Given a class that inherits from ActiveRecord::Base, lets call it Task, I have two subclasses that specialize some aspects of a task, Activity and Training, using standard Rails single table inheritance.
I'm confident in that choice after looking at other available since the actual data for the models are the same, it's just the behavior that differs. A perfect fit for STI.
A task can be created, started, progressed and finished. That is some logic involved in these transitions, especially start(), that calls for the specialization of the base class.
Since I'm doing this TDD and started out with a working Task calls with full test coverage I'm now wondering how to proceed. I have a few senarios that I have thought about:
Duplicate the tests for Task and test both Activity and Training end to end with some small modifications to test their specialization. Pro: it's quick and easy. Con: it duplicates code and while that might not be a big problem here it will be when the number of specializations grows.
Split tests and keep most of the testing code in a task_spec.rb while moving specialization testing into new specs for the respective subclasses. Pro: keeps the tests DRY. Con: what class do I instantiate in the base test?
That last question is what is nagging at me. Right now I have the base class test set up to randomly create a class from one of the concert subclasses, but is this good form? It almost makes me want to go with approach 1 just to keep the test runs consistent or I'll have to find a way to base the randomness of my class selection of the random seed for the test suite so that I at least have a repeatable random selection.
I'm guessing this must be a common problem people run in to but I can't find any good information on the subject. Do you have any resources or thoughts on the matter?
Using an rspec shared example (mentioned by Renato Zannon) would look like this:
Create a file in spec/support/. I'll call it shared_examples_for_sti.rb.
require 'spec_helper'
shared_examples "an STI class" do
it "should have attribute type" do
expect(subject).to have_attribute :type
end
it "should initialize successfully as an instance of the described class" do
expect(subject).to be_a_kind_of described_class
end
end
In your _spec.rb file for each STI class and it's subclasses, add this line:
it_behaves_like "an STI class"
If you have any other tests that you want to be shared across STI classes and subclasses just add them to the shared_examples.
You could use rspec shared examples to test the behavior that is shared among all of them (basically, the inherited behavior, or places where you want to guard against LSP violations).
Related
I just, manually, discovered a migration error. I added a new field to a model, and forgot to add it into the model_params method of the controller. As a result the new field wasn't persisted to the database.
Easy enough to fix once I noticed the problem, but it got me to wondering if there was a way to detect this in testing. I would imagine something like a gem that would parse the schema and generate a set of tests to ensure that all of the fields could be written and that the same data could be read back.
Is this something that can be (or is) done? So far, my searches have led me to lots of interesting reading, but not to a gem like this...
It is possible to write what you would want. Iterate through all the fields in the model, generate params that mirrors those fields, and then run functional tests on your controllers. The problem is that the test is brittle. What if you don't actually want all the fields to be writable through params? What if you reference a model in another controller outside of the standard pattern? How will you handle generating data that would pass different validations? You would either have to be sure that your application would only be written in a certain way or this test would become more and more complex to handle additional edge cases.
I think the solution in testing would be to try to keep things simple; realize that you've made a change to the system and as a result of that change, corresponding tests would need to be updated. In this case, you would update the functional and unit tests affected by that model. If you were strictly adhering to Test Driven Design, you would actually update the tests first to produce a failing test and then implement the change. As a result, hopefully the updated functional test would have failed in this case.
Outside of testing, you may want to look into a linter. In essence, you're asking if you can catch an error where the parameters passed to an object's method doesn't match the signature. This is more catchable when parsing the code completely (i.e. compilation in a static type environment).
EDIT - I skipped a step on the linting, as you would also have to write your code a certain way that a linter would catch it, such as being more explicit of the method and parameters passed to it.
You might want to consider that such a gem may not exist because its not that practical or useful in real life.
Getting the columns off a model is pretty simple from the reflection methods that Active Record gives you. And yeah you could use that theoretically to automagically run a bunch of tests in loop.
But in reality its just not going to cut it. In real life you don't want every column to be assignable. Thats why you are using mass assignment protection in the first place.
And add to that the complexity of the different kinds of constraints and data types your models have. You'll end up with something extremely complex with just adds a bunch of tests with limited value.
