Jan 15 2008

RSpec + JRuby

dastels @ 10:17 pm

My coworker, Paul Zabelin, posted here on some ideas that we’ve been experimenting with using RSpec stories and JRuby.

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Jan 15 2008

New and Improved: RSpec 1.1.2

dastels @ 3:48 am

Tonight RSpec-1.1.2 was released. See most of the details on David Chelimsky’s blog.

I take a personal interest in this release as it includes my first active submission to the codebase in some time.

The functionality I added relates to the definition of steps in the new story component. Up until now, you used a string to define a step. For example:

Given "a student named '$name'" do |name|
  #...
end

When "the student is given a grade of $grade" do |grade|
  #...
end

Then "the student should $pass_fail" do |pass_fail|
  #...
end

This would result in stories like the following:

Given a student named 'Mike'
When the student is given a grade of 40
Then the student should fail

Continually talking about “the student” is grating and very un-natural sounding. Sounds downright, bloody legalistic, actually. And a lawyer is the last thing we want to be accused of sounding like… other than maybe Denny Crane.

One approach to this would be to go to something like:

When "he is given a grade of $grade" do |grade|
  #...
end

Then "he should $pass_fail" do |pass_fail|
  #...
end

which would give us:

Given a student named "Mike"
When he is given a grade of 40
Then he should fail

Now, speaking of lawyers, we probably want to make this a little more PC and be able to do this:

Given a student named "Michelle"
When she is given a grade of 60
Then she should pass

We could conceivable create another set of steps for the feminine forms, refactoring to remove the duplication. That might suffice in the simple case, but it’s still rather crude. I’d like to be able to use a regular expression and create steps something like:

When /(he|she) is given a grade of (.*?)/ do |pronoun, grade|
  #...
end

Then /(he|she) should (.*?)/ do |pronoun, pass_fail|
  #...
end

With release 1.1.2, that’s exactly what you can do.

There are a couple things to point out:

  1. Alternatives need to be in a group to limit their scope.
  2. Whatever matches groups such as that (and any others) will be sent into the supplied block as arguments. As such they need to be accommodated by having a block parameter for each of them.
  3. Since this is already a regexp, no internal processing is done to it. With string step names, variables (of the form $<identifier>) are rewritten as (.*?). When using a regexp as the step name where there are variables, we much do this rewriting ourselves.

This new feature provides a new level of flexibility in defining story steps. Have fun with it.

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Oct 22 2006

Heard on IRC

admin @ 1:12 am

Mike Pence: “BDD is the shizzit… all the goodness of TDD with less religiosity and more practicality”

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Aug 30 2006

BDD-style JavaScript testing

admin @ 3:53 pm

BDD-style JavaScript testing:

“Borrowing from Behaviour Driven Development techniques, especially the RSpec framework I’ve added some new features to script.aculo.us™ testing library.”

(Via mir.aculo.us.)

Check it out!

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Aug 26 2006

One Expectation per Example: A Remake of “One Assertion Per Test”

admin @ 10:42 pm

In the fine tradition of Hollywood (who these days is remaking everything from old movies, comic books, and video games in lieu of coming up with original ideas) I am doing a remake of the very first post on my blog (which itself was a repost from my Artima.com blog from Feb 2004). The original post created quite a stir at the time, and lead to many of the ideas that have evolved my understanding of TDD and now BDD.


Once upon a time (early 2004) there was a bit of fuss on the testdrivendevelopment Yahoo group about the idea of limiting yourself to one assertion per test method, which is a guideline that others and I offer for TDD work.

An address parser was the example of a situation where it was argued that multiple assertions per test made sense. Date was formatted with one address per line, each in one of the following formats:

  1. ADDR1$ADDR2$CSP$COUNTRY
  2. ADDR1$ADDR2$CSP
  3. ADDR1$CSP$COUNTRY
  4. ADDR1$CSP

The poster went on to say:

My first inclination is/was to write a test like this (in Java but you get the idea):

a = CreateObject("Address")
a.GetAddressParts("ADDR1$ADDR2$CITY IL 60563$COUNTRY")
AssertEquals("ADDR1", a.Addr1)
AssertEquals("ADDR2", a.Addr2)
AssertEquals("CITY IL 60563", a.CityStatePostalCd)
AssertEquals("Country", a.Country)

They didn’t see how to achieve this with one assertion per test, as there are obviously four things to test in this case. I decided that rather than simply reply, I would write some tests and code to illustrate my view on the matter, and offer a solid response.

For the original post, I chose Squeak Smalltalk and Java. In this remake I’m going to use just Ruby. In the original I said “For the sake of conciseness, I’ll omit any required accessors.” Well.. this time around I’m not going to use any accessors, since I am more & more of the opinion that they are quite simply an idea whose sole purpose is to undermine the very essence of Object-Oriented software. I’ll also be using rSpec rather than an xUnit framework.

So, where to start? Well, it often makes sense to start with something simple to quickly and easily get some code written and working. Then it can be extended and evolved. Here the simplest case is: ADDR1$CSP. There are two requirements in the parsing of this example: that the ADDR1 was recognized, and that the CSP was recognized. Viewed this way, we need two examples.

If we want to avoid accessors (and for this exercise, I do) we need another way to see inside the object were working with. This is an address.. let’s say (for the sake of argument & this exercise) that one of the purposes of having an address is to generate address labels of some sort. We could do that with an address label maker object that would interrogate the address object for it’s contents and use them. A better way is to have an address label builder that the address object gives information to. It would have methods such as street_number=, csp=, etc. This is something that we can use Mocks Objects for in our examples.

So, let’s start with an example for ADDR1:

context "An address with street & csp" do

  specify "should capture street information" do
    builder = mock("builder", null_object => true)
    builder.should_receive(:addr1=).once.with("ADDR1")
    addr = Address.from_string("ADDR1$CITY IL 60563")
    addr.use(builder)
  end

end

To get this to pass we need an Address class, a from_string factory method, and a use method.

class Address
  def self.from_string(address_string)
    Address.new
  end

  def use(a_builder)
  end
end

This lets our spec run and fail:

An address with street & csp
- should capture street information (FAILED - 1)

1)
Spec::Api::MockExpectationError in 'An address with street & csp should capture street information'
Mock 'builder' expected 'street=' once, but received it 0 times
./address_spec.rb:7:in `'

Finished in 0.003395 seconds

1 specification, 1 failure

Now let’s make that work:

class Address
  def self.from_string(address_string)
    addr1, rest = address_string.split('$')
    Address.new(addr1)
  end

  def initialize(addr1)
    @addr1 = addr1
  end

  def use(a_builder)
    a_builder.addr1 = @addr1
  end
end

This makes the example work:

An address with street & csp
- should capture street information

Finished in 0.003003 seconds

1 specification, 0 failures

That’s well & good. The next test is for CSP.

specify "should capture csp information" do
  builder = mock("builder", :null_object => true)
  builder.should_receive(:csp=).once.with("CITY IL 60563")
  addr = Address.from_string("ADDR1$CITY IL 60563")
  addr.use(builder)
end

Resulting in:

An address with street & csp
- should capture street information
- should capture street information (FAILED - 1)

1)
Spec::Api::MockExpectationError in 'An address with street & csp should capture street information'
Mock 'builder' expected 'csp=' once, but received it 0 times
./address_spec.rb:15:in `'

Finished in 0.005866 seconds

2 specifications, 1 failure

Address#from_string will need to be extended (and we need to add csp support):

class Address
  def self.from_string(address_string)
    addr1, csp, rest = address_string.split('$')
    Address.new(addr1, csp)
  end

  def initialize(addr1, csp)
    @addr1 = addr1
    @csp = csp
  end

  def use(a_builder)
    a_builder.addr1 = @addr1
    a_builder.csp = @csp
  end
end

