I have a model which gets its data from a parser object. I'm thinking that the parser class should live in the lib/ directory (although I could be persuaded that it should live soewhere else). The question is: Where should my unit tests for the parser class be? And how do I ensure that they are run each time I run rake test?
7 Answers
In the Rails application I'm working on, I decided to just place the tests in the test\unit
directory. I will also nest them by module/directory as well, for example:
lib/a.rb => test/unit/a_test.rb
lib/b/c.rb => test/unit/b/c_test.rb
For me, this was the path of last resistance, as these tests ran without having to make any other changes.
-
5@Qqwy since this does not work on Rails 5, what is the best practice for testing
lib
on Rails 5.2. Jul 18, 2018 at 16:15 -
Here's one way:
Create lib/tasks/test_lib_dir.rake
with the following
namespace :test do
desc "Test lib source"
Rake::TestTask.new(:lib) do |t|
t.libs << "test"
t.pattern = 'test/lib/**/*_test.rb'
t.verbose = true
end
end
Mimic the structure of your lib
dir under the test
dir, replacing lib code with corresponding tests.
Run rake test:lib
to run your lib tests.
If you want all tests to run when you invoke rake test
, you could add the following to your new rake file.
lib_task = Rake::Task["test:lib"]
test_task = Rake::Task[:test]
test_task.enhance { lib_task.invoke }
-
Somehow it doesn't load up the environment (specifically
ActiveSupport
'sfixtures
), and there's not way to force it in rakefile. May 18, 2012 at 14:45 -
1Hey, I tried your solution and
rake test:lib
runs my test, butrake test
does not. I copied it verbatim. Here's a link to my file contents: pastebin.com/FHMXU6vG Thanks in advance!– robertAug 3, 2014 at 16:22
I was looking to do the same thing but with rspec & autospec and it took a little digging to figure out just where they were getting the list of directories / file patterns that dictated which test files to run. Ultimately I found this in lib/tasks/rspec.rake:86
[:models, :controllers, :views, :helpers, :lib, :integration].each do |sub|
desc "Run the code examples in spec/#{sub}"
Spec::Rake::SpecTask.new(sub => spec_prereq) do |t|
t.spec_opts = ['--options', "\"#{RAILS_ROOT}/spec/spec.opts\""]
t.spec_files = FileList["spec/#{sub}/**/*_spec.rb"]
end
end
I had placed my tests in a new spec/libs directory when the rpsec.rake file was configured to look in spec/lib. Simply renaming libs -> lib did the trick!
-
I have
/lib
by default in my project somehow. Unfortunatelyrake test
does't catch up the files, so this is RSpec-only and I have to use the solution above. May 18, 2012 at 13:47
An easy and clean way is just to create a directory under test/unit/lib. Then create test as test/unit/lib/foo_test.rb corresponding to lib/foo.rb. No new rake tasks required, and you can nest more directories if needed to match the lib directory structure.
As of Rails 4.0:
rake test:all # Run all tests in any subdir of `test` without resetting the DB
rake test:all:db # Same as above and resets the DB
As of Rails 4.1, redefine test:run
to include additional tasks when running rake
or rake test
:
# lib/tasks/test.rake
namespace :test do
Rake::Task["run"].clear
task run: ["test:units", "test:functionals", "test:generators", "test:integration", "test:tasks"]
["tasks"].each do |name|
Rails::TestTask.new(name => "test:prepare") do |t|
t.pattern = "test/#{name}/**/*_test.rb"
end
end
end
This has the added bonus of defining rake test:tasks
in the given example.
As of Rails 4.2, test:run
includes all subdirs of test
including them when running rake test
, and thus rake
.
-
5
To not define additional rake tasks to run tests from the custom defined folders you may also run them with the command rake test:all
. Tests folders structure for the lib
folder or any other custom folder is up to you. But I prefer to duplicate them in classes: lib
is matched to test/lib
, app/form_objects
to test/form_objects
.
Use:
[spring] rake test:all
to run all tests, including the directories you created (like [root]/test/lib/
).
Omit [spring]
if tou aren't using it.