How to say “any_instance” “should_receive” any number of times in RSpec

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刺人心
刺人心 2020-12-14 05:24

I\'ve got an import controller in rails that imports several csv files with multiple records into my database. I would like to test in RSpec if the records are actually save

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  • 2020-12-14 05:49

    Here's a better answer that avoids having to override the :new method:

    save_count = 0
    <Model>.any_instance.stub(:save) do |arg|
        # The evaluation context is the rspec group instance,
        # arg are the arguments to the function. I can't see a
        # way to get the actual <Model> instance :(
        save_count+=1
    end
    .... run the test here ...
    save_count.should > 0
    

    Seems that the stub method can be attached to any instance w/o the constraint, and the do block can make a count that you can check to assert it was called the right number of times.

    Update - new rspec version requires this syntax:

    save_count = 0
    allow_any_instance_of(Model).to receive(:save) do |arg|
        # The evaluation context is the rspec group instance,
        # arg are the arguments to the function. I can't see a
        # way to get the actual <Model> instance :(
        save_count+=1
    end
    .... run the test here ...
    save_count.should > 0
    
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  • 2020-12-14 05:52

    I finally managed to make a test that works for me:

      mutation = FactoryGirl.build(:mutation)
      Mutation.stub(:new).and_return(mutation)
      mutation.should_receive(:save).at_least(:once)
    

    The stub method returns one single instance that receives the save method multiple times. Because it is a single instance i can drop the any_instance method and use the at_least method normally.

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  • 2020-12-14 05:55

    My case was a bit different, but I ended up at this question to figured to drop my answer here too. In my case I wanted to stub any instance of a given class. I got the same error when I used expect_any_instance_of(Model).to. When I changed it to allow_any_instance_of(Model).to, my problem was solved.

    Check out the documentation for some more background: https://github.com/rspec/rspec-mocks#settings-mocks-or-stubs-on-any-instance-of-a-class

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  • 2020-12-14 06:04

    You may try to count the number of new on the class. That is not actually tests the number of saves but may be enough

        expect(Mutation).to receive(:new).at_least(:once)
    

    If there is the only expectation of how many times it was saved. Then you probably want to use spy() instead of fully functioning factory, as in Harm de Wit own answer

        allow(Mutation).to receive(:new).and_return(spy)
        ...
        expect(Mutation.new).to have_received(:save).at_least(:once)
    
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  • 2020-12-14 06:05

    This is Rob's example using RSpec 3.3, which no longer supports Foo.any_instance. I found this useful when in a loop creating objects

    # code (simplified version)
    array_of_hashes.each { |hash| Model.new(hash).write! }
    
    # spec
    it "calls write! for each instance of Model" do 
      call_count = 0
      allow_any_instance_of(Model).to receive(:write!) { call_count += 1 }
    
      response.process # run the test
      expect(call_count).to eq(2)
    end
    
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  • 2020-12-14 06:07

    Stub like this

    User.stub(:save) # Could be any class method in any class
    User.any_instance.stub(:save) { |*args| User.save(*args) }
    

    Then expect like this:

    # User.any_instance.should_receive(:save).at_least(:once)
    User.should_receive(:save).at_least(:once)
    

    This is a simplification of this gist, to use any_instance, since you don't need to proxy to the original method. Refer to that gist for other uses.

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