What's the best way to set Time.now
for the purpose of testing time-sensitive methods in a unit test?
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6Is there a TimeLord ruby gem? :P – Rob Jul 31 '09 at 23:01
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3Close! There's Timecop. (See my answer below.) – James A. Rosen Aug 3 '09 at 12:11
I really like the Timecop library. You can do time warps in block form (just like time-warp):
Timecop.travel(6.days.ago) do
@model = TimeSensitiveMode.new
end
assert @model.times_up!
(Yes, you can nest block-form time travel.)
You can also do declarative time travel:
class MyTest < Test::Unit::TestCase
def setup
Timecop.travel(...)
end
def teardown
Timecop.return
end
end
I have some cucumber helpers for Timecop here. They let you do things like:
Given it is currently January 24, 2008
And I go to the new post page
And I fill in "title" with "An old post"
And I fill in "body" with "..."
And I press "Submit"
And we jump in our Delorean and return to the present
When I go to the home page
I should not see "An old post"
Personally I prefer to make the clock injectable, like so:
def hello(clock=Time)
puts "the time is now: #{clock.now}"
end
Or:
class MyClass
attr_writer :clock
def initialize
@clock = Time
end
def hello
puts "the time is now: #{@clock.now}"
end
end
However, many prefer to use a mocking/stubbing library. In RSpec/flexmock you can use:
Time.stub!(:now).and_return(Time.mktime(1970,1,1))
Or in Mocha:
Time.stubs(:now).returns(Time.mktime(1970,1,1))
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1The testing part is exactly the kind of answer I was going to provide. – nitecoder Aug 1 '09 at 3:08
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This is totally what I would have done as well. If you write your code in a way that makes it easy to test, you don't have to do arcane things in order to make it testable. – August Lilleaas Aug 14 '09 at 7:32
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5While I agree with the general idea of writing stuff in a more testable way, there are times when it is simply not practical. And Time.now is one of those examples. it can be used in a lot of parts of the system and passing it around all the time will be too much overhead. – Vitaly Kushner Feb 16 '10 at 23:56
I'm using RSpec and I did this: Time.stub!(:now).and_return(2.days.ago) before I call Time.now. In that way I'm able to control the time I used for that particular test case
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for e.g. if i have a rental system, i want to test if the system charge penalty fees if the day the item is returned is late, i'll need to manipulate Time.now so that when the item is returned, it'll be late... not sure if u get me though – Staelen Sep 22 '10 at 7:56
Using Rspec 3.2, the only simple way I found to fake Time.now return value is :
now = Time.parse("1969-07-20 20:17:40")
allow(Time).to receive(:now) { now }
Now Time.now will always return the date of Apollo 11 landing on the moon.
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Very nice answer! This is by far the simplest solution and static mocking of something as fundamental as time seems like a reasonable approach as one would end up injecting all base libraries into your classes. – Alexander Oh Jul 24 '19 at 9:36
Do the time-warp
time-warp is a library that does what you want. It gives you a method that takes a time and a block and anything that happens in the block uses the faked time.
pretend_now_is(2000,"jan",1,0) do
Time.now
end
Don't forget that Time
is merely a constant that refers to a class object. If you're willing to cause a warning, you can always do
real_time_class = Time
Time = FakeTimeClass
# run test
Time = real_time_class
If you have ActiveSupport included, you could use:
travel_to Time.zone.parse('2010-07-05 08:00')
http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveSupport/Testing/TimeHelpers.html
Also see this question where I put this comment as well.
Depending upon what you are comparing Time.now
to, sometimes you can change your fixtures to accomplish the same goal or test the same feature. For example, I had a situation where I needed one thing to happen if some date was in the future and another to happen if it was in the past. What I was able to do was include in my fixtures some embedded ruby (erb):
future:
comparing_date: <%= Time.now + 10.years %>
...
past:
comparing_date: <%= Time.now - 10.years %>
...
Then in your tests then you choose which one to use to test the different features or actions based upon the time relative to Time.now
.
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Thank you, I found this much more elegant than faking Time.now. Your tests will also ensure there is no hardcoded date anywhere and your code still works as expected the day you run it – Benoit Jan 24 '16 at 21:55
Had the same issue, I had to fake time for a spec for a specific day and time just did that:
Time.stub!(:now).and_return(Time.mktime(2014,10,22,5,35,28))
this will give you:
2014-10-22 05:35:28 -0700
This kind of works and allows for nesting:
class Time
class << self
attr_accessor :stack, :depth
end
def self.warp(time)
Time.stack ||= []
Time.depth ||= -1
Time.depth += 1
Time.stack.push time
if Time.depth == 0
class << self
alias_method :real_now, :now
alias_method :real_new, :new
define_method :now do
stack[depth]
end
define_method :new do
now
end
end
end
yield
Time.depth -= 1
Time.stack.pop
class << self
if Time.depth < 0
alias_method :new, :real_new
alias_method :now, :real_now
remove_method :real_new
remove_method :real_now
end
end
end
end
It could be slightly improved by undefing the stack and depth accessors at the end
Usage:
time1 = 2.days.ago
time2 = 5.months.ago
Time.warp(time1) do
Time.real_now.should_not == Time.now
Time.now.should == time1
Time.warp(time2) do
Time.now.should == time2
end
Time.now.should == time1
end
Time.now.should_not == time1
Time.now.should_not be_nil
Depending upon what you are comparing Time.now
to, sometimes you can change your fixtures to accomplish the same goal or test the same feature. For example, I had a situation where I needed one thing to happen if some date was in the future and another to happen if it was in the past. What I was able to do was include in my fixtures some embedded ruby (erb):
future:
comparing_date: <%= Time.now + 10.years %>
...
past:
comparing_date: <%= Time.now - 10.years %>
...
Then in your tests then you choose which one to use to test the different features or actions based upon the time relative to Time.now
.
i just have this in my test file:
def time_right_now
current_time = Time.parse("07/09/10 14:20")
current_time = convert_time_to_utc(current_date)
return current_time
end
and in my Time_helper.rb file i have a
def time_right_now
current_time= Time.new
return current_time
end
so when testing the time_right_now is overwritten to use what ever time you want it to be.
I allways extract Time.now
into a separate method that I turn into attr_accessor
in the mock.
The recently-released Test::Redef
makes this and other fakery easy, even without restructuring the code in a dependency-injection style (especially helpful if you're using other peoples' code.)
fake_time = Time.at(12345) # ~3:30pm UTC Jan 1 1970
Test::Redef.rd 'Time.now' => proc { fake_time } do
assert_equal 12345, Time.now.to_i
end
However, be careful of other ways to obtain time that this will not fake out (Date.new
, a compiled extension that makes its own system call, interfaces to things like external database servers which know current timestamps, etc.) It sounds like the Timecop library above might overcome these limitations.
Other great uses include testing things like "what happens when I'm trying to use this friendly http client but it decides to raise this an exception instead of returning me a string?" without actually setting up the network conditions which lead to that exception (which may be tricky). It also lets you check the arguments to redef'd functions.
My own solution https://github.com/igorkasyanchuk/rails_time_travel - a gem with UI, so you don't need to hardcode any datetime in the code. Just change it from the UI.
It might be also very useful for you QA's team, or testing app on the staging.