I test my destroy and update methods in hotel_controller and Im keep getting ActiveRecord:RecordNotFound error. Heres a screenshot
I think this is coz FactoryGirs doesnt save recods to the db. Help me pls to get things right.
hotels_controller.rb
class HotelsController < ApplicationController
before_action :signed_in_user, except: [:index, :show, :top5hotels]
...
def destroy
#hotel = current_user.hotels.find(params[:id])
#hotel.destroy
redirect_to hotels_url
end
def update
#hotel = current_user.hotels.find(params[:id])
if #hotel.update_attributes!(params[:hotel])
redirect_to #hotel, notice: "Hotel was successfully updated."
else
render "edit"
end
end
...
end
factories.rb
FactoryGirl.define do
factory :hotel do
name 'NewHotel'
star_rating 5
breakfast false
room_description 'Room Description'
price_for_room 500
user { create(:user) }
address { create(:address) }
end
factory :user do
sequence(:email) { |n| "user_mail.#{n}#gmail.com" }
name 'Yuri Gagarin'
password 'foobar'
password_confirmation 'foobar'
end
factory :rating do
value 5
user { create(:user) }
hotel { create(:hotel) }
end
factory :comment do
body "Heresanytextyouwant"
user { create(:user) }
hotel { create(:hotel) }
end
factory :address do
country 'Country'
state 'State'
city 'City'
street 'Street'
end
end
hotels_controller_spec.rb
require 'spec_helper'
describe HotelsController do
before { sign_in user, no_capybara: true }
...
describe "destroy action" do
it "redirects to index action when hotel is destroyed" do
hotel = create(:hotel)
delete :destroy, id: hotel.id
expect(response).to redirect_to(hotels_url)
end
end
describe "update action" do
it "redirects to the hotel" do
hotel = create(:hotel)
put :update, id: hotel.id, hotel: FactoryGirl.attributes_for(:hotel)
expect(assigns(:hotel)).to be_eq(hotel)
#expect(response).to render_template('show')
end
end
end
FactoryGirl IS saving records to db.
The trouble is the current_user is not the same user that the hotel belongs to, so when you try to retrieve the hotel record it's not found.
Try changing...
#hotel = current_user.hotels.find(params[:id])
to...
#hotel = Hotel.find(params[:id])
And you'll see it works.
If you want to keep the original code, then in the test you should be doing...
hotel = create(:hotel, user: current_user)
Related
I'm writing an app using RoR, using gem Devise for user authentication. I'm trying to test user behaviour when he signed in the app and have next error:
User::TransactionsController when logged in when its own record GET #show assigns the requested instance as #instance
Failure/Error: let(:transaction) { FactoryGirl.create(:transaction, user_id: user.id) }
NameError:
undefined local variable or method `user' for #<RSpec::ExampleGroups::UserTransactionsController::WhenLoggedIn::WhenItsOwnRecord::GETShow:0x00000004d77220>
My tests start with:
RSpec.describe User::TransactionsController, type: :controller do
render_views
before { sign_in FactoryGirl.create :user }
let(:transaction_category) { FactoryGirl.create(:transaction_category) }
let(:transaction) { FactoryGirl.create(:transaction, user_id: user.id) }
......
end
My factory:
FactoryGirl.define do
factory :transaction do
date '2016-01-08'
comment 'MyString'
amount 1
transaction_category
trait :invalid do
amount nil
end
end
end
My TransactionsController looks like:
class User::TransactionsController < ApplicationController
before_action :authenticate_user!
before_action :find_transaction, only: [:show, :edit, :destroy, :update]
def new
#transaction = current_user.transactions.build
end
def show
end
def create
#transaction = current_user.transactions.build(transaction_params)
if #transaction.save
redirect_to user_transaction_url(#transaction)
else
render :new
end
end
def index
#transactions = current_user.transactions
end
def edit
end
def destroy
#transaction.destroy
redirect_to user_transactions_url
end
def update
if #transaction.update(transaction_params)
redirect_to user_transaction_url
else
render :edit
end
end
private
def transaction_params
params.require(:transaction).permit(:amount, :date, :comment,
:transaction_category_id)
end
def find_transaction
#transaction = current_user.transactions.find(params[:id])
end
end
Thanks!
You need to define user
RSpec.describe User::TransactionsController, type: :controller do
render_views
user = FactoryGirl.create( :user )
before { sign_in( user ) }
let(:transaction_category) { FactoryGirl.create(:transaction_category) }
let(:transaction) { FactoryGirl.create(:transaction, user_id: user.id) }
......
end
I have problem with my "POST create" action. Test passed successfully, when attributes are valid, but when they are invalid, player is also saved. It's strange because, only :invalid_player, can be saved with invalid attributes. If I change for example, wins to -1 or "string", player with attributes :invalid_player is saved. But if I change attributes for :player, like wins = -1, validators prevent player, from being saved.
