lookout 2.0.1
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- data/README +645 -0
- data/Rakefile +9 -0
- data/lib/lookout.rb +34 -0
- data/lib/lookout/aphonic.rb +40 -0
- data/lib/lookout/benchmark.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff.rb +10 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/algorithms.rb +5 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/algorithms/difflib.rb +38 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/algorithms/difflib/position.rb +92 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/algorithms/difflib/position/to.rb +47 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/formats.rb +7 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/formats/hash.rb +53 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/formats/inline.rb +39 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/formats/unified.rb +57 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/group.rb +61 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/groups.rb +34 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/match.rb +36 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/operation.rb +33 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/operations.rb +36 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/operations/delete.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/operations/equal.rb +27 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/operations/insert.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/operations/replace.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/lookout/diff/range.rb +91 -0
- data/lib/lookout/equality.rb +178 -0
- data/lib/lookout/expectation.rb +50 -0
- data/lib/lookout/expectations.rb +62 -0
- data/lib/lookout/expectations/behavior.rb +20 -0
- data/lib/lookout/expectations/state.rb +29 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock.rb +18 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method.rb +70 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/arguments.rb +33 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/arguments/any.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/arguments/anything.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/arguments/list.rb +15 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/arguments/none.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/arguments/one.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/calls.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/calls/class.rb +21 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/calls/exactly.rb +28 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/calls/instance.rb +25 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/calls/lower.rb +22 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/method/calls/upper.rb +22 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/methods.rb +12 -0
- data/lib/lookout/mock/object.rb +12 -0
- data/lib/lookout/object.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/lookout/output.rb +21 -0
- data/lib/lookout/rake/tasks.rb +36 -0
- data/lib/lookout/rake/tasks/gem.rb +49 -0
- data/lib/lookout/rake/tasks/tags.rb +16 -0
- data/lib/lookout/rake/tasks/test.rb +46 -0
- data/lib/lookout/rake/tasks/test/loader.rb +19 -0
- data/lib/lookout/recorder.rb +45 -0
- data/lib/lookout/recorder/not.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/lookout/recorder/tape.rb +21 -0
- data/lib/lookout/recorders.rb +6 -0
- data/lib/lookout/recorders/reception.rb +47 -0
- data/lib/lookout/recorders/state.rb +35 -0
- data/lib/lookout/result.rb +23 -0
- data/lib/lookout/results.rb +46 -0
- data/lib/lookout/results/error.rb +18 -0
- data/lib/lookout/results/error/exception.rb +36 -0
- data/lib/lookout/results/error/exception/backtrace.rb +41 -0
- data/lib/lookout/results/failure.rb +16 -0
- data/lib/lookout/results/failures.rb +6 -0
- data/lib/lookout/results/failures/behavior.rb +4 -0
- data/lib/lookout/results/failures/state.rb +4 -0
- data/lib/lookout/results/fulfilled.rb +9 -0
- data/lib/lookout/runners.rb +5 -0
- data/lib/lookout/runners/console.rb +22 -0
- data/lib/lookout/stub.rb +16 -0
- data/lib/lookout/stub/method.rb +105 -0
- data/lib/lookout/stub/methods.rb +18 -0
- data/lib/lookout/stub/object.rb +11 -0
- data/lib/lookout/ui.rb +7 -0
- data/lib/lookout/ui/console.rb +36 -0
- data/lib/lookout/ui/silent.rb +12 -0
- data/lib/lookout/version.rb +5 -0
- data/lib/lookout/xml.rb +17 -0
- data/test/unit/examples.rb +169 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout.rb +7 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff.rb +4 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/algorithms/difflib.rb +56 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/algorithms/difflib/position.rb +92 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/algorithms/difflib/position/to.rb +12 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/formats/inline.rb +17 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/formats/unified.rb +67 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/group.rb +4 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/groups.rb +102 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/match.rb +5 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/operations.rb +22 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/operations/delete.rb +45 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/operations/equal.rb +45 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/operations/insert.rb +45 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/operations/replace.rb +45 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/diff/range.rb +50 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/equality.rb +113 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/expectation.rb +39 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/expectations.rb +58 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/expectations/behavior.rb +35 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/expectations/state.rb +29 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/mock.rb +4 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/mock/method.rb +143 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/mock/method/arguments.rb +57 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/mock/method/arguments/any.rb +11 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/recorder.rb +11 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/results.rb +30 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/results/error.rb +7 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/results/failures/behavior.rb +7 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/results/failures/state.rb +7 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/results/fulfilled.rb +7 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/runners/console.rb +4 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/stub.rb +4 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/stub/method.rb +48 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/ui/formatters/exception.rb +5 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/ui/formatters/exception/backtrace.rb +11 -0
- data/test/unit/lookout/xml.rb +55 -0
- metadata +496 -0
data/README
ADDED
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# Lookout #
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Lookout is a lightweight unit testing framework. Tests (expectations) can be
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written as follows
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expect 2 do
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1 + 1
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end
