Skip to content

(NOT MAINTAINED - Pickle 0.3.3 merged in the changes I made here.) Easy model creation/reference in cucumber - optionally leveraging your factories/blueprints

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

seanhussey/factory_pickle

 
 

Repository files navigation

pickle

Pickle gives you cucumber steps that create your models easily from factory-girl or machinist factories/blueprints. You can also just use ActiveRecord as a factory but it’s not as cool.

Pickle can make use of different ORMs for finding records. Currently ActiveRecord and DataMapper adapters are provided. More adapters welcome!

References to the models are stored in the current world, not necessarily for the purpose of checking the db (although you could use it for that), but for enabling easy reference to urls, and for building complex givens which require a bunch of models collaborating

Quickstart

This is a quickstart guide for rails apps. Firstly, install cucumber-rails, and its dependencies. Then do the following:

Rails 3:

Add the gem to your Gemfile:

gem 'pickle'

Then install with:

bundle install

Discover the options for the generator:

rails g pickle --help

Run the generator, e.g:

rails g pickle --paths --email

For Rails 2:

Add the following to config/environments/cucumber:

config.gem 'pickle'

Install the gem with

rake gems:install RAILS_ENV=cucumber

Run the generator with:

script/generate pickle [paths] [email]

Resources

Github for code: github.com/ianwhite/pickle

Gemcutter for the gem: gemcutter.org/gems/pickle

Rdoc.info for docs: rdoc.info/projects/ianwhite/pickle

Google group for questions: groups.google.com/group/pickle-cucumber

Lighthouse for bugs: ianwhite.lighthouseapp.com/projects/25941-pickle

Railscast presentation: railscasts.com/episodes/186-pickle-with-cucumber

Blog articles: dynamic50: Integration testing with cucumber and pickle, rubyflare: pickle my cucumber

Using Pickle

Now have a look at features/step_definitions/pickle_steps.rb

If you want path steps and email steps then just add the ‘paths’ and/or ‘email’ options to the generator. The code/steps will be written to features/env/paths.rb and features/step_definitions/email_steps.rb respectively.

Using with plain ole Active Record or DataMapper

Pickle comes with adapters for Active Record and DataMapper.

If you have an AR/DM called ‘Post’, with required fields ‘title’, and ‘body’, then you can now write steps like this

Given a post exists with title: "My Post", body: "My body"

Using with factory-girl or machinist

But you’re using Machinist or FactoryGirl right?! To leverage all of the factories/blueprints you’ve written, you can just do stuff like

Given a user exists
And another user exists with role: "admin"

# later
Then a user should exist with name: "Fred"
And that user should be activated # this uses rspec predicate matchers

Machinist: require your blueprints and reset Shams

In your features/support/env.rb add the following lines at the bottom

require "#{Rails.root}/spec/blueprints" # or wherever they live
Before { Sham.reset } # reset Shams in between scenarios

FactoryGirl: make sure factories are loaded

In your config/environments/cucumber.rb file, make sure the factory-girl gem is included (unless it’s installed as a plugin).

If that doesn’t solve loading issues then require your factories.rb file directly in a file called ‘features/support/factory_girl.rb’

# example features/support/factory_girl.rb
require File.dirname(__FILE__) + '/../../spec/factories'

Using with an ORM other than ActiveRecord or DataMapper

Pickle can be used with any modelling library provided there is an adapter written for it.

Adapters are very simple and exist a module or class with the name “PickleAdapter” available to the class. For example

User.const_get(:PickleAdapter) #=> should return a pickle adapter

The Active Record and DataMapper ones can be found at ActiveRecord::Base::PickleAdapter and DataMapper::Resource::PickleAdapter respectively.

See how to implement one by looking at the ones provided in the pickle source in lib/pickle/adapters/*

Configuring Pickle

You can tell pickle to use another factory adapter (see Pickle::Adapter), or create mappings from english expressions to pickle model names. You can also override many of the options on the Pickle::Config object if you so choose.

In: features/support/pickle.rb

require 'pickle/world'

Pickle.configure do |config|
  config.adapters = [:machinist, YourOwnAdapterClass]
  config.map 'me', 'myself', 'my', 'I', :to => 'user: "me"'
end

Out of the box pickle looks for machinist, then factory-girl, then finally active-record ‘factories’. If you find that your steps aren’t working with your factories, it’s probably the case that your factory setup is not being included in your cucumber environment (see comments above regarding machinist and factory-girl).

