As a reminder, this project is being built upon the following starter project on [Repl.it](https://repl.it/github/freeCodeCamp/boilerplate-mochachai), or cloned from [GitHub](https://github.com/freeCodeCamp/boilerplate-mochachai/).
Mocha allows testing asyncronous operations. There is a small (BIG) difference. Can you spot it?
We can test our API endpoints using a plugin, called `chai-http`. Let's see how it works. And remember, API calls are asynchronous.
The following is an example of a test using `chai-http` for the `'GET /hello?name=[name] => "hello [name]"'` suite. The test sends a name string in a url query string (`?name=John`) using a `GET`request to the `server`. In the `end` method's callback function, the response object (`res`) is received and contains the `status` property. The first `assert.equal` checks if the status is equal to `200`. The second `assert.equal` checks that the response string (`res.text`) is equal to `"hello John"`.
```js
suite('GET /hello?name=[name] => "hello [name]"', function () {
test("?name=John", function (done) {
chai
.request(server)
.get("/hello?name=John")
.end(function (err, res) {
assert.equal(res.status, 200, "response status should be 200");
assert.equal(
res.text,
"hello John",
'response should be "hello John"'
);
done();
});
});
```
Notice the `done` parameter in the test's callback function. Calling it at the end without an argument is necessary to signal successful asynchronous completion.
Within `tests/2_functional-tests.js`, alter the `'Test GET /hello with no name'` test (`// #1`) to assert the `status` and the `text` response to make the test pass. Do not alter the arguments passed to the asserts.
There should be no name in the query; the endpoint responds with `hello Guest`.