Module: Shoulda::Matchers::ActionController
Overview
This module provides matchers that are used to test behavior within controllers.
Instance Method Summary collapse
-
#filter_param(key) ⇒ FilterParamMatcher
The
filter_param
matcher is used to test parameter filtering configuration. -
#permit(*params) ⇒ PermitMatcher
The
permit
matcher tests that an action in your controller receives a allowlist of parameters using Rails' Strong Parameters feature (specifically thatpermit
was called with the correct arguments). -
#redirect_to(url_or_description, &block) ⇒ RedirectToMatcher
The
redirect_to
matcher tests that an action redirects to a certain location. -
#render_template(options = {}, message = nil) ⇒ RenderTemplateMatcher
The
render_template
matcher tests that an action renders a template or partial. -
#render_with_layout(expected_layout = nil) ⇒ RenderWithLayoutMatcher
The
render_with_layout
matcher asserts that an action is rendered with a particular layout. -
#rescue_from(exception) ⇒ RescueFromMatcher
The
rescue_from
matcher tests usage of therescue_from
macro. -
#respond_with(status) ⇒ RespondWithMatcher
The
respond_with
matcher tests that an action responds with a certain status code. -
#route(method, path, port: nil) ⇒ RouteMatcher
The
route
matcher tests that a route resolves to a controller, action, and params; and that the controller, action, and params generates the same route. -
#set_flash ⇒ SetFlashMatcher
The
set_flash
matcher is used to make assertions about theflash
hash. -
#set_session ⇒ SetSessionMatcher
The
set_session
matcher is used to make assertions about thesession
hash. -
#use_after_action(callback) ⇒ CallbackMatcher
The
use_after_action
matcher is used to test that an after_action callback is defined within your controller. -
#use_around_action(callback) ⇒ CallbackMatcher
The
use_around_action
matcher is used to test that an around_action callback is defined within your controller. -
#use_before_action(callback) ⇒ CallbackMatcher
The
use_before_action
matcher is used to test that a before_action callback is defined within your controller.
Instance Method Details
#filter_param(key) ⇒ FilterParamMatcher
The filter_param
matcher is used to test parameter filtering
configuration. Specifically, it asserts that the given parameter is
present in config.filter_parameters
.
class MyApplication < Rails::Application
config.filter_parameters << :secret_key
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe ApplicationController, type: :controller do
it { should filter_param(:secret_key) }
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class ApplicationControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
should filter_param(:secret_key)
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/filter_param_matcher.rb', line 24 def filter_param(key) FilterParamMatcher.new(key) end |
#permit(*params) ⇒ PermitMatcher
The permit
matcher tests that an action in your controller receives a
allowlist of parameters using Rails' Strong Parameters feature
(specifically that permit
was called with the correct arguments).
Here's an example:
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def create
user = User.create(user_params)
# ...
end
private
def user_params
params.require(:user).permit(
:first_name,
:last_name,
:email,
:password
)
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe UsersController, type: :controller do
it do
params = {
user: {
first_name: 'John',
last_name: 'Doe',
email: 'johndoe@example.com',
password: 'password'
}
}
should permit(:first_name, :last_name, :email, :password).
for(:create, params: params).
on(:user)
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class UsersControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
should "(for POST #create) restrict parameters on :user to first_name, last_name, email, and password" do
params = {
user: {
first_name: 'John',
last_name: 'Doe',
email: 'johndoe@example.com',
password: 'password'
}
}
matcher = permit(:first_name, :last_name, :email, :password).
for(:create, params: params).
on(:user)
assert_accepts matcher, subject
end
end
If your action requires query parameters in order to work, then you'll need to supply them:
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def update
user = User.find(params[:id])
if user.update_attributes(user_params)
# ...
else
# ...
end
end
private
def user_params
params.require(:user).permit(
:first_name,
:last_name,
:email,
:password
)
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe UsersController, type: :controller do
before do
create(:user, id: 1)
end
it do
params = {
id: 1,
user: {
first_name: 'Jon',
last_name: 'Doe',
email: 'jondoe@example.com',
password: 'password'
}
}
should permit(:first_name, :last_name, :email, :password).
for(:update, params: params).
on(:user)
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class UsersControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
setup do
create(:user, id: 1)
end
should "(for PATCH #update) restrict parameters on :user to :first_name, :last_name, :email, and :password" do
params = {
id: 1,
user: {
first_name: 'Jon',
last_name: 'Doe',
email: 'jondoe@example.com',
password: 'password'
}
}
matcher = permit(:first_name, :last_name, :email, :password).
for(:update, params: params).
on(:user)
assert_accepts matcher, subject
end
end
Finally, if you have an action that isn't one of the seven resourceful actions, then you'll need to provide the HTTP verb that it responds to:
Rails.application.routes.draw do
resources :users do
member do
put :toggle
end
end
end
class UsersController < ApplicationController
def toggle
user = User.find(params[:id])
if user.update_attributes(user_params)
# ...
else
# ...
end
end
private
def user_params
params.require(:user).permit(:activated)
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe UsersController, type: :controller do
before do
create(:user, id: 1)
end
it do
params = { id: 1, user: { activated: true } }
should permit(:activated).
for(:toggle, params: params, verb: :put).
on(:user)
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class UsersControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
setup do
create(:user, id: 1)
end
should "(for PUT #toggle) restrict parameters on :user to :activated" do
params = { id: 1, user: { activated: true } }
matcher = permit(:activated).
for(:toggle, params: params, verb: :put).
on(:user)
assert_accepts matcher, subject
end
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/permit_matcher.rb', line 203 def permit(*params) PermitMatcher.new(params).in_context(self) end |
#redirect_to(url_or_description, &block) ⇒ RedirectToMatcher
The redirect_to
matcher tests that an action redirects to a certain
location. In a test suite using RSpec, it is very similar to
rspec-rails's redirect_to
matcher. In a test suite using Minitest +
Shoulda, it provides a more expressive syntax over
assert_redirected_to
.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def show
redirect_to :index
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #show' do
before { get :show }
it { should redirect_to(posts_path) }
it { should redirect_to(action: :index) }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #show' do
setup { get :show }
should redirect_to('/posts') { posts_path }
should redirect_to(action: :index)
end
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/redirect_to_matcher.rb', line 38 def redirect_to(url_or_description, &block) RedirectToMatcher.new(url_or_description, self, &block) end |
#render_template(options = {}, message = nil) ⇒ RenderTemplateMatcher
The render_template
matcher tests that an action renders a template
or partial. In RSpec, it is very similar to rspec-rails's
render_template
matcher. In a test suite using Minitest + Shoulda, it
provides a more expressive syntax over assert_template
.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def show
end
end
# app/views/posts/show.html.erb
<%= render 'sidebar' %>
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #show' do
before { get :show }
it { should render_template('show') }
it { should render_template(partial: '_sidebar') }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #show' do
setup { get :show }
should render_template('show')
should render_template(partial: '_sidebar')
end
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/render_template_matcher.rb', line 39 def render_template(options = {}, message = nil) RenderTemplateMatcher.new(options, message, self) end |
#render_with_layout(expected_layout = nil) ⇒ RenderWithLayoutMatcher
The render_with_layout
matcher asserts that an action is rendered with
a particular layout.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def show
render layout: 'posts'
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #show' do
before { get :show }
it { should render_with_layout('posts') }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #show' do
setup { get :show }
should render_with_layout('posts')
end
end
It can also be used to assert that the action is not rendered with a layout at all:
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def sidebar
render layout: false
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #sidebar' do
before { get :sidebar }
it { should_not render_with_layout }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #sidebar' do
setup { get :sidebar }
should_not render_with_layout
end
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/render_with_layout_matcher.rb', line 60 def render_with_layout(expected_layout = nil) RenderWithLayoutMatcher.new(expected_layout).in_context(self) end |
#rescue_from(exception) ⇒ RescueFromMatcher
The rescue_from
matcher tests usage of the rescue_from
macro. It
asserts that an exception and method are present in the list of
exception handlers, and that the handler method exists.
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
rescue_from ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound, with: :handle_not_found
private
def handle_not_found
# ...
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe ApplicationController, type: :controller do
it do
should rescue_from(ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound).
with(:handle_not_found)
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class ApplicationControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
should rescue_from(ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound).
with(:handle_not_found)
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/rescue_from_matcher.rb', line 34 def rescue_from(exception) RescueFromMatcher.new exception end |
#respond_with(status) ⇒ RespondWithMatcher
The respond_with
matcher tests that an action responds with a certain
status code.
You can specify that the status should be a number:
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def index
render status: 403
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #index' do
before { get :index }
it { should respond_with(403) }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #index' do
setup { get :index }
should respond_with(403)
end
end
You can specify that the status should be within a range of numbers:
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def destroy
render status: 508
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'DELETE #destroy' do
before { delete :destroy }
it { should respond_with(500..600) }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'DELETE #destroy' do
setup { delete :destroy }
should respond_with(500..600)
end
end
Finally, you can specify that the status should be a symbol:
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def show
render status: :locked
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #show' do
before { get :show }
it { should respond_with(:locked) }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #show' do
setup { get :show }
should respond_with(:locked)
end
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/respond_with_matcher.rb', line 87 def respond_with(status) RespondWithMatcher.new(status) end |
#route(method, path, port: nil) ⇒ RouteMatcher
The route
matcher tests that a route resolves to a controller,
action, and params; and that the controller, action, and params
generates the same route. For an RSpec suite, this is like using a
combination of route_to
and be_routable
. In a test suite using
Minitest + Shoulda, it provides a more expressive syntax over
assert_routing
.
You can use this matcher either in a controller test case or in a routing test case. For instance, given these routes:
My::Application.routes.draw do
get '/posts', to: 'posts#index'
get '/posts/:id', to: 'posts#show'
end
You could choose to write tests for these routes alongside other tests for PostsController:
class PostsController < ApplicationController
# ...
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
it { should route(:get, '/posts').to(action: :index) }
it { should route(:get, '/posts/1').to(action: :show, id: 1) }
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
should route(:get, '/posts').to(action: 'index')
should route(:get, '/posts/1').to(action: :show, id: 1)
end
Or you could place the tests along with other route tests:
# RSpec
describe 'Routing', type: :routing do
it do
should route(:get, '/posts').
to(controller: :posts, action: :index)
end
it do
should route(:get, '/posts/1').
to('posts#show', id: 1)
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class RoutesTest < ActionController::IntegrationTest
should route(:get, '/posts').
to(controller: :posts, action: :index)
should route(:get, '/posts/1').
to('posts#show', id: 1)
end
Notice that in the former case, as we are inside of a test case for
PostsController, we do not have to specify that the routes resolve to
this controller. In the latter case we specify this using the
controller
key passed to the to
qualifier.
Specifying a port
If the route you're testing has a constraint on it that limits the route
to a particular port, you can specify it by passing a port
option to
the matcher:
class PortConstraint
def initialize(port)
@port = port
end
def matches?(request)
request.port == @port
end
end
My::Application.routes.draw do
get '/posts',
to: 'posts#index',
constraints: PortConstraint.new(12345)
end
# RSpec
describe 'Routing', type: :routing do
it do
should route(:get, '/posts', port: 12345).
to('posts#index')
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class RoutesTest < ActionController::IntegrationTest
should route(:get, '/posts', port: 12345).
to('posts#index')
end
Qualifiers
to
Use to
to specify the action (along with the controller, if needed)
that the route resolves to.
to
takes either keyword arguments (controller
and action
) or a
string that represents the controller/action pair:
route(:get, '/posts').to(action: index)
route(:get, '/posts').to(controller: :posts, action: index)
route(:get, '/posts').to('posts#index')
If there are parameters in your route, then specify those too:
route(:get, '/posts/1').to('posts#show', id: 1)
You may also specify special parameters such as :format
:
route(:get, '/posts').to('posts#index', format: :json)
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/route_matcher.rb', line 127 def route(method, path, port: nil) RouteMatcher.new(self, method, path, port: port) end |
#set_flash ⇒ SetFlashMatcher
The set_flash
matcher is used to make assertions about the
flash
hash.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def index
flash[:foo] = 'A candy bar'
end
def destroy
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #index' do
before { get :index }
it { should set_flash }
end
describe 'DELETE #destroy' do
before { delete :destroy }
it { should_not set_flash }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #index' do
setup { get :index }
should set_flash
end
context 'DELETE #destroy' do
setup { delete :destroy }
should_not set_flash
end
end
Qualifiers
[]
Use []
to narrow the scope of the matcher to a particular key.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def index
flash[:foo] = 'A candy bar'
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #index' do
before { get :index }
it { should set_flash[:foo] }
it { should_not set_flash[:bar] }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #index' do
setup { get :show }
should set_flash[:foo]
should_not set_flash[:bar]
end
end
to
Use to
to assert that some key was set to a particular value, or that
some key matches a particular regex.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def index
