118
votes

Are there any libraries out there to mock localStorage?

I've been using Sinon.JS for most of my other javascript mocking and have found it is really great.

My initial testing shows that localStorage refuses to be assignable in firefox (sadface) so I'll probably need some sort of hack around this :/

My options as of now (as I see) are as follows:

  1. Create wrapping functions that all my code uses and mock those
  2. Create some sort of (might be complicated) state management (snapshot localStorage before test, in cleanup restore snapshot) for localStorage.
  3. ??????

What do you think of these approaches and do you think there are any other better ways to go about this? Either way I'll put the resulting "library" that I end up making on github for open source goodness.

16
You missed #4: Profit!Chris Laplante

16 Answers

139
votes

Here is a simple way to mock it with Jasmine:

beforeEach(function () {
  var store = {};

  spyOn(localStorage, 'getItem').andCallFake(function (key) {
    return store[key];
  });
  spyOn(localStorage, 'setItem').andCallFake(function (key, value) {
    return store[key] = value + '';
  });
  spyOn(localStorage, 'clear').andCallFake(function () {
      store = {};
  });
});

If you want to mock the local storage in all your tests, declare the beforeEach() function shown above in the global scope of your tests (the usual place is a specHelper.js script).

55
votes

just mock the global localStorage / sessionStorage (they have the same API) for your needs.
For example:

 // Storage Mock
  function storageMock() {
    let storage = {};

    return {
      setItem: function(key, value) {
        storage[key] = value || '';
      },
      getItem: function(key) {
        return key in storage ? storage[key] : null;
      },
      removeItem: function(key) {
        delete storage[key];
      },
      get length() {
        return Object.keys(storage).length;
      },
      key: function(i) {
        const keys = Object.keys(storage);
        return keys[i] || null;
      }
    };
  }

And then what you actually do, is something like that:

// mock the localStorage
window.localStorage = storageMock();
// mock the sessionStorage
window.sessionStorage = storageMock();
22
votes

Also consider the option to inject dependencies in an object's constructor function.

var SomeObject(storage) {
  this.storge = storage || window.localStorage;
  // ...
}

SomeObject.prototype.doSomeStorageRelatedStuff = function() {
  var myValue = this.storage.getItem('myKey');
  // ...
}

// In src
var myObj = new SomeObject();

// In test
var myObj = new SomeObject(mockStorage)

In line with mocking and unit testing, I like to avoid testing the storage implementation. For instance no point in checking if length of storage increased after you set an item, etc.

Since it is obviously unreliable to replace methods on the real localStorage object, use a "dumb" mockStorage and stub the individual methods as desired, such as:

var mockStorage = {
  setItem: function() {},
  removeItem: function() {},
  key: function() {},
  getItem: function() {},
  removeItem: function() {},
  length: 0
};

// Then in test that needs to know if and how setItem was called
sinon.stub(mockStorage, 'setItem');
var myObj = new SomeObject(mockStorage);

myObj.doSomeStorageRelatedStuff();
expect(mockStorage.setItem).toHaveBeenCalledWith('myKey');
15
votes

The current solutions will not work in Firefox. This is because localStorage is defined by the html spec as being not modifiable. You can however get around this by accessing localStorage's prototype directly.

The cross browser solution is to mock the objects on Storage.prototype e.g.

instead of spyOn(localStorage, 'setItem') use

spyOn(Storage.prototype, 'setItem')
spyOn(Storage.prototype, 'getItem')

taken from bzbarsky and teogeos's replies here https://github.com/jasmine/jasmine/issues/299

14
votes

This is what I do...

var mock = (function() {
  var store = {};
  return {
    getItem: function(key) {
      return store[key];
    },
    setItem: function(key, value) {
      store[key] = value.toString();
    },
    clear: function() {
      store = {};
    }
  };
})();

Object.defineProperty(window, 'localStorage', { 
  value: mock,
});
6
votes

Are there any libraries out there to mock localStorage?

I just wrote one:

(function () {
    var localStorage = {};
    localStorage.setItem = function (key, val) {
         this[key] = val + '';
    }
    localStorage.getItem = function (key) {
        return this[key];
    }
    Object.defineProperty(localStorage, 'length', {
        get: function () { return Object.keys(this).length - 2; }
    });

    // Your tests here

})();

My initial testing shows that localStorage refuses to be assignable in firefox

Only in global context. With a wrapper function as above, it works just fine.