Console output with error message:
Failures:
1) PlayersController user is signed in POST create with invalid attributes does not save the new player
Failure/Error:
expect{
post :create, { tournament_id: #tournament, player: FactoryGirl.attributes_for(:invalid_player) }
}.to_not change(Player, :count)
expected #count not to have changed, but did change from 1 to 2
# ./spec/controllers/players_controller_spec.rb:111:in `block (5 levels) in <top (required)>'
This is my Player model:
class Player < ActiveRecord::Base
belongs_to :user
belongs_to :tournament
validates :wins, numericality: { only_integer: true, greater_than_or_equal_to: 0 }
validates :loses, numericality: { only_integer: true, greater_than_or_equal_to: 0 }
validates :draws, numericality: { only_integer: true, greater_than_or_equal_to: 0 }
end
Factory file for players:
FactoryGirl.define do
factory :player do
wins 0
loses 0
draws 0
end
factory :invalid_player, parent: :player do
wins -1
loses 0
draws 0
end
end
Spec test:
context "user is signed in" do
before do
#tournament = create(:tournament)
#player = create(:player)
#user = create(:user)
#request.env["devise.mapping"] = Devise.mappings[:user]
sign_in(#user)
controller.stub(:current_user).and_return(#user)
end
describe "GET new" do
end
describe "GET index" do
it "renders the :index view" do
get :index, tournament_id: #tournament
expect(response).to render_template :index
end
end
describe "GET show" do
it "renders the :show view" do
get :show, { id: #player, tournament_id: #tournament }
expect(response).to render_template :show
end
end
describe "POST create" do
context "with valid attributes" do
it "creates a new player" do
expect{
post :create, { tournament_id: #tournament, player: FactoryGirl.attributes_for(:player) }
}.to change(Player,:count).by(1)
end
it "redirects to the tournament" do
post :create, { tournament_id: #tournament, player: FactoryGirl.attributes_for(:player) }
expect(response).to redirect_to #tournament
end
end
context "with invalid attributes" do
it "does not save the new player" do
expect{
post :create, { tournament_id: #tournament, player: FactoryGirl.attributes_for(:invalid_player) }
}.to_not change(Player, :count)
end
it 're-renders the new method' do
post :create, { tournament_id: #tournament, player: FactoryGirl.attributes_for(:invalid_player) }
response.should render_template :new
end
end
end
end
Controller:
class PlayersController < ApplicationController
before_action :set_tournament
before_action :set_admin, only: [:edit, :update, :destroy]
before_action :authenticate_user!, only: [:new, :create, :edit, :update, :destroy]
def index
#players = #tournament.players.all
end
def show
#player = Player.find(params[:id])
end
def new
#player = #tournament.players.new
end
def create
if current_user.player.nil? == false
flash[:error] = "You're already in tournament."
redirect_to tournaments_url
else
#player = #tournament.players.new
#player.user_id = current_user.id
if #player.save
redirect_to #tournament
else
render 'new'
end
end
end
def edit
if current_user == #admin
#player = #tournament.players.find(params[:id])
else
redirect_to tournaments_url
end
end
def update
if current_user == #admin
#player = #tournament.players.find(params[:id])
if #player.update_attributes(game_params)
flash[:success] = "Player was updated successful"
redirect_to #tournament
end
else
redirect_to tournaments_url
end
end
def destroy
#player = Player.find(params[:id])
flash[:success] = "Player deleted"
redirect_to #tournament
end
private
def set_tournament
#tournament = Tournament.find(params[:tournament_id])
end
def set_admin
#tournament = Tournament.find(params[:tournament_id])
#admin = #tournament.user
end
end
You are not assigning any attributes to your model in your create method. You need to do the following (I assume it's rails 4):
#player = #tournament.players.new(player_params)
#...
private
def player_params
params.require(:player).permit(:wins, :loses, :draws)
end
Without any assignment you most likely falling back onto database default value of zero, which is valid.
I'm new to rails and working on embedding associations into my models for my API. However adding the embeds has caused my specs to fire the following error:
Rails: 4.2.3 Ruby:2.2.1 Rspec: 3.3.2 FactoryGirl: 4.5.0
1) Api::V1::ProductsController GET #show returns the information about a reporter on a hash
Failure/Error: get :show, id: #product.id
SystemStackError:
stack level too deep
I think from looking at other answers on stack overflow that there is a problem with how I'm using my factories in my tests.
