18

I'm having problem making two requests to the same url in a rails integration test, with rspec

it 'does something' do

  # get '/something', {:status=>'any_other'}, @header ## <<<<< this line causes problem!

  get '/something', {:status=>'ok'}, @header
  doc = Nokogiri::HTML(response.body)
  lis = doc.css('#the_id')
  lis.size.should == 1
  lis[0].text.should include('anything')
end

If I make two requests to the same controller, the test seems to maintain the old response...

In the above example, if I uncomment that line, the test breaks beacause it maintains the result of the first 'query'

Is it a limitation of the test stack, or am I doing something wrong?

5 Answers 5

2

With plain old Rails test suite, functional tests are for single request and if you want to test flows you should use integration tests (you can reset the controller in functional tests).

Controller specs from rspec-rails inherit from Rails functional tests, so they have same limitation. You can use rspec with capybara or webrat (I recommend the former) for integration tests.

Also, recent versions of rspec-rails has "request specs" which "mix in behaivour of Rails integration tests": https://github.com/rspec/rspec-rails

1

rails integration tests should be written so that the on case tests the one single request - response cycle. we can check redirects. but if you have to do something like

get '/something', {:status=>'any_other'}, @header

get '/something', {:status=>'ok'}, @header

You should write two different cases for this.

3
  • 6
    If the designers of rspec don't want you to make a second request, the second request should raise an exception to stop you from doing so. That way it comes through as a feature, not a bug. Any idea why they didn't do that? Dec 16, 2013 at 15:57
  • 1
    Yes, designers of rspec provided you with the feature. Its your requirement how you want to test it (as per the actual behaviour of the application). Feb 5, 2014 at 7:24
  • 3
    I find this paradigm to be suboptimal because there are cases where I want to test idempotence of a request. Jul 30, 2018 at 19:40
1

Using Capybara instead of rspec is a better solution for (request) intergration tests. It uses the same syntax as rspec and allow multiple requests in a single it block. I use rspec for unit testing and capybara for integration testing.

https://github.com/jnicklas/capybara

0

You have to clear your instance variables, or maybe the only necessary one. Let's pretend you use @book in your controller.

get '/something'
assert ...
controller.instance_variable_set(:@book, nil)
get '/something'
assert ...

If you are using inherit_resources

get '/something'
assert ...
controller.send(:set_resource_ivar, nil)
get '/something'
assert ...
1
  • 2
    This isn't good enough. RSpec keeps the old params lying around, and if you pass a new params to your second request, the params that your controller sees can be surprising at times. Feb 14, 2018 at 20:37
0

I don't think the problem is that you are getting the same response, it is that you are actually sending the same request twice.

The following works for me when I want to make two requests in the same test: @request.delete_header 'RAW_POST_DATA'

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.