I just added the Rolify gem, and am running some rspec tests.
2 tests are as follows:
describe "roles" do
before(:each) do
@user = FactoryGirl.create(:user)
end
it "should not approve incorrect roles" do
@user.add_role :moderator
@user.has_role? :admin
should be_false
end
it "should approve correct roles" do
@user.add_role :moderator
@user.has_role? :moderator
should be_true
end
end
The test result is:
1) User roles should not approve incorrect roles
Failure/Error: should be_false
expected: false value
got: #<User id: nil, email: "", encrypted_password: "", reset_password_token: nil, reset_password_sent_at: nil, remember_created_at: nil, sign_in_count: 0, current_sign_in_at: nil, last_sign_in_at: nil, current_sign_in_ip: nil, last_sign_in_ip: nil, confirmation_token: nil, confirmed_at: nil, confirmation_sent_at: nil, name: nil, position: nil, location: nil, admin: false, archived: false, public_email: false, created_at: nil, updated_at: nil>
# ./spec/models/user_spec.rb:70:in `block (3 levels) in <top (required)>'
Finished in 1.37 seconds
7 examples, 1 failure
Failed examples:
rspec ./spec/models/user_spec.rb:67 # User roles should not approve incorrect roles
Randomized with seed 13074
factories.rb
FactoryGirl.define do
factory :user do
sequence(:name) {|n| "Example User #{n}"}
sequence(:email) {|n| "email#{n}@program.com" }
position "Regular"
location "Anywhere, USA"
public_email false
password "foobar"
password_confirmation "foobar"
confirmed_at Time.now
end
end
How is the first test is failing with a nil object, but the second is passing?
EDIT
Upon further inspection, any test for should be_true passes, and any test for should be_false fails, regardless of whether the added role matches the checked role.
When your tests do
should be_truewhat is happening is the should call is being delegated to the subject object (see RSpec docs for implicit receiver). In this case, your subject object is a User instance that has not yet been saved to the database. If your user_spec.rb file starts withdescribe User do, RSpec is automatically providing this default subject of User.new (see RSpec docs for implicit subject).What this means is that your tests are essentially doing
User.new.should be_trueandUser.new.should be_false. Since a User object will always evaluate to true, theshould be_truetest will always pass (although probably not for the reason you wanted it to) and the should be_false will always fail.Based on the way your tests are written, maybe you meant something more like this: