CSC/ECE 517 Fall 2010/ch1 1f ap
Introduction
Benefits of unit test frameworks
- It provides us utilities and helps us develop test cases with ease
- Easy to build, compile and run the test cases.
- It helps us in isolating development code and test cases.
- More important it helps us in testing the parts of the application and thus reducing the effort required in integration testing.
- Some frameworks makes us to follow "Test Driven Development" paradigm and helps us to achieve good design of the software.
Unit testing frameworks for Ruby
Test::Unit
Rspec
Rspec is one more unit test framework available for ruby programmers , it has following features.
- This framework adopts Behaviour Driven development paradigm - User write test cases prior to writing test code.
- Test cases are very easy to comprehend , test case resembles plain english language.
Some keyword that you need to know before jumping into technical aspects about Rspec.
- Expectations - These are assertion statments used inside the test case.
- Example - This is a test method and collection of expectations(assertion statements).
- Example Group - Collection of examples is called Example group and also called test case.
Lets take an example and explain on how to write a unit test case using Rspec framework.
describe "Checking Account" do it "should have a balance greater than 0" do CheckingAccount = Account.new CheckingAccount account.balance.should > Money.new(0, :USD) end it “...” do //some expectations end end
Lets go through elements of this test case aka code example group.
1. it () :: This is called code example and it is similar to test method in Test::unit .This method takes string as an argument and the string describes the functionality/ behaviour we are going to test about the system . it() method has a code block , which is collection of expectations also called assertions.Expectations are enclosed between the do ... end keywords.
General structure of it() method:.
it <String which summarizes the behaviour we are going to test in code block> do Expectation1 <-- Text between do and end is called block and it has expectations.. Expectation2 aka assertions. . . Expectationn end
Arguments to it :: it( ) method takes a single String, an optional Hash and an optional block
2. describe() :: We use describe() method to define example group aka test case in Test::Unit. This acts as an abstraction to many code examples -i,e its a wrapper around multiple it() functions .
General structure of describe() construct looks like this.
describe <arbitrary no of input params> do <--- Start of block , this encloses multiple code exampl //Here we will have multiple code examples i ,e it() functions, helper methods, before and each method done
Arguments:Arguments passed to describe function are string and they describe the subset of behaviour exhibited by the object.
3. Methods We can have other methods apart from it() , inside the describe block
- Before and after methods.
- Helper methods.
1. Before and after methods.
- before(:[each or all] ):Some times we need to run some code or some setup prior to executing the code examples (test methods).We do this by using the before method, this gets executes first, prior to all code examples. It takes either :each or :all as parameter . If we use :each then before method gets executed before running each code example. If we use :all then before gets executed only once at the start before running code examples.
- after(:[each or all] ) : This is counterpart for before function. If we need to run some code or some clean up post running the code examples, we use this function. It takes either :each or :all as parameter . If we use :each then after method gets executed after running each code example. If we use :all then after method gets executed only once, at the end after running all the code examples.
3. Helper methods:Sometimes we require code that is common across all the code examples.Instead of repeating the same code in each code example.we write helper method and this be utilized by all of the code examples present in the code example group.This method helps us to overcome duplication in the code.Even these helper methods can be used across the example groups.
module UserExampleHelpers def add_employee_details User.new(:email => 'e@mail.com' , :password => 'shhhhh' ) end it “Calculating payroll” do empx = add_employee_details # do more processing. end end
4.Nested code example groups(): To better organize our example group some times we need nesting of example groups and this feature is available in Rspec.
expectations
These are like assertions in Test::Unit framework and are most important part of any example. Expectations use language that is very easy to understand and even non programmer like project manager can understand what we are doing in then give expectation.
Eg: result.should equal(10) It says the result should be equal to 10. Expectation says at specific point in the execution of a code example, some thing should be in some state. Some more expectations:-
- result.should_not equal(10)
- message.should match(/Its raining today//)
- team.should have(2).players
To gain better understand of RSpec’s expectations, let’s get familiar with the different parts of the expectation. First we will start of with the should and should_not methods and will learn about different types of expression matchers.
1. should and should_not :
Both of these methods are part of the Object Class(top most parent class in Ruby) , Both of these functions take Expression matcher or Ruby Expression with subset of operators available in Ruby as argument .Here expression matcher is an object as its name suggests it matches the expression.
Eg of Expression matchers.:
1)result.should equal(5) expectation using should method
If the result turns out to be 5 then this expectation is successful.
2)result.should_not equal(5) expectation using should_not method.
If the result turns out to be 5 then this expectation fails.
To understand more about how ruby interprets this line ,follow the links in appendix section.
2. Matchers: Expression matcher is an object as its name suggests it matches the expression. There are several categories of matchers in Ruby.
- Built-In Matchers :
Are the ones that gets shipped with Rspec.
1.result.should equal(2) ----> is equal(item) expression matcher 2.prime_numbers.should_not include(8) ----> is include(item) expression matcher. 3.(2 * 5).should == 10 ----> Testing for equality matcher. 4.result.should be_close(4.10, 0.004) ----> This matcher is used for floating point , this says if the result is inbetween 4.10 plus or minus 0.04 the expectation is success. 5.result.should match(/OOLS /) ----> This is a text matcher , and it succeeds if the result contains OOLS as part of the string
- Predicate Matchers : A Ruby predicate method is one whose name ends with a “?” and returns a boolean response
eg: stack.should be_empty?