Here are the models:
product.rb
class User < ActiveRecord::Base
validates :auth_token, uniqueness: true
# Include default devise modules. Others available are:
# :confirmable, :lockable, :timeoutable and :omniauthable
devise :database_authenticatable, :registerable,
:recoverable, :rememberable, :trackable, :validatable
before_create :generate_authentication_token!
has_many :products, dependent: :destroy
def generate_authentication_token!
begin
self.auth_token = Devise.friendly_token
end while self.class.exists?(auth_token: auth_token)
end
end
user.rb
class Product < ActiveRecord::Base
validates :title, :user_id, presence: true
validates :price, numericality: { greater_than_or_equal_to: 0 },
presence: true
belongs_to :user
end
and the factories:
users.rb
FactoryGirl.define do
factory :user do
email { FFaker::Internet.email }
password "12345678"
password_confirmation "12345678"
end
end
products.rb
FactoryGirl.define do
factory :product do
title { FFaker::Product.product_name }
price { rand() * 100 }
published false
user
end
end
and here is the spec I'm getting all of the errors from.
products_controller_spec.rb
require 'spec_helper'
describe Api::V1::ProductsController do
describe "GET #show" do
before(:each) do
#product = FactoryGirl.create :product
get :show, id: #product.id
end
it "returns the information about a reporter on a hash" do
product_response = json_response[:product]
expect(product_response[:user][:email]).to eql #product.user.email
end
it "has the user as an embeded object" do
product_response = json_response[:product]
expect(product_response[:user][:email]).to eql #product.user.email
end
it { should respond_with 200 }
end
describe "GET #index" do
before(:each) do
4.times { FactoryGirl.create :product }
get :index
end
it "returns 4 records from the database" do
products_response = json_response
expect(products_response[:products]).to have(4).items
end
it "returns the user object into each product" do
products_response = json_response[:products]
products_response.each do |product_response|
expect(product_response[:user]).to be_present
end
end
it { should respond_with 200 }
end
describe "POST #create" do
context "when is succesfully created" do
before(:each) do
user = FactoryGirl.create :user
#product_attributes = FactoryGirl.attributes_for :product
api_authorization_header user.auth_token
post :create, { user_id: user.id, product: #product_attributes }
end
it "renders the json representation for the product record just created" do
product_response = json_response[:product]
expect(product_response[:title]).to eql #product_attributes[:title]
end
it { should respond_with 201 }
end
context "when is not created" do
before(:each) do
user = FactoryGirl.create :user
#invalid_product_attributes = { title: "Smart TV", price: "Twelve dolalrs" }
api_authorization_header user.auth_token
post :create, { user_id: user.id, product: #invalid_product_attributes }
end
it "renders an errors json" do
product_response = json_response
expect(product_response).to have_key(:errors)
end
it "renders the json errors on why the product could not be created" do
product_response = json_response
expect(product_response[:errors][:price]).to include "is not a number"
end
it { should respond_with 422 }
end
end
describe "PUT/PATCH #update" do
before(:each) do
#user = FactoryGirl.create :user
#product = FactoryGirl.create :product, user: #user
api_authorization_header #user.auth_token
end
context "when is successfully updated" do
before(:each) do
patch :update, { user_id: #user.id, id: #product.id,
product: { title: "An expensive TV"} }
end
it "renders the json representation for the updated user" do
product_response = json_response[:product]
expect(product_response[:title]).to eql "An expensive TV"
end
it { should respond_with 200 }
end
context "when is not updated" do
before(:each) do
patch :update, { user_id: #user.id, id: #product.id,
product: { price: "two hundred" } }
end
it "renders an errors json" do
product_response = json_response
expect(product_response).to have_key(:errors)
end
it "renders the json errors on why the user could not be created" do
product_response = json_response
expect(product_response[:errors][:price]).to include "is not a number"
end
it { should respond_with 422 }
end
end
describe "DELETE #destroy" do
before(:each) do
#user = FactoryGirl.create :user
#product = FactoryGirl.create :product, user: #user
api_authorization_header #user.auth_token
delete :destroy, { user_id: #user.id, id: #product.id }
end
it { should respond_with 204 }
end
end
And the Products Controller:
class Api::V1::ProductsController < ApplicationController
before_action :authenticate_with_token!, only: [:create, :update]
respond_to :json
def show
respond_with Product.find(params[:id])
end
def index
respond_with Product.all
end
def create
product = current_user.products.build(product_params)
if product.save
render json: product, status: 201, location: [:api, product]
else
render json: { errors: product.errors }, status: 422
end
end
def update
product = current_user.products.find(params[:id])
if product.update(product_params)
render json: product, status: 200, location: [:api, product]
else
render json: { errors: product.errors }, status: 422
end
end
def destroy
product = current_user.products.find(params[:id])
product.destroy
head 204
end
private
def product_params
params.require(:product).permit(:title, :price, :published)
end
end
user_serializer.rb
class UserSerializer < ActiveModel::Serializer
attributes :id, :email, :created_at, :updated_at, :auth_token
has_many :products
end
EDIT: Adds Products Controller
I'm trying to write a controller test for my update route using Rspec with factory girl but I can't get my test to pass validations even though I'm pretty sure the data in my factories is valid.
