Vitest
IntelliJ IDEA integrates with Vitest, a Vite-native unit test framework. You can run, debug, do snapshot testing, and measure test coverage both from the editor and via a run/debug configuration.
You can re-run failed tests or turn on the watch mode. When you launch a test session in this mode, IntelliJ IDEA monitors changes in your project source code. As soon as any changes are made to a test or to its subject, IntelliJ IDEA re-runs the affected test, you do not even have to re-start the run/debug configuration.
Before you start
Download and install Node.js.
Make sure the JavaScript and TypeScript plugin is enabled in the settings. Press Ctrl+Alt+S to open settings and then select . Click the Installed tab. In the search field, type JavaScript and TypeScript. For more information about plugins, refer to Managing plugins.
Install Vitest
In the embedded Terminal (Alt+F12) , type:
npm install --save-dev vitest
Learn more from Getting Started and Configuring Vitest on the Vitest official website.
Run and debug tests
With IntelliJ IDEA, you can quickly run or debug a single Vitest test right from the editor or create a run/debug configuration to run or debug some or all of your tests.
For more information about creating Vitest tests for JavaScript and TypeScript code, refer to Vitest features on the Vitest official website.
Run or debug a single test from the editor
Click or in the gutter and select Run <test_name> from the list.
You can also see whether a test has passed or failed right in the editor, thanks to the test status icons and in the gutter.
To debug a test, set a breakpoint inside it, click or in the gutter and select Debug <test_name> from the list.
In the Debug tool window, examine the suspended test and step through it.
Create a Vitest run configuration
Open the Run/Debug Configuration dialog ( in the main menu), click in the left-hand pane, and select Vitest from the list. The Run/Debug Configuration: Vitest dialog opens.
Specify the Node.js interpreter to use.
If you choose the Project alias, IntelliJ IDEA will automatically use the project default interpreter from the Node interpreter field on the Node.js page . In most cases, IntelliJ IDEA detects the project default interpreter and fills in the field itself.
You can also choose another configured local or remote interpreter or click and configure a new one.
Optionally specify the Node.js-specific option parameters and the environment variables to be passed to Node.js.
Specify the location of the
vitest
package.Specify the working directory of the application. By default, the Working directory field shows the project root folder. To change this predefined setting, specify the path to the desired folder.
Specify the tests to run. This can be a specific test or suite, an entire test file, or a folder with test files.
By default, vite.config.ts is used. If vite.config.ts is missing, or you want to use a custom configuration, specify the vitest.config.ts to use. Learn more from the Vitest official website.
Optionally:
Configure rerunning tests automatically on changes in them or in the related source files. To do that, add the
--watch
flag in the Vitest options field.You can also add other Vitest options. For more information, refer to the Vitest official website.
Optionally:
In the Node options field, type the Node.js-specific command-line options to be passed to the Node.js executable file. The acceptable options are:
Use
--require coffeescript/register
to have CoffeeScript files compiled into JavaScript on the fly during run.This mode requires that the register.js file, which is a part of the
coffeescript
package, is located inside your project. Therefore make sure you have thecoffeescript
package installed locally as described in Install the CoffeeScript compiler.Use
--inspect
or--inspect-brk
parameter when you are using Node.js v7 for Chrome Debugging Protocol support. Otherwise, by default the debug process will use V8 Debugging Protocol.
Run tests via a run configuration
Select the Vitest run/debug configuration from the list of configurations and click in the list or on the toolbar.
Monitor test execution and analyze test results in the Test Runner tab of the Run tool window. For more information, refer to Explore test results.
To debug tests, set breakpoints where necessary, select the run/debug configuration, and click .
Rerun tests
You can rerun all the tests in the specified scope Alt+Shift+R or rerun only the tests that failed.
You can also launch tests in the --watch mode. In this mode, IntelliJ IDEA monitors saved changes to tests and related test subjects. As soon as a change is detected, IntelliJ IDEA reruns the affected test without stopping the current test session.
Rerun failed tests
Click on the test results toolbar. IntelliJ IDEA will execute all the tests that failed during the previous session.
To rerun a specific failed test, select
on its context menu.
Rerun updated tests automatically (--watch mode)
Open a Vitest run/debug configuration or create a new one as described above.
In the Vitest options field, type
--watch
. In the autogenerated All tests configuration, the--watch
option is already specified.Launch the run/debug configuration. If some tests fail, you can update them or related test subjects without stopping the test session. As soon as your changes are saved, IntelliJ IDEA detects them and reruns the affected tests.
In the example below, the test at line
29
of vue.test.ts fails. With the--watch
option, the test is rerun after you replace'4 x 4 = 18'
with'4 x 4 = 16'
in vue.test.ts an save the changes with Ctrl+S or move the focus from IntelliJ IDEA.
Snapshot testing
IntelliJ IDEA also supports Vitest snapshot testing. When IntelliJ IDEA runs a test with the toMatchSnapshot()
method for the first time, a snapshot file is created and a icon appears in the gutter next to toMatchSnapshot ()
. Click to open the generated snapshot.
Monitor code coverage
With IntelliJ IDEA, you can also monitor how much of your code is covered with Vitest tests. IntelliJ IDEA displays this statistics in a dedicated Coverage tool window and marks covered and uncovered lines visually in the editor and in the Project tool window.
Enable code coverage for Vitest
Install c8 or istanbul. To do that, open the built-in Terminal Alt+F12 and type one of the following:
npm install --save-dev @vitest/coverage-c8
npm install --save-dev @vitest/coverage-istanbul
.
Learn more from Coverage on the Vitest official website.
Run tests with coverage
Run a specific suite or a test with coverage from the editor: click or in the gutter and select Run <test_name> with Coverage from the list.
Alternatively:
Create a Vitest run/debug configuration as described above. Select the Vitest run/debug configuration from the list on the main toolbar and click to the right of the list.
Monitor the code coverage in the Coverage tool window. The report shows how many files were covered with tests and the percentage of covered lines in them. From the report you can jump to the file and see what lines were covered – marked green – and what lines were not covered – marked red: