Timeouts and delays are quite extensively used in many applications when deferring execution of some action via Ember.run.later or debouncing via Ember.run.debounce . Having small amounts of tests executing such methods might not be a problem initially, but obviously, as the application grows, this can easily lead to slow test suite which takes minutes to finish due to the waiting for all the timeouts and delays in many places. Let’s try to find the best solution to solve this problem.

Anatomy of The Problem

Imagine you are implementing a todo-list and want to add a destroy item feature. The obvious solution would be adding a button which would trigger some destroy action once a user clicks it. But the problem with such solution is that it doesn’t offer the best UX as a user could easily destroy items by accident. A nicer way for such use cases is making a user hold the button for a certain period of time and only after this delay would the action be invoked, otherwise it won’t be executed.

A great news is that there is already an addon solving such problem: ember-hold-button. Let’s create a very simple component handling the logic of displaying the item and deleting it after holding a button for 3 seconds using ember-hold-button :

// app/components/display-todo-item.js import Ember from ' ember ' ; const { get , } = Ember ; export default Ember . Component . extend ({ actions : { destroy () { const item = get ( this , ' item ' ); item . destroyRecord (); }, }, });

// app/templates/components/display-todo-item.hbs {{item.name}} {{#hold-button type="rectangle" action="destroy" delay=3000 data-test="destroy-item-btn"}} Destroy {{/hold-button}}

Ok, cool, so the feature is done. What about integrations tests verifying that this feature works? Currently, it would take at least 3 seconds due to the waiting time + the runtime of the test itself, which is definitely too slow.

Solving The Problem

One way to fix this problem would be moving delay to computed property which would be configurable and by default make it equal to 3 seconds. The component would look like this in such case:

// app/components/display-todo-item.js import Ember from ' ember ' ; const { get , } = Ember ; export default Ember . Component . extend ({ destroyActionDelay : 3000 , actions : { destroy () { const item = get ( this , ' item ' ); item . destroyRecord (); }, }, });

// app/templates/components/display-todo-item.hbs {{item.name}} {{#hold-button type="rectangle" action="destroy" delay=destroyActionDelay data-test="destroy-item-btn"}} Destroy {{/hold-button}}

To make integration tests fast, we would simply override the default value of destroyActionDelay and render the component in the test the following way:

// tests/integration/components/display-todo-item-test.js // the rest of the tests this . render ( hbs `{{display-todo-item item=item destroyActionDelay=0}}` ); // the rest of the tests

This surely solves the problem for integration tests, but what about the acceptance ones? It would still take at least 3 seconds of waiting for this delay.

For this purpose we could add a special function which would return the value for the delay based on the environment. For non-test we may want to return a provided value and for test environment some other value, which by default would be equal to 0 to make the tests fast. Let’s add such a utility function and call it timeoutForEnv :

// my-app/app/utils/timeout-for-env.js import config from ' my-app/config/environment ' ; export default function timeoutForEnv ( timeout , timeoutForTestEnv = 0 ) { if ( config . environment === ' test ' ) { return timeoutForTestEnv ; } else { return timeout ; } }

And update the component:

// app/components/display-todo-item.js import Ember from ' ember ' ; import timeoutForEnv from ' my-app/utils/timeout-for-env ' ; const { get , } = Ember ; export default Ember . Component . extend ({ destroyActionDelay : timeoutForEnv ( 3000 ), actions : { destroy () { const item = get ( this , ' item ' ); item . destroyRecord (); }, }, });

If we wanted for some reason to have a delay different than 0 for the test env, we could simply provide the value of the second argument:

// app/components/display-todo-item.js import Ember from ' ember ' ; import timeoutForEnv from ' my-app/utils/timeout-for-env ' ; const { get , } = Ember ; export default Ember . Component . extend ({ destroyActionDelay : timeoutForEnv ( 3000 , 1000 ), actions : { destroy () { const item = get ( this , ' item ' ); item . destroyRecord (); }, }, });

And that’s it! It will work for both integration and acceptance tests.

Wrapping Up

Using a lot of timeouts and delays without special adjustments for tests can easily lead to a very slow test suite as the application grows. Fortunately, it’s quite easy so solve such a problem by using environment-dependent config and setting the values to 0 for tests.

P.S. I’ve just started writing a book about test-driving Ember applications. If you found this article useful, you are going to love it :). Subscribe to my newsletter to get updates and promotion code once it’s released.