Here are my factories:
FactoryGirl.define do
factory :user do
username { Faker::Internet.user_name(8) }
password 'password'
end
factory :post do
title { Faker::Lorem.sentence }
body { Faker::Lorem.paragraph }
author { Faker::Internet.user_name(8) }
end
end
here is my model:
class Post < ActiveRecord::Base
validates :title, :body, :author, presence: true
end
Here is my test:
require 'rails_helper'
describe PostsController do
let!(:user) { FactoryGirl.create :user }
let!(:post) { FactoryGirl.create :post }
let(:attributes) { FactoryGirl.attributes_for :post }
describe 'PUT #update' do
let(:title) { "A treatise on Malomars." }
it 'updates a field on a blog post' do
put :update, id: post.id, post: {title: title}
expect(post.reload.title).to eq(post.title)
end
end
end
The error I'm getting is:
Failure/Error: put :update, id: post.id, post: {title: title}
ActiveRecord::RecordInvalid:
Validation failed: Body can't be blank
EDIT---
here is the controller:
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def index
#posts = Post.all
end
def new
end
def create
post = Post.new
post.title = params[:title]
post.body = params[:body]
post.author = "#{session[:username].titleize} Force"
redirect_to root_path
post.save!
end
def show
p session[:id]
#post = Post.find(params[:id])
end
def update
post = Post.find(params[:id])
post.title = params[:post][:title]
post.body = params[:post][:body]
post.save!
redirect_to root_path
end
def destroy
post = Post.find(params[:id])
post.destroy
redirect_to root_path
end
end
Strong parameters aside, you're setting post.body to nil since you're not passing a value for the body parameter in your test. When you call save! in your controller, you're getting an error because you have a validation for body being present (i.e. not nil).
I have a nested resource specialty under user.
My routes.rb looks like
resources :users do
resources :specialties do
end
end
My factories.rb looks like
Factory.define :user do |f|
f.description { Populator.sentences(1..3) }
f.experience { Populator.sentences(1..5) }
f.tag_list { create_tags }
end
Factory.define :specialty do |f|
f.association :user
specialties = CategoryType.valuesForTest
f.sequence(:category) { |i| specialties[i%specialties.length] }
f.description { Populator.sentences(1..5) }
f.rate 150.0
f.position { Populator.sentences(1) }
f.company { Populator.sentences(1) }
f.tag_list { create_tags }
end
My Specialties_controller.rb looks like
class SpecialtiesController < ApplicationController
def index
#user = User.find(params[:user_id])
#specialties = #user.specialties
respond_to do |format|
format.html # index.html.erb
format.json { render json: #specialties }
end
end
My specialties_controller_spec.rb looks like
require 'spec_helper'
describe SpecialtiesController do
render_views
describe "GET 'index'" do
before do
#user = Factory.create(:user)
#specialty = Factory.create(:specialty, :user => #user)
#user.stub!(:specialty).and_return(#specialty)
User.stub!(:find).and_return(#user)
end
def do_get
get :index, :user_id => #user.id
end
it "should render index template" do
do_get
response.should render_template('index')
end
it "should find user with params[:user_id]" do
User.should_receive(:find).with(#user.id.to_s).and_return(#user)
do_get
end
it "should get user's specialties" do
#user.should_receive(:specialty).and_return(#specialty)
do_get
end
end
end
The first two tests pass, but the last test fails with the error message
Failure/Error: #user.should_receive(:specialty).and_return(#specialty)
(#<User:0x007fe4913296a0>).specialty(any args)
expected: 1 time
received: 0 times
Does anybody have an idea what this error means and how to fix it? I've looked at similar posts and can't find an error in my code. Thanks in advance.
#user.should_receive(:specialty).and_return(#specialty)
specialtyis a one-to-many relation and should be plural: specialties. And indeed you have in your controller:
#specialties = #user.specialties