So. We have two tests for this one situation. Notice the duplication in the tests… the creation of builder & address. This is the context. After refactoring, we have:

require 'address'

context "An address with street & csp" do

  setup do
    @builder = mock("builder", :null_object => true)
    @addr = Address.from_string("ADDR1$CITY IL 60563")
  end

  specify "should capture street information" do
    @builder.should_receive(:addr1=).once.with("ADDR1")
    @addr.use(@builder)
  end

  specify "should capture csp information" do
    @builder.should_receive(:csp=).once.with("CITY IL 60563")
    @addr.use(@builder)
  end
end

So, a context that creates the Address instance from the string as well as the mock, and very simple examples that focus on each aspect of that context.

Note that we don’t have any direct expectations in these examples… What’s up? Well, the mock is autoverifying itself at the end of each example, and that is where our expectations are.. on @address’s interaction with the mock.

The next simplest case is the obvious choice for the next context:

context "An address with street, csp, and country" do

  setup do
    @builder = mock("builder", :null_object => true)
    @addr = Address.from_string("ADDR1$CITY IL 60563$COUNTRY")
  end

end

This set of tests will include ones for addr1 and csp as before (since that behaviour is required in this new context) as well as a new test for country:

specify "should capture country information" do
  @builder.should_receive(:country=).once.with("COUNTRY")
  @addr.use(@builder)
end

As before, an instance variable and such need to be added to the Address class.

This drives Address to evolve:

class Address
  def self.from_string(address_string)
    addr1, csp, country, rest = address_string.split('$')
    Address.new(addr1, csp, country)
  end

  def initialize(addr1, csp, country)
    @addr1 = addr1
    @csp = csp
    @country = country
  end

  def use(a_builder)
    a_builder.addr1 = @addr1
    a_builder.csp = @csp
    a_builder.country = @country
  end
end

Now that we are supporting country, we can go back to the first context and add an example specifying that no country information should be provided to the builder:

specify "should not capture country information" do
  @builder.should_not_receive(:country=)
  @addr.use(@builder)
end

A slight tweak to Address#use will make this work:

def use(a_builder)
  a_builder.addr1 = @addr1
  a_builder.csp = @csp
  a_builder.country = @country unless @country.nil?
end

From here on, the evolution gets a bit more complex, as we add the ADDR2 option to the mix.

The final code and output is:

address_spec.rb

require 'address'

context "An address with street & csp" do

  setup do
    @builder = mock("builder", :null_object => true)
    @addr = Address.from_string("ADDR1$CITY IL 60563")
  end

  specify "should capture street information" do
    @builder.should_receive(:addr1=).once.with("ADDR1")
    @addr.use(@builder)
  end

  specify "should capture csp information" do
    @builder.should_receive(:csp=).once.with("CITY IL 60563")
    @addr.use(@builder)
  end

  specify "should not capture country information" do
    @builder.should_not_receive(:country=)
    @addr.use(@builder)
  end
end

context "An address with street, csp, and country" do

  setup do
    @builder = mock("builder", :null_object => true)
    @addr = Address.from_string("ADDR1$CITY IL 60563$COUNTRY")
  end

  specify "should capture street information" do
    @builder.should_receive(:addr1=).once.with("ADDR1")
    @addr.use(@builder)
  end

  specify "should capture csp information" do
    @builder.should_receive(:csp=).once.with("CITY IL 60563")
    @addr.use(@builder)
  end

  specify "should capture country information" do
    @builder.should_receive(:country=).once.with("COUNTRY")
    @addr.use(@builder)
  end
end

address.rb

class Address
  def self.from_string(address_string)
    addr1, csp, country, rest = address_string.split('$')
    Address.new(addr1, csp, country)
  end

  def initialize(addr1, csp, country)
    @addr1 = addr1
    @csp = csp
    @country = country
  end

  def use(a_builder)
    a_builder.addr1 = @addr1
    a_builder.csp = @csp
    a_builder.country = @country unless @country.nil?
  end
end

spec output

An address with street & csp
- should capture street information
- should capture csp information
- should not capture country information

