CSC/ECE 517 Spring 2017 E1711
E1711. Refactor delayed_mailer.rb and scheduled_task.rb
Overview
Introduction to Expertiza
Expertiza is a web based tool that allows instructors to create collaborative assignments where students can provide peer feedback on each others work. It provides instructors a system to manage assignments and different courses.
Scope of project E1711
The goal of E1711 was to refactor code found in the files delayed_mailer.rb and scheduled_task.rb.
The following issues were identified as the scope of this project:
- scheduled_task.rb duplicated most of its code from delayed_mailer.rb. Our objective is to reduce/remove the duplication in keeping with the DRY principle.
- The
perform
method uses a giant case statement, instead we were to incorporate the use of polymorphism - The
mail_signed_up_users
is long and should be broken into smaller and better named methods - Add/modify test cases as we added/removed/modified areas of the code
Information about the assignment can be found on this document
Test Plan
As this was a purely refactoring effort, our testing consisted of confirming existing tests did not break, modifying existing tests to match our changes, or adding tests as needed. The below sections will cover each objective in detail and will include information on how testing was done for each of those changes. See each of the Our Testing sections.
Note that the recommended format for a test plan included creating a flowchart. However, our assignment cannot be easily explained by a flow chart. First, none of the changes impact user behavior (refactoring only). Second, the changes were in an area of the code that was not impacted by user behavior, so there are no decision points that can be made into a flowchart.
Instead the below table summarizes the test cases for delayed_mailer.rb Much of our work consisted of modifying the existing tests so they were more thorough and adding some tests.
You can find the test cases in delayed_mailer_spec.rb
Scenario Description | Test Type | Test Description | Test Tool | Test Added/Modified |
---|---|---|---|---|
Email submission deadlines to signed up users | Functional | A new delayed mailing task is created. The number of delayed jobs pending is increased by 1. One second later, the job launches and the mailer deliveries increase by 1. | Rspec | Modified |
row 2, cell 1 | row 2, cell 2 | row 2, cell 3 | ||
row 2, cell 1 | row 2, cell 2 | row 2, cell 3 | ||
row 2, cell 1 | row 2, cell 2 | row 2, cell 3 | ||
row 2, cell 1 | row 2, cell 2 | row 2, cell 3 | ||
row 2, cell 1 | row 2, cell 2 | }
Remove duplicated code between delayed_mailer.rb and scheduled_task.rbBackground of ObjectiveThe main objective of this task was to reduce duplicated code as recommended by DRY principle. After a deep investigation into understanding why the same code would appear in two separate files, we concluded that the authors of scheduled_task.rb found that delayed_mailer.rb already integrated with a Ruby gem called delayed_job. delayed_job is used to run tasks asynchronously in the background. It was used in delayed_mailer to add an outgoing email to a queue to send out in the future. Instead of recreating similar infrastructure, the authors copied over the file to a different location, added on the new desired functionality, and renamed it. The authors also pointed all existing code to use scheduled_task.rb instead of delayed_mailer.rb Our ChangesWe found that the vast majority of the code in both the files applied to sending emails so we decided to merge the scheduled_task.rb into delayed_mailer.rb by porting the enhancements made for the scheduled tasks into delayed_mailer.rb. Doing so allowed us to meet the objective of DRYing out the code. However, we still have a situation where scheduled tasks feature has code in a section devoted to mailer code. We recommend that a future project take up the needed changes to pull out the scheduled task code out of the mailer file and make it a standalone feature as it should have been originally. See details in the Future Refactoring Opportunities below. Existing TestsWe did not find any existing automated testing targeting this area of the code. All existing tests in the Our TestingWe went back to the demonstration of this feature and manually tested all the same scenarios. We verified that no functionality presented in the scheduled tasks demonstration was broken. Tests were added for the delayed mailer feature (covered in more details in the following sections). We recommend tests focused towards scheduled tasks are added once the scheduled tasks code is removed from the delayed mailer file back into an independent file.
Refactor the
|