flash[:foo] = 'A candy bar'
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #index' do
before { get :index }
it { should set_flash.to('A candy bar') }
it { should set_flash.to(/bar/) }
it { should set_flash[:foo].to('bar') }
it { should_not set_flash[:foo].to('something else') }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #index' do
setup { get :show }
should set_flash.to('A candy bar')
should set_flash.to(/bar/)
should set_flash[:foo].to('bar')
should_not set_flash[:foo].to('something else')
end
end
now
Use now
to change the scope of the matcher to use the "now" hash
instead of the usual "future" hash.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def show
flash.now[:foo] = 'bar'
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #show' do
before { get :show }
it { should set_flash.now }
it { should set_flash.now[:foo] }
it { should set_flash.now[:foo].to('bar') }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #index' do
setup { get :show }
should set_flash.now
should set_flash.now[:foo]
should set_flash.now[:foo].to('bar')
end
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/set_flash_matcher.rb', line 150 def set_flash SetFlashMatcher.new.in_context(self) end |
#set_session ⇒ SetSessionMatcher
The set_session
matcher is used to make assertions about the
session
hash.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def index
session[:foo] = 'A candy bar'
end
def destroy
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #index' do
before { get :index }
it { should set_session }
end
describe 'DELETE #destroy' do
before { delete :destroy }
it { should_not set_session }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #index' do
setup { get :index }
should set_session
end
context 'DELETE #destroy' do
setup { delete :destroy }
should_not set_session
end
end
Qualifiers
[]
Use []
to narrow the scope of the matcher to a particular key.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def index
session[:foo] = 'A candy bar'
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #index' do
before { get :index }
it { should set_session[:foo] }
it { should_not set_session[:bar] }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #index' do
setup { get :show }
should set_session[:foo]
should_not set_session[:bar]
end
end
to
Use to
to assert that some key was set to a particular value, or that
some key matches a particular regex.
class PostsController < ApplicationController
def index
session[:foo] = 'A candy bar'
end
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe PostsController, type: :controller do
describe 'GET #index' do
before { get :index }
it { should set_session.to('A candy bar') }
it { should set_session.to(/bar/) }
it { should set_session[:foo].to('bar') }
it { should_not set_session[:foo].to('something else') }
end
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class PostsControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
context 'GET #index' do
setup { get :show }
should set_session.to('A candy bar')
should set_session.to(/bar/)
should set_session[:foo].to('bar')
should_not set_session[:foo].to('something else')
end
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/set_session_matcher.rb', line 117 def set_session SetSessionMatcher.new.in_context(self) end |
#use_after_action(callback) ⇒ CallbackMatcher
The use_after_action
matcher is used to test that an after_action
callback is defined within your controller.
class IssuesController < ApplicationController
after_action :log_activity
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe IssuesController, type: :controller do
it { should use_after_action(:log_activity) }
it { should_not use_after_action(:destroy_user) }
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class IssuesControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
should use_after_action(:log_activity)
should_not use_after_action(:destroy_user)
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/callback_matcher.rb', line 50 def use_after_action(callback) CallbackMatcher.new(callback, :after, :action) end |
#use_around_action(callback) ⇒ CallbackMatcher
The use_around_action
matcher is used to test that an around_action
callback is defined within your controller.
class ChangesController < ApplicationController
around_action :wrap_in_transaction
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe ChangesController, type: :controller do
it { should use_around_action(:wrap_in_transaction) }
it { should_not use_around_action(:save_view_context) }
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class ChangesControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
should use_around_action(:wrap_in_transaction)
should_not use_around_action(:save_view_context)
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/callback_matcher.rb', line 75 def use_around_action(callback) CallbackMatcher.new(callback, :around, :action) end |
#use_before_action(callback) ⇒ CallbackMatcher
The use_before_action
matcher is used to test that a before_action
callback is defined within your controller.
class UsersController < ApplicationController
before_action :authenticate_user!
end
# RSpec
RSpec.describe UsersController, type: :controller do
it { should use_before_action(:authenticate_user!) }
it { should_not use_before_action(:prevent_ssl) }
end
# Minitest (Shoulda)
class UsersControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
should use_before_action(:authenticate_user!)
should_not use_before_action(:prevent_ssl)
end
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# File 'lib/shoulda/matchers/action_controller/callback_matcher.rb', line 25 def use_before_action(callback) CallbackMatcher.new(callback, :before, :action) end |