Testing Teleport
Vue 3 comes with a new built-in component: <Teleport>
, which allows components to "teleport" their content far outside of their own <template>
. Most tests written with Vue Test Utils are scoped to the component passed to mount
, which introduces some complexity when it comes to testing a component that is teleported outside of the component where it is initially rendered.
Here are some strategies and techniques for testing components using <Teleport>
.
TIP
If you want to test the rest of your component, ignoring teleport, you can stub teleport
by passing teleport: true
in the global stubs option.
Example
In this example we are testing a <Navbar>
component. It renders a <Signup>
component inside of a <Teleport>
. The target
prop of <Teleport>
is an element located outside of the <Navbar>
component.
This is the Navbar.vue
component:
<template>
<Teleport to="#modal">
<Signup />
</Teleport>
</template>
<script lang="ts">
import { defineComponent } from 'vue'
import Signup from './Signup.vue'
export default defineComponent({
components: {
Signup
}
})
</script>
It simply teleports a <Signup>
somewhere else. It's simple for the purpose of this example.
Signup.vue
is a form that validates if username
is greater than 8 characters. If it is, when submitted, it emits a signup
event with the username
as the payload. Testing that will be our goal.
<template>
<div>
<form @submit.prevent="submit">
<input v-model="username" />
</form>
</div>
</template>
<script>
export default {
emits: ['signup'],
data() {
return {
username: ''
}
},
computed: {
error() {
return this.username.length < 8
}
},
methods: {
submit() {
if (!this.error) {
this.$emit('signup', this.username)
}
}
}
}
</script>
Mounting the Component
Starting with a minimal test:
import { mount } from '@vue/test-utils'
import Navbar from './Navbar.vue'
import Signup from './Signup.vue'
test('emits a signup event when valid', async () => {
const wrapper = mount(Navbar)
})
Running this test will give you a warning: [Vue warn]: Failed to locate Teleport target with selector "#modal"
. Let's create it:
import { mount } from '@vue/test-utils'
import Navbar from './Navbar.vue'
import Signup from './Signup.vue'
beforeEach(() => {
// create teleport target
const el = document.createElement('div')
el.id = 'modal'
document.body.appendChild(el)
})
afterEach(() => {
// clean up
document.body.innerHTML = ''
})
test('teleport', async () => {
const wrapper = mount(Navbar)
})
We are using Jest for this example, which does not reset the DOM every test. For this reason, it's good to clean up after each test with afterEach
.
Interacting with the Teleported Component
The next thing to do is fill out the username input. Unfortunately, we cannot use wrapper.find('input')
. Why not? A quick console.log(wrapper.html())
shows us:
<!--teleport start-->
<!--teleport end-->
We see some comments used by Vue to handle <Teleport>
- but no <input>
. That's because the <Signup>
component (and its HTML) are not rendered inside of <Navbar>
anymore - it was teleported outside.
Although the actual HTML is teleported outside, it turns out the Virtual DOM associated with <Navbar>
maintains a reference to the original component. This means you can use getComponent
and findComponent
, which operate on the Virtual DOM, not the regular DOM.
beforeEach(() => {
// ...
})
afterEach(() => {
// ...
})
test('teleport', async () => {
const wrapper = mount(Navbar)
wrapper.getComponent(Signup) // got it!
})
getComponent
returns a VueWrapper
. Now you can use methods like get
, find
and trigger
.
Let's finish the test:
test('teleport', async () => {
const wrapper = mount(Navbar)
const signup = wrapper.getComponent(Signup)
await signup.get('input').setValue('valid_username')
await signup.get('form').trigger('submit.prevent')
expect(signup.emitted().signup[0]).toEqual(['valid_username'])
})
It passes!
The full test:
import { mount } from '@vue/test-utils'
import Navbar from './Navbar.vue'
import Signup from './Signup.vue'
beforeEach(() => {
// create teleport target
const el = document.createElement('div')
el.id = 'modal'
document.body.appendChild(el)
})
afterEach(() => {
// clean up
document.body.innerHTML = ''
})
test('teleport', async () => {
const wrapper = mount(Navbar)
const signup = wrapper.getComponent(Signup)
await signup.get('input').setValue('valid_username')
await signup.get('form').trigger('submit.prevent')
expect(signup.emitted().signup[0]).toEqual(['valid_username'])
})
You can stub teleport by using teleport: true
:
import { mount } from '@vue/test-utils'
import Navbar from './Navbar.vue'
test('teleport', async () => {
const wrapper = mount(Navbar, {
global: {
stubs: {
teleport: true
}
}
})
})
Conclusion
- Create a teleport target with
document.createElement
. - Find teleported components using
getComponent
orfindComponent
which operate on the Virtual DOM level.