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I'm trying to test an object in RSpec. There are multiple things I want to check before and after, so I followed the examples I found around the web and ended up with something like this:

describe Processor do
  before(:each) do
    # create some data in temp to run the test against
  end
  after(:each) do
    # wipe out the data we put in temp
  end

  let(:processor) { Processor.new }

  describe '#process' do
    subject { lambda { processor.process } }

    # it should actually perform the processing
    it { should change { count('...') }.from(0).to(1) }
    it { should change { count('...') }.from(0).to(2) }

    # it should leave some other things unaffected
    it { should_not change { count('...') } }
  end
end

This does work, but what I'm seeing is that both the before() code and #process are slow - and being executed by RSpec three times each.

Usually when you have a slow thing, people say "just mock it out", but this time, it's the very thing I am trying to test which is slow, so that would be pointless.

How can I avoid multiple calls to the subject of the test, in this situation where all the checks are of the before-and-after variety?

12
  • What does "check" actually mean?
    – ian
    Jun 13, 2013 at 1:28
  • Ok, I didn't need a synonym ;) I don't see check1 defined. Is it defined within the code to be tested or within the before block?
    – ian
    Jun 13, 2013 at 1:35
  • It stands in for the actual check being done, the nature of which isn't really important. What's important is that it returns a value which is supposed to be 0 before the test and 1 after.
    – Hakanai
    Jun 13, 2013 at 1:36
  • 1
    without knowing what's in those slow blocks (and therefore the meaning of the test) how can we say? after blocks are usually always a code smell. Jun 13, 2013 at 1:43
  • 3
    I understand you don't want to show too much code, but if someone's asking you questions in the comments it usually means a bit of clarification is helpful, and notes should be added on pseudo code. Stick all the 3 it blocks into one it block and it should all just run once.
    – ian
    Jun 13, 2013 at 1:44

1 Answer 1

2

before(:each) and after(:each) is a callback that's called before and after each spec, i.e. each 'it'. If you wish to do something before and after the outer 'describe' block, use before(:all) and after(:all).

See rspec docs here (relishapp).

(Note, however, that if you're using rspec with rails, using before/after(:all) will run outside of the regular cleanup of the database, which might lead to crap in your test db.)

Good luck!

1
  • The slowest thing here is the process() call, actually. I'm already in the middle of changing before/after to :all... of course, the problem is that now tests are cross-dependent, so I have to be really careful that the tests don't tread on each other if I do that.
    – Hakanai
    Jun 13, 2013 at 23:52

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