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rspec_tutorial.md

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A brief introduction to testing in Puppet

Puppet relies heavily on automated testing to ensure that Puppet behaves as expected and that new features don't interfere with existing behavior. There are three primary sets of tests that Puppet uses: unit tests, integration tests, and acceptance tests.


Unit tests are used to test the individual components of Puppet to ensure that they function as expected in isolation. Unit tests are designed to hide the actual system implementations and provide canned information so that only the intended behavior is tested, rather than the targeted code and everything else connected to it. Unit tests should never affect the state of the system that's running the test.


Integration tests serve to test different units of code together to ensure that they interact correctly. While individual methods might perform correctly, when used with the rest of the system they might fail, so integration tests are a higher level version of unit tests that serve to check the behavior of individual subsystems.

All of the unit and integration tests for Puppet are kept in the spec/ directory.


Acceptance tests are used to test high level behaviors of Puppet that deal with a number of concerns and aren't easily tested with normal unit tests. Acceptance tests function by changing system state and checking the system after the fact to make sure that the intended behavior occurred. Because of this acceptance tests can be destructive, so the systems being tested should be throwaway systems.

All of the acceptance tests for Puppet are kept in the acceptance/tests/ directory. Running the acceptance tests is much more involved than running the spec tests. Information about how to run them can be found in the acceptance testing documentation

Testing dependency version requirements

Puppet is only compatible with certain versions of RSpec and Mocha. If you are not using Bundler to install the required test libraries you must ensure that you are using the right library versions. Using unsupported versions of Mocha and RSpec will probably display many spurious failures. The supported versions of RSpec and Mocha can be found in the project Gemfile.

Puppet Continuous integration

RSpec

Puppet uses RSpec to perform unit and integration tests. RSpec handles a number of concerns to make testing easier:

  • Executing examples and ensuring the actual behavior matches the expected behavior (examples)
  • Grouping tests (describe and contexts)
  • Setting up test environments and cleaning up afterwards (before and after blocks)
  • Isolating tests (mocks and stubs)

Examples and expectations

At the most basic level, RSpec provides a framework for executing tests (which are called examples) and ensuring that the actual behavior matches the expected behavior (which are done with expectations)

# This is an example; it sets the test name and defines the test to run
specify "one equals one" do
  # 'should' is an expectation; it adds a check to make sure that the left argument
  # matches the right argument
  1.should == 1
end

# Examples can be declared with either 'it' or 'specify'
it "one doesn't equal two" do
  1.should_not == 2
end

Good examples generally do as little setup as possible and only test one or two things; it makes tests easier to understand and easier to debug.

More complete documentation on expectations is available at https://www.relishapp.com/rspec/rspec-expectations/docs

Example groups

Example groups are fairly self explanatory; they group similar examples into a set.

describe "the number one" do

  it "is larger than zero" do
    1.should be > 0
  end

  it "is an odd number" do
    1.odd?.should be true
  end

  it "is not nil" do
    1.should_not be_nil
  end
end

Example groups have a number of uses that we'll get into later, but one of the simplest demonstrations of what they do is how they help to format documentation:

rspec ex.rb --format documentation

the number one
  is larger than zero
  is an odd number
  is not nil

Finished in 0.00516 seconds
3 examples, 0 failures

Setting up and tearing down tests

Examples may require some setup before they can run, and might need to clean up afterwards. before and after blocks can be used before this, and can be used inside of example groups to limit how many examples they affect.

describe "something that could warn" do
  before :each do
    # Disable warnings for this test
    $VERBOSE = nil
  end

  after :each do
    # Enable warnings afterwards
    $VERBOSE = true
  end

  it "doesn't generate a warning" do
    MY_CONSTANT = 1
    # reassigning a constant normally prints out 'warning: already initialized constant FOO'
    MY_CONSTANT = 2
  end
end

Setting up helper data

Some examples may require setting up data before hand and making it available to tests. RSpec provides helper methods with the let method call that can be used inside of tests.

describe "a helper object" do
  # This creates an array with three elements that we can retrieve in tests. A
  # new copy will be made for each test.
  let(:my_helper) do
    ['foo', 'bar', 'baz']
  end

  it "is an array" do
    my_helper.should be_a_kind_of Array
  end

  it "has three elements" do
    my_helper.should have(3).items
  end
end

Like before blocks, helper objects like this are used to avoid doing a lot of setup in individual examples and share setup between similar tests.

