Testing

React Query works by means of hooks - either the ones we offer or custom ones that wrap around them.

Writing unit tests for these custom hooks can be done by means of the React Hooks Testing Library library.

Install this by running:

npm install @testing-library/react-hooks react-test-renderer --save-dev

(The react-test-renderer library is needed as a peer dependency of @testing-library/react-hooks, and needs to correspond to the version of React that you are using.)

Our First Test

Once installed, a simple test can be written. Given the following custom hook:

export function useCustomHook() {
return useQuery('customHook', () => 'Hello');
}

We can write a test for this as follows:

const queryClient = new QueryClient();
const wrapper = ({ children }) => (
<QueryClientProvider client={queryClient}>
{children}
</QueryClientProvider>
);
const { result, waitFor } = renderHook(() => useCustomHook(), { wrapper });
await waitFor(() => result.current.isSuccess);
expect(result.current.data).toEqual("Hello");

Note that we provide a custom wrapper that builds the QueryClient and QueryClientProvider. This helps to ensure that our test is completely isolated from any other tests.

It is possible to write this wrapper only once, but if so we need to ensure that the QueryClient gets cleared before every test, and that tests don't run in parallel otherwise one test will influence the results of others.

Turn off retries

The library defaults to three retries with exponential backoff, which means that your tests are likely to timeout if you want to test an erroneous query. The easiest way to turn retries off is via the QueryClientProvider. Let's extend the above example:

const queryClient = new QueryClient({
defaultOptions: {
queries: {
// ✅ turns retries off
retry: false,
},
},
})
const wrapper = ({ children }) => (
<QueryClientProvider client={queryClient}>
{children}
</QueryClientProvider>
);

This will set the defaults for all queries in the component tree to "no retries". It is important to know that this will only work if your actual useQuery has no explicit retries set. If you have a query that wants 5 retries, this will still take precedence, because defaults are only taken as a fallback.

Turn off network error logging

When testing we want to suppress network errors being logged to the console. To do this, we can use react-query's setLogger() function.

// as part of your test setup
import { setLogger } from 'react-query'
setLogger({
log: console.log,
warn: console.warn,
// ✅ no more errors on the console
error: () => {},
})

Set cacheTime to Infinity with Jest

cacheTime is set to 5 minutes by default. It means that the cache garbage collector timer will be triggered every 5 minutes. If you use Jest, you can set the cacheTime to Infinity to prevent "Jest did not exit one second after the test run completed" error message.

Testing Network Calls

The primary use for React Query is to cache network requests, so it's important that we can test our code is making the correct network requests in the first place.

There are plenty of ways that these can be tested, but for this example we are going to use nock.

Given the following custom hook:

function useFetchData() {
return useQuery('fetchData', () => request('/api/data'));
}

We can write a test for this as follows:

const queryClient = new QueryClient();
const wrapper = ({ children }) => (
<QueryClientProvider client={queryClient}>
{children}
</QueryClientProvider>
);
const expectation = nock('http://example.com')
.get('/api/data')
.reply(200, {
answer: 42
});
const { result, waitFor } = renderHook(() => useFetchData(), { wrapper });
await waitFor(() => {
return result.current.isSuccess;
});
expect(result.current.data).toEqual({answer: 42});

Here we are making use of waitFor and waiting until our the query status indicates that the request has succeeded. This way we know that our hook has finished and should have the correct data.

Testing Load More / Infinite Scroll

First we need to mock our API response

function generateMockedResponse(page) {
return {
page: page,
items: [...]
}
}

Then, our nock configuration needs to differentiate responses based on the page, and we'll be using uri to do this. uri's value here will be something like "/?page=1 or /?page=2

const expectation = nock('http://example.com')
.persist()
.query(true)
.get('/api/data')
.reply(200, (uri) => {
const url = new URL(`http://example.com${uri}`);
const { page } = Object.fromEntries(url.searchParams);
return generateMockedResponse(page);
});

(Notice the .persist(), because we'll be calling from this endpoint multiple times)

Now we can safely run our tests, the trick here is to await both isFetching and then !isFetching after calling fetchNextPage():

const { result, waitFor } = renderHook(() => useInfiniteQueryCustomHook(), { wrapper });
await waitFor(() => result.current.isSuccess);
expect(result.current.data.pages).toStrictEqual(generateMockedResponse(1));
result.current.fetchNextPage();
await waitFor(() => result.current.isFetching);
await waitFor(() => !result.current.isFetching);
expect(result.current.data.pages).toStrictEqual([
...generateMockedResponse(1),
...generateMockedResponse(2),
]);
expectation.done();

Further reading

For additional tips and an alternative setup using mock-service-worker, have a look at Testing React Query from the Community Resources.

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