1

Though correct, the title needs some explanation :)

I have this class:

class Character
  include DataMapper::Resource

  def self.tick_all
    all.collect &:tick
  end

  def tick
    # do stuff
  end

end

As you can see when Character.tick_all is called all its instances should receive the tick invocation. It works as exptected: when I fire up a console the stuff in tick gets done. But I can't get my tests to pass:

describe ".tick_all" do
  let(:instance) { FactoryGirl.create(:character) }
  it "invokes #tick for every instance" do
    Character.tick_all
    instance.should_receive(:tick)
  end
end

Failed example:

Failure/Error: instance.should_receive(:tick)
  (#<Character:0x00000002fa4e28>).tick(any args)
      expected: 1 time
      received: 0 times
8
  • The problem is that DataMapper will create a new in-memory instance to receive the tick. The ORM tends to spawn new in-memory objects, rather than re-use ones you have already loaded from the db. This can make not only testing, but also using, DataMapper, a little bit awkward if you need to get "messages" between objects. May 8, 2013 at 17:41
  • Thanks, that explains a lot. So maybe I should test the desired behavior (test if the stuff that needs done is done) instead if tick gets called?
    – Flauwekeul
    May 8, 2013 at 17:44
  • Yes that should solve your testing problem, but you should be aware that any object-to-object messaging system using DataMapper is going to have your objects talking to each other via changes to the data store, and many invocations of reload. May 8, 2013 at 17:59
  • I switched from ActiveRecord to DataMapper for that very reason :) Would using Redis as my datastore solve this problem?
    – Flauwekeul
    May 8, 2013 at 18:10
  • I don't know. Redis itself looks like it could support single memory-instance (per process) equals single db-instance semantics. But when accessed by an ORM, the properties of the ORM will usually be more important. May 8, 2013 at 19:37

1 Answer 1

1

The expectation should be set up before the method call:

describe ".tick_all" do
  let(:instance) { FactoryGirl.create(:character) }
  it "invokes #tick for every instance" do
    instance.should_receive(:tick)
    Character.tick_all
  end
end

UPD: The code above doesn't work. What about this variant?

describe ".tick_all" do
  it "invokes #tick for every instance" do
    Character.any_instance.should_receive(:tick)
    Character.tick_all
  end
end

UPD2: Aaand one more version:

describe ".tick_all" do
  it "invokes #tick for every instance" do
    tick_count = 0
    Character.any_instance.stub(:tick) { tick_count += 1 }
    Character.tick_all

    tick_count.should == Character.count
    # or
    # expect{ Character.tick_all }.to change{tick_count}.by(Character.count)
  end
end
6
  • Nope, doesn't work. Probably because of what Neil Slater says (first comment on question).
    – Flauwekeul
    May 8, 2013 at 17:57
  • Yeah, I think Neil Slater is right. What about the second variant?
    – DNNX
    May 8, 2013 at 18:04
  • It gives me a failure with a different message: Failure/Error: Character.tick_all The message 'tick' was received by #<Character @id=2 @created_at=Wed, 08 May 2013 20:11:14 +0200 @updated_at=Wed, 08 May 2013 20:11:14 +0200> but has already been received by #<Character:0x000000049960c0>
    – Flauwekeul
    May 8, 2013 at 18:12
  • And I have a new version :)
    – DNNX
    May 8, 2013 at 18:20
  • It actually passes my tests if I remove DataMapper.setup(:default, :adapter => 'in_memory') (else it will throw an error saying aggregate isn't supported if the in-memory adapter is used). Not using the in-memory adapter makes my tests veeeryyyyy sloooowwww though...
    – Flauwekeul
    May 8, 2013 at 18:29

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