Isolating tests with stubs

RSpec allows you to provide fake data during testing to make sure that individual tests are only running the code being tested. You can stub out entire objects, or just stub out individual methods on an object. When a method is stubbed the method itself will never be called.

While RSpec comes with its own stubbing framework, Puppet uses the Mocha framework.

A brief usage guide for Mocha is available at http://gofreerange.com/mocha/docs/#Usage, and an overview of Mocha expectations is available at http://gofreerange.com/mocha/docs/Mocha/Expectation.html

describe "stubbing a method on an object" do
  let(:my_helper) do
    ['foo', 'bar', 'baz']
  end

  it 'has three items before being stubbed' do
    my_helper.size.should == 3
  end

  describe 'when stubbing the size' do
    before :each do
      my_helper.stubs(:size).returns 10
    end

    it 'has the stubbed value for size' do
      my_helper.size.should == 10
    end
  end
end

Entire objects can be stubbed as well.

describe "stubbing an object" do
  let(:my_helper) do
    stub(:not_an_array, :size => 10)
  end

  it 'has the stubbed size'
    my_helper.size.should == 10
  end
end

Adding expectations with mocks

It's possible to combine the concepts of stubbing and expectations so that a method has to be called for the test to pass (like an expectation), and can return a fixed value (like a stub).

describe "mocking a method on an object" do
  let(:my_helper) do
    ['foo', 'bar', 'baz']
  end

  describe "when mocking the size" do
    before :each do
      my_helper.expects(:size).returns 10
    end

    it "adds an expectation that a method was called" do
      my_helper.size
    end
  end
end

Like stubs, entire objects can be mocked.

describe "mocking an object" do
  let(:my_helper) do
    mock(:not_an_array)
  end

  before :each do
    not_an_array.expects(:size).returns 10
  end

  it "adds an expectation that the method was called" do
    not_an_array.size
  end
end

Writing tests without side effects

When properly written each test should be able to run in isolation, and tests should be able to be run in any order. This makes tests more reliable and allows a single test to be run if only that test is failing, instead of running all 17000+ tests each time something is changed. However, there are a number of ways that can make tests fail when run in isolation or out of order.

Using instance variables

Puppet has a number of older tests that use before blocks and instance variables to set up fixture data, instead of let blocks. These can retain state between tests, which can lead to test failures when tests are run out of order.

# test.rb
RSpec.configure do |c|
  c.mock_framework = :mocha
end

describe "fixture data" do
  describe "using instance variables" do

    # BAD
    before :all do
      # This fixture will be created only once and will retain the `foo` stub
      # between tests.
      @fixture = stub 'test data'
    end

    it "can be stubbed" do
      @fixture.stubs(:foo).returns :bar
      @fixture.foo.should == :bar
    end

    it "does not keep state between tests" do
      # The foo stub was added in the previous test and shouldn't be present
      # in this test.
      expect { @fixture.foo }.to raise_error
    end
  end

  describe "using `let` blocks" do

    # GOOD
    # This will be recreated between tests so that state isn't retained.
    let(:fixture) { stub 'test data' }

    it "can be stubbed" do
      fixture.stubs(:foo).returns :bar
      fixture.foo.should == :bar
    end

    it "does not keep state between tests" do
      # since let blocks are regenerated between tests, the foo stub added in
      # the previous test will not be present here.
      expect { fixture.foo }.to raise_error
    end
  end
end
bundle exec rspec test.rb -fd

fixture data
  using instance variables
    can be stubbed
    should not keep state between tests (FAILED - 1)
  using `let` blocks
    can be stubbed
    should not keep state between tests

Failures:

  1) fixture data using instance variables should not keep state between tests
     Failure/Error: expect { @fixture.foo }.to raise_error
       expected Exception but nothing was raised
     # ./test.rb:17:in `block (3 levels) in <top (required)>'

Finished in 0.00248 seconds
4 examples, 1 failure

Failed examples:

rspec ./test.rb:16 # fixture data using instance variables should not keep state between tests

RSpec references