JavaScript implementation of the timer APIs; setTimeout
, clearTimeout
,
setImmediate
, clearImmediate
, setInterval
, clearInterval
, and
requestAnimationFrame
, along with a clock instance that controls the flow of
time. Lolex also provides a Date
implementation that gets its time from the
clock.
Lolex can be used to simulate passing time in automated tests and other situations where you want the scheduling semantics, but don't want to actually wait. Lolex is extracted from Sinon.JS.
Lolex can be installed using npm
:
npm install lolex
If you want to use Lolex in a browser, you have a few options. Releases are hosted on the sinonjs.org website. You can also get the node module and build a file for the browser using browserify:
npm install lolex
npm install browserify # If you don't already have it globally installed
browserify node_modules/lolex/lolex.js
To use lolex, create a new clock, schedule events on it using the timer
functions and pass time using the tick
method.
// In the browser distribution, a global `lolex` is already available
var lolex = require("lolex");
var clock = lolex.createClock();
clock.setTimeout(function () {
console.log("The poblano is a mild chili pepper originating in the state of Puebla, Mexico.");
}, 15);
// ...
clock.tick(15);
Upon executing the last line, an interesting fact about the Poblano will be printed synchronously to the screen. If you want to simulate asynchronous behavior, you have to use your imagination when calling the various functions.
When using lolex to test timers, you will most likely want to replace the native
timers such that calling setTimeout
actually schedules a callback with your
clock instance, not the browser's internals.
To hijack timers in another context, use the install
method. You can then call
uninstall
later to restore things as they were again.
var lolex = require("lolex");
var clock = lolex.install(window);
window.setTimeout(fn, 15); // Schedules with clock.setTimeout
clock.uninstall();
// window.setTimeout is restored to the native implementation
In 90% av the times, you want to install the timers onto the global object.
Calling install
with no arguments achieves this:
var clock = lolex.install();
// Equivalent to
// var clock = lolex.install(typeof global !== "undefined" ? global : window);
This simulates a user changing the system clock while your program is running. It affects the current time but it does not in itself cause e.g. timers to fire; they will fire exactly as they would have done without the call to setSystemTime().
Lolex has a comprehensive test suite. If you're thinking of contributing bug fixes or suggest new features, you need to make sure you have not broken any tests. You are also expected to add tests for any new behavior.
npm test
Or, if you prefer slightly less verbose output:
mocha ./test/lolex-test.js
BSD 3-clause "New" or "Revised" License (see LICENSE file)