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expect NoMethodError do
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Object.invalid_method_call
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end
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Lookout is designed to encourage – force, even – unit testing best practices
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such as
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* Setting up only one expectation per test
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* Not setting expectations on non-public APIs
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* Test isolation
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This is done by
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* Only allowing one expectation to be set per test
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* Providing no (additonal) way of accessing private state
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* Providing no setup and teardown methods, nor a method of providing test
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helpers
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Other important points are
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* A unified syntax for setting up both state-based and behavior-based
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expectations
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* A focus on code readability by providing no mechanism for describing an
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expectation other than the code in the expectation itself
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The way Lookout works has been heavily influenced by [expectations], by [Jay
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Fields][]. The code base was once also heavily based on [expectations],
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based at Subversion [revision r76][]. A lot has happened since then and all of the
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work past that revision are due to [Nikolai Weibull][].
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[expectations]: http://expectations.rubyforge.org
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[Jay Fields]: http://blog.jayfields.com
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[revision r76]: https://github.com/now/lookout/commit/537bedf3e5b3eb4b31c066b3266f42964ac35ebe
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[Nikolai Weibull]: http://bitwi.se
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## Installation ##
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Install Lookout with
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% gem install lookout
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## Usage ##
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Lookout allows you to set expectations on an object’s state or behavior. We’ll
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begin by looking at state expectations and then take a look at expectations on
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behavior.
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### Expectations on State ###
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An expectation can be made on the result of a computation:
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expect 2 do
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1 + 1
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end
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Most objects, in fact, have their state expectations checked by invoking `#==`
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on the expected value with the result as its argument.
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Checking that a result is within a given range is also simple:
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expect 0.099..0.101 do
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0.4 - 0.3
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end
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Here, the more general `#===` is being used on the `Range`.
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`Strings` of course match against `Strings`:
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expect 'ab' do
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'abc'[0..1]
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end
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but we can also match a `String` against a `Regexp`:
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expect %r{a substring} do
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'a string with a substring'
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end
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(Please note the use of `%r{…}` to avoid warnings that will be generated when
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Ruby parses `expect /…/`.)
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Checking that the result includes a certain module is done by expecting the
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`Module`.
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expect Enumerable do
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[]
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end
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This, due to the nature of Ruby, of course also works for classes (as they are
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also modules):
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expect String do
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'a string'
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end
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This doesn’t hinder us from expecting the actual `Module` itself:
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expect Enumerable do
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Enumerable
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end
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As you may have figured out yourself, this is accomplished by first trying
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`#==` and, if it returns `false`, then trying `#===` on the expected `Module`.
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This is also true of `Ranges` and `Regexps`.
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Truthfulness is expected with `true` and `false`:
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expect true do
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1
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end
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expect false do
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nil
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end
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Results equaling `true` or `false` are slightly different:
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expect TrueClass do
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true
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end
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expect FalseClass do
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false
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end
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The rationale for this is that you should only care if the result of a
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computation evaluates to a value that Ruby considers to be either true or
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false, not the exact literals `true` or `false`.