API

Steps

When you run script/generate pickle you get the following steps

Given steps

“Given a model exists”, e.g.

Given a user exists
Given a user: "fred" exists
Given the user exists

“Given a model exists with fields”, e.g.

Given a user exists with name: "Fred"
Given a user exists with name: "Fred", activated: false

You can refer to other models in the fields

Given a user exists
And a post exists with author: the user

Given a person: "fred" exists
And a person: "ethel" exists
And a fatherhood exists with parent: user "fred", child: user "ethel"

“Given n models exist”, e.g.

Given 10 users exist

“Given n models exist with fields”, examples:

Given 10 users exist with activated: false

“Given the following models exist:”, examples:

Given the following users exist
  | name  | activated |
  | Fred  | false     |
  | Ethel | true      |
Named machinist blueprints

“Given a named model exists with fields

The latest version of pickle supports named machinist blueprints.

If you had the following blueprints:

User.blueprint do
  name
  email
end

User.blueprint(:super_admin) do
  role { "admin" }
end

User.blueprint(:activated) do
  activated { true }
end

You could create a user with pickle by simply adding the name of the blueprint before the model:

Given a super admin user exists
And an activated user exists with name: "Fred"

This is much nicer than having to set up common configurations in your steps all the time, and far more readable to boot.

Then steps

Asserting existence of models

“Then a model should exist”, e.g.

Then a user should exist

“Then a model should exist with fields”, e.g.

Then a user: "fred" should exist with name: "Fred" # we can label the found user for later use

You can use other models, booleans, numerics, and strings as fields

Then a person should exist with child: person "ethel"
Then a user should exist with activated: false
Then a user should exist with activated: true, email: "fred@gmail.com"

“Then n models should exist”, e.g.

Then 10 events should exist

“Then n models should exist with fields”, e.g.

Then 2 people should exist with father: person "fred"

“Then the following models exist”. This allows the creation of multiple models using a table syntax. Using a column with the singularized name of the model creates a referenceable model. E.g.

Then the following users exist:
  | name   | activated |
  | Freddy | false     |

Then the following users exist:
  | user | name   | activated |
  | Fred | Freddy | false     |
Asserting associations

One-to-one assocs: “Then a model should be other model’s association”, e.g.

Then the person: "fred" should be person: "ethel"'s father

Many-to-one assocs: “Then a model should be [in|one of] other model’s association”, e.g.

Then the person: "ethel" should be one of person: "fred"'s children
Then the comment should be in the post's comments
Asserting predicate methods

“Then a model should [be|have] [a|an] predicate”, e.g.

Then the user should have a status # => user.status.should be_present
Then the user should have a stale password # => user.should have_stale_password
Then the car: "batmobile" should be fast # => car.should be_fast

“Then a model should not [be|have] [a|an] predicate”, e.g.

Then person: "fred" should not be childless # => fred.should_not be_childless

Regexps for use in your own steps

By default you get some regexps available in the main namespace for use in creating your own steps: ‘capture_model`, `capture_fields`, and others (see lib/pickle.rb)

(You can use any of the regexps that Pickle uses by using the Pickle.parser namespace, see Pickle::Parser::Matchers for the methods available)

capture_model

Given /^#{capture_model} exists$/ do |model_name|
  model(model_name).should_not == nil
end

Then /^I should be at the (.*?) page$/ |page|
  if page =~ /#{capture_model}'s/
    url_for(model($1))
  else
    # ...
  end
end

Then /^#{capture_model} should be one of #{capture_model}'s posts$/ do |post, forum|
  post = model!(post)
  forum = model!(forum)
  forum.posts.should include(post)
end

capture_fields

This is useful for setting attributes, and knows about pickle model names so that you can build up composite objects with ease

Given /^#{capture_model} exists with #{capture_fields}$/ do |model_name, fields|
  create_model(model_name, fields)
end

# example of use
Given a user exists
And a post exists with author: the user # this step will assign the above user as :author on the post

Run the tests

To run the specs do:

rake spec

To run the features (rails 2.3 only ATM):

rake cucumber

Contributors

The following people have made Pickle better:

About

(NOT MAINTAINED - Pickle 0.3.3 merged in the changes I made here.) Easy model creation/reference in cucumber - optionally leveraging your factories/blueprints

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Ruby 100.0%