Jest allows you to organise your test files the way you want it. However, the
more your codebase grows, the more it becomes hard to navigate in your test
files. This rule makes sure you provide at least a top-level describe
block in
your test file.
This rule triggers a warning if a test case (test
and it
) or a hook
(beforeAll
, beforeEach
, afterEach
, afterAll
) is not located in a
top-level describe
block.
The following patterns are considered warnings:
// Above a describe block
test('my test', () => {});
describe('test suite', () => {
it('test', () => {});
});
// Below a describe block
describe('test suite', () => {});
test('my test', () => {});
// Same for hooks
beforeAll('my beforeAll', () => {});
describe('test suite', () => {});
afterEach('my afterEach', () => {});
The following patterns are not considered warnings:
// In a describe block
describe('test suite', () => {
test('my test', () => {});
});
// In a nested describe block
describe('test suite', () => {
test('my test', () => {});
describe('another test suite', () => {
test('my other test', () => {});
});
});
You can also enforce a limit on the number of describes allowed at the top-level
using the maxNumberOfTopLevelDescribes
option:
{
"jest/require-top-level-describe": [
"error",
{
"maxNumberOfTopLevelDescribes": 2
}
]
}
Examples of incorrect code with the above config:
describe('test suite', () => {
it('test', () => {});
});
describe('test suite', () => {});
describe('test suite', () => {});
This option defaults to Infinity
, allowing any number of top-level describes.
Don't use this rule on non-jest test files.