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Expecting output on an IO object is also common:
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expect output("abc\ndef\n") do |io|
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io.puts 'abc', 'def'
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end
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This can be used to capture the output of a formatter that takes an output
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object as a parameter.
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You should always be expecting errors from – and in, but that’s a different
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story – your code:
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expect NoMethodError do
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Object.no_method
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end
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Often, not only the type of the error, but its description, is important to
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check:
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expect StandardError.new('message') do
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raise StandardError.new('message')
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end
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As with `Strings`, `Regexps` can be used to check the error description:
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expect StandardError.new(/mess/) do
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raise StandardError.new('message')
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end
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(Note that some of Ruby’s built-in error classes have slightly complicated
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behavior and will not allow you to pass a `Regexp` as a parameter. `NameError`
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is such a class. This may warrant further investigation into whether or not
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this is a bug, but I’ll leave that up to the reader to decide.)
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Lookout further provides a fluent way of setting up expectations on boolean
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results. An object can “be”
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expect Class.new{ attr_accessor :running; }.new.to.be.running do |process|
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process.running = true
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end
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or “not be”
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expect Class.new{ attr_accessor :running; }.new.not.to.be.running do |process|
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process.running = false
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end
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or to “have”
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expect Class.new{ attr_accessor :finished; }.new.to.have.finished do |process|
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process.finished = true
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end
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or “not have”
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expect Class.new{ attr_accessor :finished; }.new.not.to.have.finished do |process|
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process.finished = false
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end
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On the same note
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expect nil.to.be.nil?
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and
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expect Object.new.not.to.be.nil?
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As not every boolean method “is” or “has” you can even
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expect nil.to.respond_to? :nil?
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The rules here are that all `Objects` respond to `#to`. After `#to` you may
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call
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* `#not`
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* `#be`
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* `#have`
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* Any method whose name ends with `?`
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A call to `#not` must be followed by a call to one of the three alternatives
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that follow it in the list. `#Be` and `#Have` must be followed by a call to a
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method.
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### Expectations on Behavior ###
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We expect our objects to be on their best behavior. Lookout allows you to make
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sure that they are.
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Mocks let use verify that a method is called in the way that we expect it to
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be:
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expect mock.to.receive.dial('2125551212').twice do |phone|
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phone.dial('2125551212')
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phone.dial('2125551212')
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end
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Here, `#mock` creates a mock object, an object that doesn’t respond to
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anything unless you tell it to. We tell it to expect to receive a call to
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`#dail` with `'2125551212'` as its formal argument, and we expect it to receive
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it twice. The mock object is then passed in to the block so that the
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expectations placed upon it can be fulfilled.
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Sometimes we only want to make sure that a method is called in the way that we
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expect it to be, but we don’t care if any other methods are called on the
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object. A stub object, created with `#stub`, expects any method and returns a
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stub object that, again, expects any method, and thus fits the bill.
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expect stub.to.receive.dial('2125551212').twice do |phone|
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phone.dial('2125551212')
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phone.hangup
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phone.dial('2125551212')
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end
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We can also use stubs without any expectations on them:
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expect 3 do
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s = stub(:a => 1, :b => 2)
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s.a + s.b
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end
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and we can stub out a specific method on an object:
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expect 'def' do
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a = 'abc'
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stub(a).to_str{ 'def' }
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a.to_str
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end
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You don’t have to use a mock object to verify that a method is called:
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expect Object.to.receive.deal do
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Object.deal
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end
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As you have figured out by now, the expected method call is set up by calling
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`#receive` after `#to`. `#Receive` is followed by a call to the method to
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expect with any expected arguments. The body of the mocked method can be given
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as the block to the method. Finally, an expected invocation count may follow
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the method. Let’s look at this formal specification in more detail.
