as an argument, allowing it to take full control
over the test process!
The test runner is currently pretty simple, executing a few steps:
- First, it runs the equivalent of
wasm-bindgen
. This'll generate wasm-bindgen output in a temporary directory. - Next, it generates a small shim JS file which imports these wasm-bindgen-generated files and executes the test harness.
- Finally, it executes
node
over the generated JS file, executing all of your tests.
In essence what happens is that this test runner automatically executes
wasm-bindgen
and then uses Node to actually execute the Wasm file, meaning
that your Wasm code currently runs in a Node environment.
Future Work
Things that'd be awesome to support in the future:
- Arguments to
wasm-bindgen-test-runner
which are the same aswasm-bindgen
, for example--debug
to affect the generated output. - Running each test in its own Wasm instance to avoid poisoning the environment on panic