metabolize / anafanafo

Efficiently compute text width using pre-generated charater-width tables
MIT License
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Bump mocha from 8.1.0 to 8.2.1 #187

Closed dependabot-preview[bot] closed 3 years ago

dependabot-preview[bot] commented 3 years ago

Bumps mocha from 8.1.0 to 8.2.1.

Release notes

Sourced from mocha's releases.

v8.2.1

8.2.1 / 2020-11-02

Fixed stuff.

:bug: Fixes

  • #4489: Fix problematic handling of otherwise-unhandled Promise rejections and erroneous "done() called twice" errors (@boneskull)
  • #4496: Avoid MaxListenersExceededWarning in watch mode (@boneskull)

Also thanks to @akeating for a documentation fix!

v8.2.0

8.2.0 / 2020-10-16

The major feature added in v8.2.0 is addition of support for global fixtures.

While Mocha has always had the ability to run setup and teardown via a hook (e.g., a before() at the top level of a test file) when running tests in serial, Mocha v8.0.0 added support for parallel runs. Parallel runs are incompatible with this strategy; e.g., a top-level before() would only run for the file in which it was defined.

With global fixtures, Mocha can now perform user-defined setup and teardown regardless of mode, and these fixtures are guaranteed to run once and only once. This holds for parallel mode, serial mode, and even "watch" mode (the teardown will run once you hit Ctrl-C, just before Mocha finally exits). Tasks such as starting and stopping servers are well-suited to global fixtures, but not sharing resources--global fixtures do not share context with your test files (but they do share context with each other).

Here's a short example of usage:

// fixtures.js

// can be async or not exports.mochaGlobalSetup = async function() { this.server = await startSomeServer({port: process.env.TEST_PORT}); console.log(server running on port ${this.server.port}); };

exports.mochaGlobalTeardown = async function() { // the context (this) is shared, but not with the test files await this.server.stop(); console.log(server on port ${this.server.port} stopped); };

// this file can contain root hook plugins as well! // exports.mochaHooks = { ... }

Fixtures are loaded with --require, e.g., mocha --require fixtures.js.

For detailed information, please see the documentation and this handy-dandy flowchart to help understand the differences between hooks, root hook plugins, and global fixtures (and when you should use each).

:tada: Enhancements

Changelog

Sourced from mocha's changelog.

8.2.1 / 2020-11-02

Fixed stuff.

:bug: Fixes

  • #4489: Fix problematic handling of otherwise-unhandled Promise rejections and erroneous "done() called twice" errors (@boneskull)
  • #4496: Avoid MaxListenersExceededWarning in watch mode (@boneskull)

Also thanks to @akeating for a documentation fix!

8.2.0 / 2020-10-16

The major feature added in v8.2.0 is addition of support for global fixtures.

While Mocha has always had the ability to run setup and teardown via a hook (e.g., a before() at the top level of a test file) when running tests in serial, Mocha v8.0.0 added support for parallel runs. Parallel runs are incompatible with this strategy; e.g., a top-level before() would only run for the file in which it was defined.

With global fixtures, Mocha can now perform user-defined setup and teardown regardless of mode, and these fixtures are guaranteed to run once and only once. This holds for parallel mode, serial mode, and even "watch" mode (the teardown will run once you hit Ctrl-C, just before Mocha finally exits). Tasks such as starting and stopping servers are well-suited to global fixtures, but not sharing resources--global fixtures do not share context with your test files (but they do share context with each other).

Here's a short example of usage:

// fixtures.js

// can be async or not exports.mochaGlobalSetup = async function() { this.server = await startSomeServer({port: process.env.TEST_PORT}); console.log(server running on port ${this.server.port}); };

exports.mochaGlobalTeardown = async function() { // the context (this) is shared, but not with the test files await this.server.stop(); console.log(server on port ${this.server.port} stopped); };

// this file can contain root hook plugins as well! // exports.mochaHooks = { ... }

Fixtures are loaded with --require, e.g., mocha --require fixtures.js.

For detailed information, please see the documentation and this handy-dandy flowchart to help understand the differences between hooks, root hook plugins, and global fixtures (and when you should use each).

:tada: Enhancements

Commits
  • 185cada Release v8.2.1
  • bddc079 update CHANGELOG for v8.2.1
  • d2e0e83 ensure eslint runs properly on PRs
  • 27cae39 properly dispose Mocha instance in watch mode; closes #4495
  • 5c004a9 do not run CI on closed PRs
  • 8318dff update deps for some vuln which is not applicable to mocha
  • c3ced39 delegate to Node on non-Mocha unhandled rejections (#4489)
  • fac181b Correct global fixtures release version
  • 7e490aa Change assert module's deprecated methods in testing files (#4435)
  • 0165112 add node.js v15 to build matrix
  • Additional commits viewable in compare view


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