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?
check1
defined. Is it defined within the code to be tested or within thebefore
block?it
blocks into oneit
block and it should all just run once.