Stubbing authentication in request spec

安稳与你 提交于 2019-11-26 18:18:26

A request spec is a thin wrapper around ActionDispatch::IntegrationTest, which doesn't work like controller specs (which wrap ActionController::TestCase). Even though there is a session method available, I don't think it is supported (i.e. it's probably there because a module that gets included for other utilities also includes that method).

I'd recommend logging in by posting to whatever action you use to authenticate users. If you make the password 'password' (for example) for all the User factories, then you can do something like this:

def login(user)
  post login_path, :login => user.login, :password => 'password'
end

Note for Devise users...

BTW, @David Chelimsky's answer may need a little tweaking if you're using Devise. What I'm doing in my integration / requests testing (thanks to this StackOverflow post):

# file: spec/requests_helper.rb
def login(user)
  post_via_redirect user_session_path, 'user[email]' => user.email, 'user[password]' => user.password
end

FWIW, in porting my Test::Unit tests to RSpec, I wanted to be able to login with multiple (devise) sessions in my request specs. It took some digging, but got this to work for me. Using Rails 3.2.13 and RSpec 2.13.0.

# file: spec/support/devise.rb
module RequestHelpers
  def login(user)
    ActionController::IntegrationTest.new(self).open_session do |sess|
      u = users(user)

      sess.post '/users/sign_in', {
        user: {
          email: u.email,
          password: 'password'
        }
      }

      sess.flash[:alert].should be_nil
      sess.flash[:notice].should == 'Signed in successfully.'
      sess.response.code.should == '302'
    end
  end
end

include RequestHelpers

And...

# spec/request/user_flows.rb
require 'spec_helper'

describe 'User flows' do
  fixtures :users

  it 'lets a user do stuff to another user' do
    karl = login :karl
    karl.get '/users'
    karl.response.code.should eq '200'

    karl.xhr :put, "/users/#{users(:bob).id}", id: users(:bob).id,
      "#{users(:bob).id}-is-funny" => 'true'

    karl.response.code.should eq '200'
    User.find(users(:bob).id).should be_funny

    bob = login :bob
    expect { bob.get '/users' }.to_not raise_exception

    bob.response.code.should eq '200'
  end
end

Edit: fixed typo

You could pretty easily stub the session as well.

controller.session.stub(:[]).with(:user_id).and_return(<whatever user ID>)

All ruby special operators are indeed methods. Calling 1+1 is the same as 1.+(1), which means + is just a method. Similarly, session[:user_id] is the same as calling method [] on session, as session.[](:user_id)

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