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The expected method arguments may be given in a variety of ways. Let’s
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introduce them by giving some examples:
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expect mock.to.receive.a do |m|
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…
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end
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Here, the method `#a` must be called with any number of arguments. It may be
|
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|
+
called any number of times, but it must be called at least once.
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
If a method must receive exactly one argument, you can use `arg`:
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
expect mock.to.receive.a(arg) do |m|
|
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|
+
…
|
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|
+
end
|
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|
+
|
297
|
+
If a method must receive a specific argument, you can use that argument:
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
expect mock.to.receive.a(1..2) do |m|
|
300
|
+
…
|
301
|
+
end
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
The same matching rules apply for arguments as they do for state expectations,
|
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|
+
so the previous example expects a call to `#a` with 1, 2, or the Range 1..2 as
|
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|
+
an argument on `m`.
|
306
|
+
|
307
|
+
If a method must be invoked without any arguments you can use
|
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|
+
`without_arguments`:
|
309
|
+
|
310
|
+
expect mock.to.receive.a(without_arguments) do |m|
|
311
|
+
…
|
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|
+
end
|
313
|
+
|
314
|
+
You can of course use both `arg` and actual arguments:
|
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|
+
|
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|
+
expect mock.to.receive.a(arg, 1, arg) do |m|
|
317
|
+
…
|
318
|
+
end
|
319
|
+
|
320
|
+
The body of the mock method may be given as the block. Here, calling `#a` on
|
321
|
+
`m` will give the result `1`:
|
322
|
+
|
323
|
+
expect mock.to.receive.a{ 1 } do |m|
|
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|
+
…
|
325
|
+
end
|
326
|
+
|
327
|
+
If no body has been given, the result will be a stub object.
|
328
|
+
|
329
|
+
There is a caveat here in that a block can’t yield in Ruby 1.8. To work around
|
330
|
+
this deficiency you have to use the `#yield` method:
|
331
|
+
|
332
|
+
expect mock.to.receive.a.yield(1) do |m|
|
333
|
+
…
|
334
|
+
end
|
335
|
+
|
336
|
+
Any number of values to yield upon successive calls may be given. The last
|
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|
+
value given will be used repeatedly when all preceding values have been
|
338
|
+
consumed. It’s also important to know that values are splatted when they are
|
339
|
+
yielded.
|
340
|
+
|
341
|
+
To simulate an `#each`-like method you can use `#each`. The following horrible
|
342
|
+
example should give you an idea of how to use it.
|
343
|
+
|
344
|
+
expect Object.new.to.receive.each.each(1, 2, 3) do |o|
|
345
|
+
class << o
|
346
|
+
include Enumerable
|
347
|
+
end
|
348
|
+
o.inject{ |i, a| i + a }
|
349
|
+
end
|
350
|
+
|
351
|
+
Invocation count expectations can also be set if the default expectation of
|
352
|
+
“at least once” isn’t good enough. The following expectations are possible
|
353
|
+
|
354
|
+
* `#at_most_once`
|
355
|
+
* `#once`
|
356
|
+
* `#at_least_once`
|
357
|
+
* `#twice`
|
358
|
+
|
359
|
+
And, for a given `N`,
|
360
|
+
|
361
|
+
* `#at_most(N)`
|
362
|
+
* `#exactly(N)`
|
363
|
+
* `#at_least(N)`
|
364
|
+
|
365
|
+
Method stubs are another useful thing to have in a unit testing framework.
|
366
|
+
Sometimes you need to override a method that does something a test shouldn’t
|
367
|
+
do, like access and alter bank accounts. We can override – stub out – a method
|
368
|
+
by using the `#stub` method. Let’s assume that we have an `Account` class that
|
369
|
+
has two methods, `#slips` and `#total`. `#Slips` retrieves the bank slips that
|
370
|
+
keep track of your deposits to the `Account` from a database. `#Total` sums
|
371
|
+
the `#slips`. In the following test we want to make sure that `#total` does
|
372
|
+
what it should do without accessing the database. We therefore stub out
|
373
|
+
`#slips` and make it return something that we can easily control.
