RSpec fundamentals: setup, naming and basic structure

Rémi Mercier - Sep 8 '21 - - Dev Community

When you start programming, it’s not easy to know what to test, how to test, and why should you test? You’ve probably heard that TDD (as in Test Driven Development) is THE best practice. But at first, it’s hard to know what your code should do before you’re writing it.

Testing requires practice to reveal its potential.

When I started programming, I’d copy other people’s tests because, well, I had to test, right? But after a while, my tests would uncover edge cases, potential bugs I’d overlooked.

So, I feel a series of short know-hows, know-whats and, know-whys, could be of some use to newcomers; brief essays explaining one aspect of testing with RSpec.

If this sounds fun to you, let’s start with the basics.

What is RSpec?

First, let’s begin with the obvious question: what is RSpec?

RSpec is a testing framework built in Ruby to test Ruby code. It focuses on testing the behavior of your program: what am I feeding my code? What do I expect to come out?

It’s one of several testing frameworks available out there. You might also know Minitest.

Adding RSpec to your application

The RSpec team maintains a gem, making it easy to use the framework in Rails applications.

First, add RSpec to your Gemfile.

  # Gemfile

  gem "rspec-rails", group: [:development, :test]
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Install the gem.

  bundle install
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Scaffold RSpec’s configuration and switch your application’s testing framework to RSpec.

  rails generate rspec:install
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Now, run your migrations and prepare your test database.

  rails db:migrate && rails db:test:prepare
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There! Now, you can run your tests by typing rspec spec in your shell. spec is the folder where you’ll create your test files.

Naming your RSpec files

RSpec naming convention is straightforward:

  • users_controller.rb is tested by users_controller_spec.rb
  • user.rb is tested by user_spec.rb
  • user_notification_job.rb is tested by user_notification_job_spec.rb

Architecturing your spec folder

To make sure RSpec and Rails work smoothly together, mimick the structure of your app folder.

  my_app_directory
  |
  |- app
  | |
  | |- models
  | |
  | |- user.rb
  |
  |- spec
     |
     |- models
        |
        |- user_spec.rb
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  • app/models/user.rb is tested by spec/models/user_spec.rb
  • app/serializers/admin/book_serializer.rb is tested by spec/serializers/admin/book_serializer_spec.rb
  • and so on.

There’s only one catch:

  • app/controllers/users_controller.rb is tested by spec/requests/users_controller.rb. The RSpec team discourages you to use spec/controllers. Why? Because testing requests allows you to test the behaviour of your controller’s actions through the stack (routing, request, response, etc…) versus testing the controller in isolation 1.

So for testing controllers, your folder’s structure is:

  my_app_directory
  |
  |- app
  | |
  | |- controllers
  | |
  | |- users_controller.rb
  |
  |- spec
     |
     |- controllers ❌
     |
     |- requests
        |
        |- users_controller_spec.rb
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The structure of your RSpec files

Let’s say we want to test our User model. Our file’s structure would look like this:

  # spec/models/user_spec.rb

  require 'rails_helper'

  RSpec.describe User do
    # test stuff
  end
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There! Your setup is done.

But now, I’d like us to dig into each element so we get a better understanding of what’s going on.

  • require 'rails_helper' loads the configuration for RSpec. rails_helper.rb is located at the root of the spec folder. RSpec is configured out of the box so no need to worry about it.

  • RSpec is the core module for all RSpec code. It encapsulates and loads a lot of things on instantiation: configuration, expectations, examples, etc. You can check out the code here.

  • .describe is a class method defined on the RSpec module. It groups your tests around a common abstraction: a class, a request, etc. In the example above, our abstraction is the User model.

The code below is from the RSpec repository.

  def self.expose_example_group_alias(name)
    return if example_group_aliases.include?(name)

    example_group_aliases << name

    (class << RSpec; self; end). __send__ (:define_method, name) do |*args, &example_group_block|
      group = RSpec::Core::ExampleGroup. __send__ (name, *args, &example_group_block)
      RSpec.world.record(group)
      group
    end

    expose_example_group_alias_globally(name) if exposed_globally?
  end
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It’s a bit hard to read because of the metaprogramming bits, but the main idea is that it defines the .describe instance method in the RSpec::Core::ExampleGroup class with the abstraction you’re testing (User) and the tests you wrote as arguments.

  • User is the class you’re testing. It’s passed as an argument to the .describe method.

  • do ... end is the block where you’re writing your tests. These will be passed as a second argument to the .describe method (see &example_group_block above).

I hope these explanations will give you a better understanding of how RSpec works. Next time, we’ll write our first tests.

Noticed something? Ping me on Twitter or create an issue on GitHub.

Cheers,

Rémi

Thanks @Benoit for pointing that out!

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