Jest is one of Facebook's open-source projects that is both under very active development and is also being used to ship code to everybody on Facebook.com. We're still working out the kinks to make contributing to this project as easy and transparent as possible, but we're not quite there yet. Hopefully, this document makes the process for contributing clear and answers some questions that you may have.
If you want an already configured online IDE to contribute to Jest, you can use Gitpod!
Facebook has adopted a Code of Conduct that we expect project participants to adhere to. Please read the full text so that you can understand what actions will and will not be tolerated.
All work on Jest happens directly on GitHub. Both core team members and external contributors send pull requests which go through the same review process.
We will do our best to keep main
in good shape, with tests passing at all times. But in order to move fast, we will make API changes that your application might not be compatible with. We will do our best to communicate these changes and always version appropriately so you can lock into a specific version if need be.
The core team will be monitoring for pull requests. When we get one, we'll run some Facebook-specific integration tests on it first. From here, we'll need to get another person to sign off on the changes and then merge the pull request. For API changes we may need to fix internal uses, which could cause some delays. We'll do our best to provide updates and feedback throughout the process.
Before submitting a pull request, please make sure the following is done…
-
Fork the repo and create your branch from
main
. A guide on how to fork a repository: https://help.github.com/articles/fork-a-repo/Open terminal (e.g. Terminal, iTerm, Git Bash or Git Shell) and type:
$ git clone https://github.com/<your_username>/jest $ cd jest $ git checkout -b my_branch
Note: Replace
<your_username>
with your GitHub username -
Jest uses Yarn for running development scripts. If you haven't already done so, please install yarn.
-
Make sure you have
python
installed. Python is required by node-gyp that is used when runningyarn install
.To check your version of Python and ensure it's installed you can type:
python --version
-
Make sure you have a compatible version of
node
installed (As of October 29th, 2021,v16.x
is recommended).node -v
-
Run
yarn install
. On Windows: To install Yarn on Windows you may need to download either node.js or Chocolateyyarn install
To check your version of Yarn and ensure it's installed you can type:
yarn --version
On Windows
yarn install
may fail withgyp ERR! build error
. One of the possible solutions:yarn global add windows-build-tools
-
Run
yarn build
to transpile TypeScript to JavaScript and type check the codeyarn build
-
If you've added code that should be tested, add tests. You can use watch mode that continuously transforms changed files to make your life easier.
# in the background yarn watch
-
If you've changed APIs, update the documentation.
-
Ensure the test suite passes via
yarn jest
. To run the test suite you may need to install Mercurial (hg
). On macOS, this can be done using homebrew:brew install hg
.$ brew install hg # maybe $ yarn test
-
If you haven't already, complete the CLA.
All changes that add a feature to or fix a bug in any of Jest's packages require a changelog entry containing the names of the packages affected, a description of the change, and the number of and link to the pull request. Try to match the structure of the existing entries.
For significant changes to the documentation or website and things like cleanup, refactoring, and dependency updates, the "Chore & Maintenance" section of the changelog can be used.
You can add or edit the changelog entry in the GitHub web interface once you have opened the pull request and know the number and link to it.
Make sure to alphabetically order your entry based on the package name. If you have changed multiple packages, separate them with a comma.
Code that is written needs to be tested to ensure that it achieves the desired behaviour. Tests either fall into a unit test or an integration test.
Some of the packages within jest have a __tests__
directory. This is where unit tests reside in. If the scope of your work only requires a unit test, this is where you will write it in. Tests here usually don't require much of any setup.
There will be situations however where the work you have done cannot be tested alone using unit tests. In situations like this, you should write an integration test for your code. The integration tests reside within the e2e
directory. Within this directory, there is a __tests__
directory. This is where you will write the integration test itself. The tests within this directory execute jest itself using runJest.js
and assertions are usually made on one if not all the output of the following status
, stdout
and stderr
. The other sub directories within the e2e
directory are where you will write the files that jest will run for your integration tests. Feel free to take a look at any of the tests in the __tests__
directory within e2e
to have a better sense of how it is currently being done.