|
374
|
+
|
375
|
+
expect 6 do |m|
|
376
|
+
account = Account.new
|
377
|
+
stub(account).slips{ [1, 2, 3] }
|
378
|
+
account.total
|
379
|
+
end
|
380
|
+
|
381
|
+
As with mock methods, if no body is given, the result will be a stub object.
|
382
|
+
|
383
|
+
To make it easy to create objects with a set of stubbed methods there’s also a
|
384
|
+
convenience method:
|
385
|
+
|
386
|
+
expect 3 do
|
387
|
+
s = stub(:a => 1, :b => 2)
|
388
|
+
s.a + s.b
|
389
|
+
end
|
390
|
+
|
391
|
+
Please note that this makes it impossible to stub a method on a Hash, but you
|
392
|
+
shouldn’t be doing that anyway. In fact, you should never mock or stub methods
|
393
|
+
on value objects.
|
394
|
+
|
395
|
+
## Integration ##
|
396
|
+
|
397
|
+
Lookout can be used from [Rake][]. Simply include the following code in your
|
398
|
+
`Rakefile`:
|
399
|
+
|
400
|
+
require 'lookout/rake/tasks'
|
401
|
+
|
402
|
+
Lookout::Rake::Tasks::Test.new
|
403
|
+
|
404
|
+
If the `:default` task hasn’t been defined it will be set to depend on the
|
405
|
+
`:test` task.
|
406
|
+
|
407
|
+
As an added bonus you can use Lookouts own [gem][RubyGems] tasks:
|
408
|
+
|
409
|
+
Lookout::Rake::Tasks::Gem.new
|
410
|
+
|
411
|
+
This provides tasks to `build`, `check`, `install`, and `push` your gem.
|
412
|
+
|
413
|
+
To use Lookout together with [Vim][], place `contrib/rakelookout.vim` in
|
414
|
+
`~/.vim/compiler` and add
|
415
|
+
|
416
|
+
compiler rakelookout
|
417
|
+
|
418
|
+
to `~/.vim/after/ftplugin/ruby.vim`. Executing `:make` from inside [Vim][]
|
419
|
+
will now run your tests and an errors and failures can be visited with
|
420
|
+
`:cnext`. Execute `:help quickfix` for additional information.
|
421
|
+
|
422
|
+
Another useful addition to your `~/.vim/after/ftplugin/ruby.vim` file may be
|
423
|
+
|
424
|
+
nnoremap <buffer> <silent> <Leader>M <Esc>:call <SID>run_test()<CR>
|
425
|
+
let b:undo_ftplugin .= ' | nunmap <buffer> <Leader>M'
|
426
|
+
|
427
|
+
function! s:run_test()
|
428
|
+
let test = expand('%')
|
429
|
+
let line = 'LINE=' . line('.')
|
430
|
+
if test =~ '^lib/'
|
431
|
+
let test = substitute(test, '^lib/', 'test/', '')
|
432
|
+
let line = ""
|
433
|
+
endif
|
434
|
+
execute 'make' 'TEST=' . shellescape(test) line
|
435
|
+
endfunction
|
436
|
+
|
437
|
+
Now, pressing `<Leader>M` will either run all tests for a given class, if the
|
438
|
+
implementation file is active, or run the test at or just before the cursor, if
|
439
|
+
the test file is active. This is useful if you’re currently receiving a lot of
|
440
|
+
errors and/or failures and want to focus on those associated with a specific
|
441
|
+
class or on a specific test.
|
442
|
+
|
443
|
+
[Rake]: http://rake.rubyforge.org
|
444
|
+
[RubyGems]: http://rubygems.org
|
445
|
+
|
446
|
+
## Interface Design ##
|
447
|
+
|
448
|
+
The default output of Lookout can Spartanly be described as Spartan. If no
|
449
|
+
errors or failures occur, no output is generated. This is unconventional, as
|
450
|
+
unit testing frameworks tend to dump a lot of information on the user,
|
451
|
+
concerning things such as progress, test count summaries, and flamboyantly
|
452
|
+
colored text telling you that your tests passed. None of this output is
|
453
|
+
needed. Your tests should run fast enough to not require progress reports.