An address with street, csp, and country
- should capture street information
- should capture csp information
- should capture country information

Finished in 0.014 seconds

6 specifications, 0 failures

Conclusion

So we took a situation that was thought to require multiple assertions/expectations in a test/example and did it in such as way as to have only one per.

The key is that instead of using a single context with a complex (i.e. multiple expectation) example for each situation, we made each of those situations into a separate context. Now each example focuses on a very small, specific aspect of the behaviour dealt with by its context.

I’m convinced writing examples like this is a useful approach. One advantage is that the resulting examples are simpler and easier to understand. Just as important, and maybe more so, is that by adding the specification of the behavior one tiny piece at a time, you drive toward evolving the code in small, controllable, understandable steps.

It also fits better into the context centered approach that is the recommended way to organize your examples. We set up the object being worked on in setup, and wrote examples of it’s behaviour in that particular context in individual specify clauses.

As I was writing this back in early 2004, something clicked. I saw these test methods (as they are in jUnit/test::unit) as specifications of tiny facets of the required behavior. Thus, it made sense to me to be as gradual as possible about it, driving the evolution of the code in the smallest steps possible. Striving for one assertion per test is a way to do that. This epiphany was one of the main drivers in my deepening understanding of what has been called Test Driven Development (and which we are now considering an aspect of Behaviour Driven Development)

If, however, you view test methods as strictly performing verification, then I can see how it might be seen to make sense to invoke some code and then test all the postconditions. But this view is not TDD (and certainly not BDD), and doesn’t buy you all of the benefits that are possible. I contend that central to TDD is this notion of working in the smallest steps possible, both for the finest-grained long-term verification, and for the most flexible design evolution. Furthermore, this is best done by striving to keep tests/examples as small, focused and simple as possible.

Aiming for one expectation each is one way to get there.

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Aug 12 2006

BDD

admin @ 5:55 pm

Keith Ray posted a comment/followup to my original BDD article here.

Excerpt:

By the way, I HATE saying TDD is ‘not about the testing’. I have to say it now and then because of people not realizing it’s about designing, rather than testing. The fact that the word ‘test’ is in the name just helps confuse the issue. My preference for naming this design technique, is to call it ‘Behavior Driven Design’. Or ‘Behavior-Spec Driven Design’. With BSDD, I could say BSDD is about the behavior-specs, but mostly about driving design.

(Via Keith Ray.)

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Jul 02 2006

Manual for sSpec

admin @ 8:55 pm

I finished the first cut of the sSpec manual. It’s sparse in places and needs some fleshing out. Feedback appreciated.

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Jul 02 2006

Another Push of sSpec

admin @ 7:32 pm

Version 0.11 of sSpec just got published. This one has much improved failure messages. Thanks to the folks on the Cincom smalltalk irc channel for their help, especially rh & jarober.

For those without a pub Store account.. get one :) or for now.. here’s the parcel files.

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Jul 02 2006

New version of sSpec

admin @ 3:19 pm

I just pushed version 0.10 of sSpec to the Cincom public store. It includes several small tweaks as well as support for ordering mock expectations.

A first pass at a reference manual is forthcoming shortly.

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Jul 01 2006

sSpec is ready for use

admin @ 2:37 pm

As the title says, sSpec is ready to be used. At the moment it’s for VisualWorks only (tested on 7.4 and 7.4.1) and is in the Cincom Public Store Repository. Load the bundle “SSpec”.

Documentation is on the way as well. For starters here’s a quick reference card.

For now most of the information on rspec.rubyforge.org is directly applicable.

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