Shoulda makes it easy to write elegant, understandable, and maintainable tests. Shoulda consists of matchers, test helpers, and assertions. It’s fully compatible with your existing tests in Test::Unit or RSpec, and requires no retooling to use.
- Matchers
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Test::Unit- and RSpec-compatible one-liners that test common Rails functionality. These tests would otherwise be much longer, more complex, and error-prone.
- Helpers
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#context and #should give you RSpec like test blocks in Test::Unit. In addition, you get nested contexts and a much more readable syntax.
- Assertions
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Many common Rails testing idioms have been distilled into a set of useful assertions.
Test your ActiveRecord associations and validations with these powerful matchers:
class PostTest < Test::Unit::TestCase should belong_to(:user) should have_many(:tags).through(:taggings) should validate_uniqueness_of(:title) should validate_presence_of(:body).with_message(/wtf/) should validate_presence_of(:title) should validate_numericality_of(:user_id) end class UserTest < Test::Unit::TestCase should have_many(:posts) should_not allow_value("blah").for(:email) should_not allow_value("b lah").for(:email) should allow_value("[email protected]").for(:email) should allow_value("[email protected]").for(:email) should ensure_inclusion_of(:email).in_range(1..100) should ensure_inclusion_of(:age).in_range(1..100) should_not allow_mass_assignment_of(:password) end
Makes TDD so much easier.
Matchers to test the most common controller patterns…
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase context "on GET to :show for first record" do setup do get :show, :id => 1 end should assign_to(:user) should respond_with(:success) should render_template(:show) should_not set_the_flash should "do something else really cool" do assert_equal 1, assigns(:user).id end end end
Stop killing your fingers with all of those underscores… Name your tests with plain sentences!
class UserTest < Test::Unit::TestCase context "A User instance" do setup do @user = User.find(:first) end should "return its full name" do assert_equal 'John Doe', @user.full_name end context "with a profile" do setup do @user.profile = Profile.find(:first) end should "return true when sent #has_profile?" do assert @user.has_profile? end end end end
Produces the following test methods:
"test: A User instance should return its full name." "test: A User instance with a profile should return true when sent #has_profile?."
So readable!
More to come here, but have fun with what’s there.
assert_same_elements([:a, :b, :c], [:c, :a, :b]) assert_contains(['a', '1'], /\d/) assert_contains(['a', '1'], 'a')
Specify the gem dependency in your config/environment.rb file:
Rails::Initializer.run do |config| config.gem "shoulda", :lib => "shoulda" end
Then:
$ rake gems:install $ rake gems:unpack
If you’re using Shoulda with RSpec, we recommend that you add config.gem lines for RSpec and Shoulda in your config/environment/test.rb file, but do not ask Rails to load the RSpec and Shoulda libraries:
config.gem 'rspec', :lib => false config.gem 'rspec-rails', :lib => false config.gem 'shoulda', :lib => false
Then require shoulda from your spec/spec_helper.rb file, before Spec::Runner is configured:
# requires for RSpec require 'shoulda' Spec::Runner.configure do |config| # ...
You should not need to require anything besides the top-level shoulda library.
Shoulda is maintained and funded by thougthbot
Shoulda is Copyright © 2006-2010 Tammer Saleh, Thoughtbot. It is free software, and may be redistributed under the terms specified in the MIT-LICENSE file.