|
454
|
+
The lack of output provides you with the same amount of information as
|
455
|
+
reporting success. Test count summaries are only useful if you’re worried that
|
456
|
+
your tests aren’t being run, but if you worry about that, then providing such
|
457
|
+
output doesn’t really help. Testing your tests requires something beyond
|
458
|
+
reporting some arbitrary count that you would have to verify by hand anyway.
|
459
|
+
|
460
|
+
When errors or failures do occur, however, the relevant information is output
|
461
|
+
in a format that can easily be parsed by an `'errorformat'` for [Vim][] or with
|
462
|
+
[Compilation Mode][] for [Emacs][]. Diffs are generated for Strings, Arrays,
|
463
|
+
Hashes, and I/O.
|
464
|
+
|
465
|
+
[Vim]: http://www.vim.org
|
466
|
+
[Compilation Mode]: http://www.emacswiki.org/emacs/CompilationMode
|
467
|
+
[Emacs]: http://www.gnu.org/software/emacs/
|
468
|
+
|
469
|
+
## External Design ##
|
470
|
+
|
471
|
+
Let’s now look at some of the points made in the introduction in greater
|
472
|
+
detail.
|
473
|
+
|
474
|
+
Lookout only allows you to set one expectation per test. If you’re testing
|
475
|
+
behavior with a mock, then only one method-invocation expectation can be set.
|
476
|
+
If you’re testing state, then only one result can be verified. It may seem
|
477
|
+
like this would cause unnecessary duplication between tests. While this is
|
478
|
+
certainly a possibility, when you actually begin to try to avoid such
|
479
|
+
duplication you find that you often do so by improving your interfaces. This
|
480
|
+
kind of restriction tends to encourage the use of value objects, which are easy
|
481
|
+
to test, and more focused objects, which require simpler tests, as they have
|
482
|
+
less behavior to test, per method. By keeping your interfaces focused you’re
|
483
|
+
also keeping your tests focused.
|
484
|
+
|
485
|
+
Keeping your tests focused improves, in itself, test isolation, but let’s look
|
486
|
+
at something that hinders it: setup and teardown methods. Most unit testing
|
487
|
+
frameworks encourage test fragmentation by providing setup and teardown
|
488
|
+
methods.
|
489
|
+
|
490
|
+
Setup methods create objects and, perhaps, just their behavior for a set of
|
491
|
+
tests. This means that you have to look in two places to figure out what’s
|
492
|
+
being done in a test. This may work fine for few methods with simple set-ups,
|
493
|
+
but makes things complicated when the number of tests increases and the set-up
|
494
|
+
is complex. Often, each test further adjusts the previously set-up object
|
495
|
+
before performing any verifications, further complicating the process of
|
496
|
+
figuring out what state an object has in a given test.
|
497
|
+
|
498
|
+
Teardown methods clean up after tests, perhaps by removing records from a
|
499
|
+
database or deleting files from the file-system.
|
500
|
+
|
501
|
+
The duplication that setup methods and teardown methods hope to remove is
|
502
|
+
better avoided by improving your interfaces. This can be done by providing
|
503
|
+
better set-up methods for your objects and using idioms such as [Resource
|
504
|
+
Acquisition Is Initialization][] for guaranteed clean-up, test or no test.
|
505
|
+
|
506
|
+
By not using setup and teardown methods we keep everything pertinent to a test
|
507
|
+
in the test itself, thus improving test isolation. (You also won’t [slow down
|
508
|
+
your tests][Broken Test::Unit] by keeping unnecessary state.)
|
509
|
+
|
510
|
+
Most unit test frameworks also allow you to create arbitrary test helper
|
511
|
+
methods. Lookout doesn’t. The same rationale as that that has been
|
512
|
+
crystallized in the preceding paragraphs applies. If you need helpers you’re
|
513
|
+
interface isn’t good enough. It really is as simple as that.