If you find yourself omitting a property from mass assignment protection than your should try to cover that part of your controller either with a functional test or an integration test.
class ArticlesControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
def valid_attributes
{
title: 'How to test like a Rockstar',
content: 'Bla bla bla'
}
end
test "created article should have the correct attributes" do
post :create, article: valid_attributes
article = Article.last
valid_attributes.keys.each do |key|
assert_equals article[key], valid_attributes[key]
end
end
end
In my Rails 4 project I've got a model, EventGenerator with an instance method generate (which creates some records in the database), and a class method generate_all which is intended to be called by a Rake task and looks something like this:
def self.generate_all
all.each(&:generate)
end
I can think of several approaches to testing this (I'm using RSpec 3 and Fabrication):
Don't bother - it's too simple to require tests. DHH says "Don't aim for 100% coverage". On the other hand, this is going to be called by a rake task, so won't be regularly exercised: I feel like that's a good reason to have tests.
Create a couple of EventGenerator instances in the database and use any_instance.should_receive(:generate) as the assertion - but RSpec 3 now recommends against this and requires a fudge to make it work. This is a personal 'showcase project' so if possible I'd like everything to be best-practice. Also (DHH aside) shouldn't it still be possible to create fast model specs which don't touch the database?
Like 2, but stub out EventGenerator.all to return some instances without touching the database. But stubbing the class under test is bad, right? And fragile.
Don't worry about unit testing it and instead cover it with an integration test: create a couple of generators in the database, run the method, check what gets changed/created in the database as a result.
Change the implementation: pass in an array of instances. But that's just pushing the problem back by a layer, and a test-driven change which I can't see benefitting the design.
Since I can't really think of a downside for option 4, perhaps that's the answer, but I feel like I need some science to back that up.
I would actually not bother to test it (so your 1.) as the method is really trivial.
If you would like to have it under test coverage though I'd suggest you to use your 3. My reasons are as follows:
Your test for .generate_all just needs to assert that the method #generate gets call on every instance returned by .all. It this context the actual implementation of .all is irrelevant and can be stubbed.
Your tests for #generate should assert that the method does the right thing. If these tests assert the proper functioning of this method, there's no need for the tests for .generate_all to duplicate any assertion.
Testing the proper functioning of #generate in the tests for .generate_all leads to unnecessary dependencies between the tests.
For example, if I am using should validate_presence_of in my spec, that's only testing that I have the validate_presence_of piece of code inside my model, and that's testing implementation. More importantly, isn't that spec totally useless for testing the real problem, which is "if I don't fill out a certain field, will the model be saved successfully?"
Some of shoulda-matchers' matchers don't test implementation, they test behavior. For example, look at the source for allow_value (which validate_presence_of uses): #matches? actually sets the instance's attribute to the value and checks to see if that causes an error. All of shoulda-matchers' matchers that test validations (its ActiveModel matchers) that I've looked at work the same way; they actually test that the model rejects bad values.
Note that if you trust ActiveModel and ActiveRecord to be fully tested, it shouldn't matter whether the matchers test behavior or just test that the macros are used.
Unit-testing a model's validations is definitely useful. Suppose you're doing BDD and implementing a simple form that creates an instance of a model. You would first write an acceptance test (a Cucumber or rspec scenario) that tests the happy path of filling out the form correctly and successfully creating the instance. You would then write a second acceptance test with an error in the form that demonstrates that when there's an error in the form no instance is saved and the form is redisplayed with the appropriate error message.
Once you've got that error-path scenario for one of the errors it is possible to make in the form, you will find that if you write more error-path scenarios for the other errors they will be very repetitive -- the only things that will be different are the erroneous field value and the error message. And then you'll have a lot of full-stack scenarios, which take a long time to run. So don't write more than that first error-path scenario. Instead, just write unit tests for the validations that would catch each error. Now most of your tests are simple and fast. (This is a specific example of the general BDD technique of dropping down from acceptance tests to unit tests to handle details.)
However, I don't find shoulda-matchers' ActiveRecord matchers very useful. Considering the matchers that test associations, I find that my acceptance tests always force me to add all the associations to my models that I need, and there's nothing left to do in unit tests. The ActiveRecord matchers that test database features that are invisible to the app (e.g. have_db_index) are useful if you're strictly test-driven, but I tend to slack off there. Also, for what it's worth, the ActiveRecord matchers don't test behavior (which would be hard to implement), only that the corresponding macros are used.
