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Home/ Questions/Q 9012731
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 16, 20262026-06-16T03:04:53+00:00 2026-06-16T03:04:53+00:00

I’m brand new to ruby (first day working with ruby) so please forgive any

  • 0

I’m brand new to ruby (first day working with ruby) so please forgive any novice questions and lack of understanding.

I’m trying to validate the responses to http callouts.

For example, let’s say the endpoint is the following:

https://applicationname-api-sbox02.herokuapp.com 

And, I’m trying to authenticate a user by sending a get request like this:

get_response = RestClient.get( "https://applicationname-api-sbox02.herokuapp.com/api/v1/users", 
                    {
                        "Content-Type" => "application/json",
                        "Authorization" => "token 4d012314b7e46008f215cdb7d120cdd7",
                        "Manufacturer-Token" => "8d0693ccfe65104600e2555d5af34213"
                    }
                ) 

Now, I want to validate the response and do the following:
– parse the response to ensure that it is valid JSON
– do some validation and verify the JSON has the correct data (verify that id == 4 for example)
– if an error is encountered, raise an exception using the ‘raise’ method.

In my first feeble attempt I tried the following:

puts get_response.body
if get_response.code == 200
puts "********* Get current user successful"
else
puts "Get current user failed!!"
end 

Now, this returned that getting the current user was successful, but how do I actually parse the json, verify the correct id, and raise an exception if an error occurred?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-16T03:04:54+00:00Added an answer on June 16, 2026 at 3:04 am

    Instead of raising an exception, write a test.

    A straightforward approach, using the json parser and unit test framework from the std lib:

    require 'minitest/autorun'
    require 'rest_client'
    require 'json'
    
    class APITest < MiniTest::Unit::TestCase
      def setup
        response = RestClient.get("https://applicationname-api-sbox02.herokuapp.com/api/v1/users", 
          {
             "Content-Type" => "application/json",
             "Authorization" => "token 4d012314b7e46008f215cdb7d120cdd7",
             "Manufacturer-Token" => "8d0693ccfe65104600e2555d5af34213"
          }
        ) 
        @data = JSON.parse response.body
      end
    
      def test_id_correct
        assert_equal 4, @data['id']
      end
    end
    

    Execute with ruby $filename

    JSON.parse parses a JSON string into a ruby hash

    Getting started with minitest

    If you are using ruby 1.8, you’ll need to install the json gem and either install the minitest gem, or switch to the older testunit API. If you choose the latter, then you’ll need to change require 'minitest/autorun' -> require 'test/unit' and MiniTest::Unit::TestCase -> Test::Unit::TestCase

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