|
514
|
+
|
515
|
+
To clarify: there’s nothing inherently wrong with test helper methods, but they
|
516
|
+
should be general enough that they reside in their own library. The support
|
517
|
+
for mocks in Lookout is provided through a set of test helper methods that make
|
518
|
+
it easier to create mocks than it would have been without them.
|
519
|
+
[Lookout-rack][] is another example of a library providing test helper methods
|
520
|
+
(well, one of method, actually) that are very useful in testing web
|
521
|
+
applications that use [Rack][].
|
522
|
+
|
523
|
+
A final point at which some unit test frameworks try to fragment tests further
|
524
|
+
is documentation. These frameworks provide ways of describing the whats and
|
525
|
+
hows of what’s being tested, the rationale being that this will provide
|
526
|
+
documentation of both the test and the code being tested. Describing how a
|
527
|
+
stack data structure is meant to work is a common example. A stack is,
|
528
|
+
however, a rather simple data structure, so such a description provides little,
|
529
|
+
if any, additional information that can’t be extracted from the implementation
|
530
|
+
and its tests themselves. The implementation and its tests is, in fact, its
|
531
|
+
own best documentation. Taking the points made in the previous paragraphs into
|
532
|
+
account, we should already have simple, self-describing, interfaces that have
|
533
|
+
easily understood tests associated with them. Rationales for the use of a
|
534
|
+
given data structure or system-design design documentation is better suited in
|
535
|
+
separate documentation focused at describing exactly those issues.
|
536
|
+
|
537
|
+
[Resource Acquisition Is Initialization]: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Resource_Acquisition_Is_Initialization
|
538
|
+
[Broken Test::Unit]: http://37signals.com/svn/posts/2742-the-road-to-faster-tests
|
539
|
+
[Lookout-rack]: http://github.com/now/lookout-rack
|
540
|
+
[Rack]: http://rack.rubyforge.org
|
541
|
+
|
542
|
+
## Internal Design ##
|
543
|
+
|
544
|
+
The internal design of Lookout has had a couple of goals.
|
545
|
+
|
546
|
+
* As few external dependencies as possible
|
547
|
+
* As few internal dependencies as possible
|
548
|
+
* Internal extensibility provides external extensibility
|
549
|
+
* As fast load times as possible
|
550
|
+
* As high a ratio of value objects to mutable objects as possible
|
551
|
+
* Each object must have a simple, obvious name
|
552
|
+
* Use mix-ins, not inheritance for shared behavior
|
553
|
+
* As few responsibilities per object as possible
|
554
|
+
* Optimizing for speed can only be done when you have all the facts
|
555
|
+
|
556
|
+
### External Dependencies ###
|
557
|
+
|
558
|
+
Lookout used to depend on Mocha for mocks and stubs. While benchmarking I
|
559
|
+
noticed that a method in Mocha was taking up more than 300 percent of the
|
560
|
+
runtime. It turned out that Mocha’s method for cleaning up back-traces
|
561
|
+
generated when a mock failed was doing something incredibly stupid:
|
562
|
+
|
563
|
+
backtrace.reject{ |l| Regexp.new(@lib).match(File.expand_path(l)) }
|
564
|
+
|
565
|
+
Here `@lib` is a `String` containing the path to the lib subdirectory in the
|
566
|
+
Mocha installation directory. I reported it, provided a patch five days later,
|
567
|
+
then waited. Nothing happened. 254 days later, according to [Wolfram
|
568
|
+
Alpha][254 days], half of my patch was, apparently – I say “apparently”, as I
|
569
|
+
received no notification – applied. By that time I had replaced the whole
|
570
|
+
mocking-and-stubbing subsystem and dropped the dependency.
|
571
|
+
|
572
|
+
Many Ruby developers claim that Ruby and its gems are too fast-moving for
|
573
|
+
normal package-managing systems to keep up. This is testament to the fact
|
574
|
+
that this isn’t the case and that the real problem is instead related to sloppy
|
575
|
+
practices.