It is possible to run the integration test itself manually to inspect that the new behaviour is indeed correct. Here is a small code snippet of how to do just that. This is useful when debugging a failing test.
$ cd e2e/clear-cache
$ node ../../packages/jest-cli/bin/jest.js # It is possible to use node --inspect or ndb
PASS __tests__/clear_cache.test.js
✓ stub (3ms)
Test Suites: 1 passed, 1 total
Tests: 1 passed, 1 total
Snapshots: 0 total
Time: 0.232 s, estimated 1 s
Ran all test suites.
We use Yarn Constraints to enforce various rules across the repository. They are declared inside the constraints.pro
file and their purposes are documented with comments.
Constraints can be checked with yarn constraints
, and fixed with yarn constraints --fix
. Generally speaking:
-
Workspaces must not depend on conflicting ranges of dependencies. Use the
-i,--interactive
flag and select "Reuse" when installing dependencies and you shouldn't ever have to deal with this rule. -
A dependency doesn't appear in both
dependencies
anddevDependencies
of the same workspace. -
Workspaces must point our repository through the
repository
field.
There may be cases where you want to run jest using jest-jasmine2
instead of jest-circus
(which is the default runner) for integration testing. In situations like this, set the environment variable JEST_JASMINE
to 1. That will configure jest to use jest-jasmine2
. So something like this.
JEST_JASMINE=1 yarn jest
If you are making changes to the website or documentation, test the website folder and run the server to check if your changes are being displayed accurately.
- Locate to the website directory and install any website specific dependencies by typing in
yarn
. Following steps are to be followed for this purpose from the root directory.$ cd website # Only needed if you are not already in the website directory $ yarn $ node fetchSupporters.js $ yarn start
- You can run a development server to check if the changes you made are being displayed accurately by running
yarn start
in the website directory.
The Jest website also offers documentation for older versions of Jest, which you can edit in website/versioned_docs
. After making changes to the current documentation in docs
, please check if any older versions of the documentation have a copy of the file where the change is also relevant and apply the changes to the versioned_docs
as well.
In order to accept your pull request, we need you to submit a CLA. You only need to do this once, so if you've done this for another Facebook open source project, you're good to go. If you are submitting a pull request for the first time, just let us know that you have completed the CLA and we can cross-check with your GitHub username.
To build Jest:
$ cd /path/to/your/Jest_clone
# Do one of the following:
# Check out a commit from another contributor, and then
$ yarn run build
# Or, save your changes to Jest, and then
$ yarn test # which also builds Jest
To run tests in another project with the development build of Jest:
$ cd /path/to/another/project
$ node /path/to/your/JestClone/packages/jest/bin/jest [options] # run jest-cli/bin/jest.js in the development build
- To decide whether to specify any options, see
test
underscripts
in thepackage.json
file of the other project.
We will be using GitHub Issues for our public bugs. We will keep a close eye on this and try to make it clear when we have an internal fix in progress. Before filing a new issue, try to make sure your problem doesn't already exist.
The best way to get your bug fixed is to provide a reduced test case. Please provide a public repository with a runnable example.
We get translations from Crowdin, see https://crowdin.com/project/jest-v2. Any and all help is very much appreciated!
Facebook has a bounty program for the safe disclosure of security bugs. With that in mind, please do not file public issues; go through the process outlined on that page.
- 2 spaces for indentation (no tabs).
- 80 character line length is strongly preferred.
- Prefer
'
over"
. - ES6 syntax when possible.
- Use TypeScript.
- Use semicolons;
- Trailing commas,
- Avd abbr wrds.
This project exists thanks to all the people who contribute.
Thank you to all our backers! 🙏
Support this project by becoming a sponsor. Your logo will show up here with a link to your website.
By contributing to Jest, you agree that your contributions will be licensed under its MIT license.