RR

RR (Double Ruby) is a test double framework that features a rich selection of double techniques and a terse syntax.

What is a Test Double?

A Test Double is a generalization of something that replaces a real object to make it easier to test another object. Its like a stunt double for tests. The following are test doubles:

  • Mocks

  • Stubs

  • Fakes

  • Spies

  • Proxies

xunitpatterns.com/Test%20Double.html

Currently RR implements mocks, stubs, and proxies. In the future, RR will support spies.

Using RR

test/unit

class Test::Unit::TestCase
  include RR::Adapters::TestUnit
end

rspec

Spec::Runners.configure do |config|
  config.mock_with :rr
  # or if that doesn't work due to a version incompatibility
  # config.mock_with RR::Adapters::Rspec
end

Syntax between RR and other double/mock frameworks

Terse Syntax

One of the goals of RR is to make doubles more scannable. This is accomplished by removing words from a double declaration. Here is RR compared to other mock frameworks:

flexmock(User).should_receive(:find).with('42').and_return(jane) # Flexmock
User.should_receive(:find).with('42').and_return(jane) # Rspec
User.expects(:find).with('42').returns {jane} # Mocha
User.should_receive(:find).with('42') {jane} # Rspec using return value blocks
mock(User).find('42') {jane} # RR

No mock objects

RR is an opinionated framework. RR does not create a mock object for you, like other frameworks. Instead, RR utilizes a technique known as “partial mocking”.

my_object = MyClass.new
mock(my_object).hello

Compare this with doing a mock in mocha:

my_mocked_object = mock()
my_mocked_object.expects(:hello)

No should_receive or expects method

RR uses method_missing to set your method expectation. This means you do not need to use a method such as should_receive or expects.

mock(my_object).hello # The hello method on my_object is mocked

Mocha:

my_object.expects(:hello) # expects sets the hello method expectation

Rspec mocks:

my_object.should_receive(:hello) # should_receive sets the hello method expectation

with method call is not necessary

Since RR uses method_missing, it also make using the with method unnecessary to set the argument expectations.

mock(my_object).hello('bob', 'jane')

Mocha:

my_object.expects(:hello).with('bob', 'jane')

Rspec mocks:

my_object.should_receive(:hello).with('bob', 'jane')

using a block to set the return value

RR supports using a block to set the return value. RR also has the #returns method. Both of the examples are equivalent.

mock(my_object).hello('bob', 'jane') {'Hello Bob and Jane'}
mock(my_object).hello('bob', 'jane').returns('Hello Bob and Jane')

Mocha:

my_object.expects(:hello).with('bob', 'jane').returns('Hello Bob and Jane')

Rspec mocks:

my_object.should_receive(:hello).with('bob', 'jane').and_return('Hello Bob and Jane')
my_object.should_receive(:hello).with('bob', 'jane') {'Hello Bob and Jane'} #rspec also supports blocks for the return value

Using RR

To create a double on an object, you can use the following methods:

  • mock

  • stub

  • proxy

  • instance_of

These methods are composable. mock and stub can be used by themselves and are mutually exclusive. proxy and instance_of must be chained with mock or stub. You can chain proxy and instance_of together.

mock

mock replaces the method on the object with an expectation and implementation. The expectations are a mock will be called with certain arguments a certain number of times (the default is once). You can also set the return value of the method invocation.

See xunitpatterns.com/Mock%20Object.html

The following example sets an expectation that the view will receive a method call to #render with the arguments => “user_info” once. When the method is called “Information” is returned.

view = controller.template
mock(view).render(:partial => "user_info") {"Information"}

stub

stub replaces the method on the object with only an implementation. You can still use arguments to differentiate which stub gets invoked.

See xunitpatterns.com/Test%20Stub.html

The following example makes the User.find method return jane when passed ‘42’ and returns bob when passed ‘99’. If another id is passed to User.find, an exception is raised.

jane = User.new
bob = User.new
stub(User).find('42') {jane}
stub(User).find('99') {bob}
stub(User).find do |id|
  raise "Unexpected id #{id.inspect} passed to me"
end

mock.proxy

mock.proxy replaces the method on the object with an expectation, implementation, and also invokes the actual method. mock.proxy also intercepts the return value and passes it into the return value block.

The following example makes sets an expectation that view.render(=> “right_navigation”) gets called once and return the actual content of the rendered partial template. A call to view.render(=> “user_info”) will render the user_info partial template and send the content into the block and is represented by the html variable. An assertion is done on the html and “Different html” is returned.

view = controller.template
mock.proxy(view).render(:partial => "right_navigation")
mock.proxy(view).render(:partial => "user_info") do |html|
  html.should include("John Doe")
  "Different html"
end

You can also use mock.proxy to set expectations on the returned value. In the following example, a call to User.find(‘5’) does the normal ActiveRecord implementation and passes the actual value, represented by the variable bob, into the block. bob is then set with a mock.proxy for projects to return only the first 3 projects. bob is also mocked with valid? to return false.

mock.proxy(User).find('5') do |bob|
  mock.proxy(bob).projects do |projects|
    projects[0..3]
  end
  mock(bob).valid? {false}
  bob
end

stub.proxy

Intercept the return value of a method call. The following example verifies render partial will be called and renders the partial.

view = controller.template
stub.proxy(view).render(:partial => "user_info") do |html|
  html.should include("Joe Smith")
  html
end

instance_of

Put double scenarios on instances of a Class.

mock.instance_of(User).valid? {false}

Block Syntax

script = MyScript.new
mock(script) do |m|
  m.system("cd #{RAILS_ENV}") {true}
  m.system("rake foo:bar") {true}
  m.system("rake baz") {true}
end

Wildcard matchers

anything

mock(object).foobar(1, anything)
object.foobar(1, :my_symbol)

is_a

mock(object).foobar(is_a(Time))
object.foobar(Time.now)

numeric

mock(object).foobar(numeric)
object.foobar(99)

numeric

mock(object).foobar(boolean)
object.foobar(false)

duck_type

mock(object).foobar(duck_type(:walk, :talk))
arg = Object.new
def arg.walk; 'waddle'; end
def arg.talk; 'quack'; end
object.foobar(arg)

Special Thanks To

With any development effort, there are countless people who have contributed to making it possible. We all are standing on the shoulders of giants.

  • Pivotal Labs for sponsoring RR development

  • Parker Thompson for pairing with me

  • Felix Morio for pairing with me

  • Jeff Whitmire for documentation suggestions

  • Nick Kallen for documentation suggestion & bug reports

  • David Chelimsky for encouragement to make the RR framework, for developing the Rspec mock framework, and syntax ideas

  • Gerald Meszaros for his excellent book “xUnit Test Patterns”

  • Dan North for syntax ideas

  • Jim Weirich for developing Flexmock, the first Terse ruby mock framework

  • James Mead for developing Mocha

  • Aslak Hellesoy for Developing Rspec

  • Stephen Baker for Developing Rspec

  • Dave Astels for some BDD inspiration