|
576
|
+
|
577
|
+
Please note that I don’t want to single out the Mocha library nor its
|
578
|
+
developers. I only want to provide an example where relying on external
|
579
|
+
dependencies can be “considered harmful”.
|
580
|
+
|
581
|
+
[254 days]: http://www.wolframalpha.com/input/?i=days+between+march+17%2C+2010+and+november+26%2C+2010
|
582
|
+
|
583
|
+
### Internal Dependencies ###
|
584
|
+
|
585
|
+
Lookout has been designed so as to keep each subsystem independent of any
|
586
|
+
other. The diff subsystem is, for example, completely decoupled from any other
|
587
|
+
part of the system as a whole and could be moved into its own library at a time
|
588
|
+
where that would be of interest to anyone. What’s perhaps more interesting is
|
589
|
+
that the diff subsystem is itself very modular. The data passes through a set
|
590
|
+
of filters that depends on what kind of diff has been requested, each filter
|
591
|
+
yielding modified data as it receives it. If you want to read some rather
|
592
|
+
functional Ruby I can highly recommend looking at the code in the
|
593
|
+
`lib/lookout/diff` directory.
|
594
|
+
|
595
|
+
This lookout on the design of the library also makes it easy to extend Lookout.
|
596
|
+
Lookout-rack was, for example, written in about four hours and about 5 of those
|
597
|
+
240 minutes were spent on setting up the interface between the two.
|
598
|
+
|
599
|
+
### Optimizing For Speed ###
|
600
|
+
|
601
|
+
The following paragraph is perhaps a bit personal, but might be interesting
|
602
|
+
nonetheless.
|
603
|
+
|
604
|
+
I’ve always worried about speed. The original Expectations library used
|
605
|
+
`extend` a lot to add new behavior to objects. Expectations, for example, used
|
606
|
+
to hold the result of their execution (what we now term “evaluation”) by being
|
607
|
+
extended by a module representing success, failure, or error. For the longest
|
608
|
+
time I used this same method, worrying about the increased performance cost
|
609
|
+
that creating new objects for results would incur. I finally came to a point
|
610
|
+
where I felt that the code was so simple and clean that rewriting this part of
|
611
|
+
the code for a benchmark wouldn’t take more than perhaps ten minutes. Well,
|
612
|
+
ten minutes later I had my results and they confirmed that creating new objects
|
613
|
+
wasn’t harming performance. I was very pleased.
|
614
|
+
|
615
|
+
### Naming ###
|
616
|
+
|
617
|
+
I hate low lines (underscores). I try to avoid them in method names and I
|
618
|
+
always avoid them in file names. Since the current “best practice” in the Ruby
|
619
|
+
community is to put `BeginEndStorage` in a file called `begin_end_storage.rb`,
|
620
|
+
I only name constants using a single noun. This has had the added benefit that
|
621
|
+
classes seem to have acquired less behavior, as using a single noun doesn’t
|
622
|
+
allow you to tack on additional behavior without questioning if it’s really
|
623
|
+
appropriate to do so, given the rather limited range of interpretation for that
|
624
|
+
noun. It also seems to encourage the creation of value objects, as something
|
625
|
+
named `Range` feels a lot more like a value than `BeginEndStorage`. (To reach
|
626
|
+
object-oriented-programming Nirvana you must achieve complete value.)
|
627
|
+
|
628
|
+
|
629
|
+
## Contributors ##
|
630
|
+
|
631
|
+
Contributors to the original expectations codebase are mentioned there. We
|
632
|
+
hope no one on that list feels left out of this list. Please [let us
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know][Lookout issues] if you do.
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* Nikolai Weibull
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[Lookout issues]: https://github.com/now/lookout/issues
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## License ##
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You may use, copy, and redistribute this library under the same [terms][] as
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Ruby itself.
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[terms]: http://www.ruby-lang.org/en/LICENSE.txt
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