- Install Jest for unit testing with React Testing Library - Install Playwright for end-to-end testing - Configure Jest with proper TypeScript support and module mapping - Create test setup files and utilities for both unit and e2e tests Components: * Jest configuration with coverage thresholds * Playwright configuration with browser automation * Unit tests for LoginForm, AuthContext, and useSocketIO hook * E2E tests for authentication, dashboard, and agents workflows * GitHub Actions workflow for automated testing * Mock data and API utilities for consistent testing * Test documentation with best practices Testing features: - Unit tests with 70% coverage threshold - E2E tests with API mocking and user journey testing - CI/CD integration for automated test runs - Cross-browser testing support with Playwright - Authentication system testing end-to-end 🚀 Generated with [Claude Code](https://claude.ai/code) Co-Authored-By: Claude <noreply@anthropic.com>
1.6 KiB
1.6 KiB
resolve-cwd 
Resolve the path of a module like
require.resolve()but from the current working directory
Install
$ npm install resolve-cwd
Usage
const resolveCwd = require('resolve-cwd');
console.log(__dirname);
//=> '/Users/sindresorhus/rainbow'
console.log(process.cwd());
//=> '/Users/sindresorhus/unicorn'
console.log(resolveCwd('./foo'));
//=> '/Users/sindresorhus/unicorn/foo.js'
API
resolveCwd(moduleId)
Like require(), throws when the module can't be found.
resolveCwd.silent(moduleId)
Returns undefined instead of throwing when the module can't be found.
moduleId
Type: string
What you would use in require().
Related
- resolve-from - Resolve the path of a module from a given path
- import-from - Import a module from a given path
- import-cwd - Import a module from the current working directory
- resolve-pkg - Resolve the path of a package regardless of it having an entry point
- import-lazy - Import a module lazily
- resolve-global - Resolve the path of a globally installed module
License
MIT © Sindre Sorhus