One exception where I do find a shoulda-matchers ActiveRecord matcher useful is deletion of dependent objects. I sometimes find that no acceptance spec has already forced me to handle what happens to associated objects when an object is deleted. The ActiveRecord way to make that happen is to add the :dependent option to the belongs_to, has_many or has_one association. Writing an example that uses shoulda-matchers' belong_to or have_many or have_one matcher with the .dependent option is the most convenient way I know to test that.
I was wondering how you guys would test a Service Object class in Rails? Let's say a User signs up. A user is created in the database, is added to the email list, and other stuff happens. How do you test this?
class UserRegistrar
def sign_up(user)
User.create(user) # or something to this effect
EmailMarketing.add_to_email_list(user)
SuperSecretClass.do_secret_stuff(user)
LoggingThing.new.log_stuff_about(user)
end
end
(Controller action)
def create
UserRegistrar.sign_up(params)
# stuff for the strong params, etc...
end
What I do is to just make sure that the methods are called, with the correct arguments. The results of the methods (like making sure that a user is really added to the list) are tested in their respective classes. Am I doing it right?
Yes, if I needed to write a unit test for a class like the one you show, I'd do it the way you say, with mocks. In your example, all of the work is delegated to high-level model methods which will need their own tests and might be used in more than one place, so it doesn't make sense to test the functionality of those methods in tests of the service. And there are not that many method calls to mock, so it won't be too painful.
However,
if any of those model methods were used only in one service, I'd consider moving those to the service to slim down the model and make the service more coherent. If I ended up with methods on the service that did a lot of work themselves, rather than just delegating, I'd test their functionality in tests of the service, by creating database objects and asserting how the service changes them.
on the other hand, if I had a service that only delegated, it might already be fully tested by my acceptance test (since I'm doing BDD and write acceptance tests first), and there would be no need to unit-test the service at all.
There's a danger to stubbing everything in your test, because then you're only testing that the class fits the test, instead of fitting in with the rest of your code. If EmailMarketing.add_to_email_list one day becomes EmailMarketing.add_to(:email_list ...) in a refactoring, your test wouldn't pick it up.
You can test the effects of the code like this, using User as an example:
expect {
UserRegistrar.sign_up(user)
}.to change{
user.persisted?
}.from(false).to(true)
Say I have an instance method that does many different things that I need to test, something like store#process_order. I'd like to test that it sends an email to the customer, adds an entry in the orders table, charges a credit card, etc. What's the best way to set this up in rspec? Currently, I'm using rspec and factory girl I do something like this:
describe Store do
describe "#process_order" do
before do
#store = Factory(:store)
#order = Factory(:order)
# call the process method
#store.process_order(#order)
end
it 'sends customer an email' do
...
end
it 'inserts order to db' do
...
end
it 'charges credit card' do
...
end
end
end
But it feels really tedious. Is this really the right way to write a spec for a method that I need to make sure does several different things?
Note: I'm not interested in answers about whether or not this is good design. It's just an example I made up to help w/ my question - how to write these types of specs.
This is a good method because you can identify which element is broken if something breaks in the future. I am all for testing things individually. I tend not to check things get inserted into the database as you are then rails functionality. I simply check the validity of the object instead.
This is the method that is used in the RSpec book too. I would certainly recommend reading it if you are unsure about anything related to RSpec.
I think what you are doing is fine and I think it's the way rspec is intended to be used. Every statement (specification) about your app gets its own block.
You might consider using before (:all) do so that the order only has to get processed once but this can introduce dependencies on the order the specs are run.
You could combine all the code inside describe "#process_order" into one big it block if you wanted to, but then it would be less readable and rspec would give you less useful error messages when a spec fails. Go head and add raise to one of your tests and see what a nice error message you can get from rspec if you do it the way you are currently doing it.
If you want to test the entire process then we're talking about an integration test, not a unit test. If you want to test #process_order method which does several things, then I'd expect those things mean calling other methods. So, I would add #should_receive expectations and make sure that all paths are covered. Then I would spec all those methods separately so I have a nice unit spec suite for everything. In the end I would definitely write an integration/acceptance spec which checks if all those pieces are working together.
Also, I would use #let to setup test objects which removes dependencies between spec examples (it blocks). Otherwise a failure of one of the examples may cause a failure in other example giving you an incorrect feedback.