5
votes

Overwriting the localStorage property of the global window object as suggested in some of the answers won't work in most JS engines, because they declare the localStorage data property as not writable and not configurable.

However I found out that at least with PhantomJS's (version 1.9.8) WebKit version you could use the legacy API __defineGetter__ to control what happens if localStorage is accessed. Still it would be interesting if this works in other browsers as well.

var tmpStorage = window.localStorage;

// replace local storage
window.__defineGetter__('localStorage', function () {
    throw new Error("localStorage not available");
    // you could also return some other object here as a mock
});

// do your tests here    

// restore old getter to actual local storage
window.__defineGetter__('localStorage',
                        function () { return tmpStorage });

The benefit of this approach is that you would not have to modify the code you're about to test.

5
votes

You don't have to pass the storage object to each method that uses it. Instead, you can use a configuration parameter for any module that touches the storage adapter.

Your old module

// hard to test !
export const someFunction (x) {
  window.localStorage.setItem('foo', x)
}

// hard to test !
export const anotherFunction () {
  return window.localStorage.getItem('foo')
}

Your new module with config "wrapper" function

export default function (storage) {
  return {
    someFunction (x) {
      storage.setItem('foo', x)
    }
    anotherFunction () {
      storage.getItem('foo')
    }
  }
}

When you use the module in testing code

// import mock storage adapater
const MockStorage = require('./mock-storage')

// create a new mock storage instance
const mock = new MockStorage()

// pass mock storage instance as configuration argument to your module
const myModule = require('./my-module')(mock)

// reset before each test
beforeEach(function() {
  mock.clear()
})

// your tests
it('should set foo', function() {
  myModule.someFunction('bar')
  assert.equal(mock.getItem('foo'), 'bar')
})

it('should get foo', function() {
  mock.setItem('foo', 'bar')
  assert.equal(myModule.anotherFunction(), 'bar')
})

The MockStorage class might look like this

export default class MockStorage {
  constructor () {
    this.storage = new Map()
  }
  setItem (key, value) {
    this.storage.set(key, value)
  }
  getItem (key) {
    return this.storage.get(key)
  }
  removeItem (key) {
    this.storage.delete(key)
  }
  clear () {
    this.constructor()
  }
}

When using your module in production code, instead pass the real localStorage adapter

const myModule = require('./my-module')(window.localStorage)
4
votes

Here is an exemple using sinon spy and mock:

// window.localStorage.setItem
var spy = sinon.spy(window.localStorage, "setItem");

// You can use this in your assertions
spy.calledWith(aKey, aValue)

// Reset localStorage.setItem method    
spy.reset();



// window.localStorage.getItem
var stub = sinon.stub(window.localStorage, "getItem");
stub.returns(aValue);

// You can use this in your assertions
stub.calledWith(aKey)

// Reset localStorage.getItem method
stub.reset();
3
votes

credits to https://medium.com/@armno/til-mocking-localstorage-and-sessionstorage-in-angular-unit-tests-a765abdc9d87 Make a fake localstorage, and spy on localstorage, when it is caleld

 beforeAll( () => {
    let store = {};
    const mockLocalStorage = {
      getItem: (key: string): string => {
        return key in store ? store[key] : null;
      },
      setItem: (key: string, value: string) => {
        store[key] = `${value}`;
      },
      removeItem: (key: string) => {
        delete store[key];
      },
      clear: () => {
        store = {};
      }
    };

    spyOn(localStorage, 'getItem')
      .and.callFake(mockLocalStorage.getItem);
    spyOn(localStorage, 'setItem')
      .and.callFake(mockLocalStorage.setItem);
    spyOn(localStorage, 'removeItem')
      .and.callFake(mockLocalStorage.removeItem);
    spyOn(localStorage, 'clear')
      .and.callFake(mockLocalStorage.clear);
  })

And here we use it

it('providing search value should return matched item', () => {
    localStorage.setItem('defaultLanguage', 'en-US');

    expect(...
  });
2
votes

I decided to reiterate my comment to Pumbaa80's answer as separate answer so that it'll be easier to reuse it as a library.

I took Pumbaa80's code, refined it a bit, added tests and published it as an npm module here: https://www.npmjs.com/package/mock-local-storage.

