"use strict"; const {strict: assert} = require("assert"); const {mock_esm, set_global, zrequire} = require("./lib/namespace"); const {run_test} = require("./lib/test"); const $ = require("./lib/zjquery"); /* Let's continue to explore how we can test complex interactions in the real code. When a new message comes in, we update the three major panes of the app: * left sidebar - stream list * middle pane - message view * right sidebar - buddy list (aka "activity" list) These are reflected by the following calls: stream_list.update_streams_sidebar message_util.add_new_messages activity.process_loaded_messages For now, though, let's focus on another side effect of processing incoming messages: unread_ops.process_visible When new messages come in, they are often immediately visible to users, so the app will communicate this back to the server by calling unread_ops.process_visible. In order to unit test this, we don't want to require an actual server to be running. Instead, this example will stub many of the "boundaries" to focus on the core behavior. The two key pieces here are as follows: * Use mock_esm to avoid compiling the "real" modules that are immaterial to our current testing concerns. * Use override(...) to simulate how we want methods to behave. (Often we want them to do nothing at all or return a simple value.) */ set_global("document", {hasFocus: () => true}); const channel = mock_esm("../src/channel"); const message_lists = mock_esm("../src/message_lists"); const message_viewport = mock_esm("../src/message_viewport"); const notifications = mock_esm("../src/notifications"); const unread_ui = mock_esm("../src/unread_ui"); message_lists.current = {view: {}}; message_lists.home = {view: {}}; message_lists.all_rendered_message_lists = () => [message_lists.home, message_lists.current]; const message_store = zrequire("message_store"); const recent_topics_util = zrequire("recent_topics_util"); const stream_data = zrequire("stream_data"); const unread = zrequire("unread"); const unread_ops = zrequire("unread_ops"); const denmark_stream = { color: "blue", name: "Denmark", stream_id: 101, subscribed: false, }; run_test("unread_ops", ({override}) => { stream_data.clear_subscriptions(); stream_data.add_sub(denmark_stream); message_store.clear_for_testing(); unread.declare_bankruptcy(); const message_id = 50; const test_messages = [ { id: message_id, type: "stream", stream_id: denmark_stream.stream_id, topic: "copenhagen", unread: true, }, ]; // We don't want recent topics to process message for this test. recent_topics_util.set_visible(false); // Make our test message appear to be unread, so that // we then need to subsequently process them as read. message_store.update_message_cache(test_messages[0]); unread.process_loaded_messages(test_messages); // Make our message_viewport appear visible. $("#message_feed_container").show(); // Make our "test" message appear visible. override(message_viewport, "bottom_message_visible", () => true); // Set message_lists.current containing messages that can be marked read override(message_lists.current, "all_messages", () => test_messages); // Ignore these interactions for now: override(message_lists.current.view, "show_message_as_read", () => {}); override(message_lists.home.view, "show_message_as_read", () => {}); override(notifications, "close_notification", () => {}); override(unread_ui, "update_unread_counts", () => {}); override(unread_ui, "notify_messages_remain_unread", () => {}); // Set up a way to capture the options passed in to channel.post. let channel_post_opts; override(channel, "post", (opts) => { channel_post_opts = opts; }); let can_mark_messages_read; // Set up an override to point to the above var, so we can // toggle it easily from within the test (and avoid complicated // data setup). override(message_lists.current, "can_mark_messages_read", () => can_mark_messages_read); override(message_lists.current, "has_unread_messages", () => true); // First, test for a message list that cannot read messages. can_mark_messages_read = false; unread_ops.process_visible(); assert.deepEqual(channel_post_opts, undefined); // Now flip the boolean, and get to the main thing we are testing. can_mark_messages_read = true; unread_ops.process_visible(); // The most important side effect of the above call is that // we post info to the server. We can verify that the correct // url and parameters are specified: assert.deepEqual(channel_post_opts, { url: "/json/messages/flags", data: {messages: "[50]", op: "add", flag: "read"}, success: channel_post_opts.success, }); // Simulate a successful post (which also clears the queue // in our message_flag code). channel_post_opts.success({messages: [message_id]}); });