1.5 KiB
Discourse Developer Testing Guide
Some notes about testing Discourse:
FakeWeb
We use the FakeWeb gem to fake external web
requests.
For example, check out the specs on specs/components/oneboxer
.
This has several advantages to making real requests:
- We freeze the expected response from the remote server.
- We don't need a network connection to run the specs.
- It's faster.
So, if you need to define a spec that makes a web request, you'll have to record the real response to a fixture file, and tell FakeWeb to respond with it for the URI of your request.
Check out spec/components/oneboxer/amazon_onebox_spec.rb
for an example on
this.
Recording responses
To record the actual response from the remote server, you can use curl and save the response to a file. We use the -i
option to include headers in the output
curl -i http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruby > wikipedia.response
If you need to specify the User-Agent to send to the server, you can use -A
:
curl -i -A 'Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 5_0_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/534.46 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/5.1 Mobile/9A405 Safari/7534.48.3' http://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ruby > wikipedia.response
If the remote server is responding with a redirect, you'll need to fake both the
original request and the one for the destination. Check out the
wikipedia.response
and wikipedia_redirected.response
files in
spec/fixtures/oneboxer
for an example. You can also consider working directly
with the final URL for simplicity.