Here is a source code: https://github.com/letsrock-today/mock-local-storage/blob/master/src/mock-localstorage.js

Some tests: https://github.com/letsrock-today/mock-local-storage/blob/master/test/mock-localstorage.js

Module creates mock localStorage and sessionStorage on the global object (window or global, which of them is defined).

In my other project's tests I required it with mocha as this: mocha -r mock-local-storage to make global definitions available for all code under test.

Basically, code looks like follows:

(function (glob) {

    function createStorage() {
        let s = {},
            noopCallback = () => {},
            _itemInsertionCallback = noopCallback;

        Object.defineProperty(s, 'setItem', {
            get: () => {
                return (k, v) => {
                    k = k + '';
                    _itemInsertionCallback(s.length);
                    s[k] = v + '';
                };
            }
        });
        Object.defineProperty(s, 'getItem', {
            // ...
        });
        Object.defineProperty(s, 'removeItem', {
            // ...
        });
        Object.defineProperty(s, 'clear', {
            // ...
        });
        Object.defineProperty(s, 'length', {
            get: () => {
                return Object.keys(s).length;
            }
        });
        Object.defineProperty(s, "key", {
            // ...
        });
        Object.defineProperty(s, 'itemInsertionCallback', {
            get: () => {
                return _itemInsertionCallback;
            },
            set: v => {
                if (!v || typeof v != 'function') {
                    v = noopCallback;
                }
                _itemInsertionCallback = v;
            }
        });
        return s;
    }

    glob.localStorage = createStorage();
    glob.sessionStorage = createStorage();
}(typeof window !== 'undefined' ? window : global));

Note that all methods added via Object.defineProperty so that them won't be iterated, accessed or removed as regular items and won't count in length. Also I added a way to register callback which is called when an item is about to be put into object. This callback may be used to emulate quota exceeded error in tests.

2
votes

I found that I did not need to mock it. I could change the actual local storage to the state I wanted it via setItem, then just query the values to see if it changed via getItem. It's not quite as powerful as mocking as you can't see how many times something was changed, but it worked for my purposes.

0
votes

Unfortunately, the only way we can mock the localStorage object in a test scenario is to change the code we're testing. You have to wrap your code in an anonymous function (which you should be doing anyway) and use "dependency injection" to pass in a reference to the window object. Something like:

(function (window) {
   // Your code
}(window.mockWindow || window));

Then, inside of your test, you can specify:

window.mockWindow = { localStorage: { ... } };
0
votes

This is how I like to do it. Keeps it simple.

  let localStoreMock: any = {};

  beforeEach(() => {

    angular.mock.module('yourApp');

    angular.mock.module(function ($provide: any) {

      $provide.service('localStorageService', function () {
        this.get = (key: any) => localStoreMock[key];
        this.set = (key: any, value: any) => localStoreMock[key] = value;
      });

    });
  });
0
votes

Need to interact with stored data
A quite short approach

const store = {};
Object.defineProperty(window, 'localStorage', { 
  value: {
    getItem:(key) => store[key]},
    setItem:(key, value) => {
      store[key] = value.toString();
    },
    clear: () => {
      store = {};
    }
  },
});

Spy with Jasmine
If you just need these functions to spy on them using jasmine it will be even shorter and easier to read.

Object.defineProperty(window, 'localStorage', { 
  value: {
    getItem:(key) => {},
    setItem:(key, value) => {},
    clear: () => {},
    ...
  },
});

const spy = spyOn(localStorage, 'getItem')

Now you don't need a store at all.

-1
votes

I know OP specifically asked about mocking, but arguably it's better to spy rather than mock. And what if you use Object.keys(localStorage) to iterate over all available keys? You can test it like this:

const someFunction = () => {
  const localStorageKeys = Object.keys(localStorage)
  console.log('localStorageKeys', localStorageKeys)
  localStorage.removeItem('whatever')
}

and the test code will be like follows:

describe('someFunction', () => {
  it('should remove some item from the local storage', () => {
    const _localStorage = {
      foo: 'bar', fizz: 'buzz'
    }

    Object.setPrototypeOf(_localStorage, {
      removeItem: jest.fn()
    })

    jest.spyOn(global, 'localStorage', 'get').mockReturnValue(_localStorage)

    someFunction()

    expect(global.localStorage.removeItem).toHaveBeenCalledTimes(1)
    expect(global.localStorage.removeItem).toHaveBeenCalledWith('whatever')
  })
})

No need for mocks or constructors. Relatively few lines, too.