Minitest is good for mocking, right? Well…

Minitest is gaining a lot of popularity and can actually be a 100% replacement for RSpec. It’s a pure ruby testing framework, it’s fast, light weight, and it supports both a test-unit like syntax and a spec engine with Rspec like syntax.

Still, when it comes to mocking, it can be a little painful. You have to initialize mocks and verify them manually after running the code under test.

A typical unit test with mocks looks something like this:

test 'a pause can be completed' do
  datetime_service = MiniTest::Mock.new
  pause            = MiniTest::Mock.new
  success          = MiniTest::Mock.new
  failure          = MiniTest::Mock.new
  now = DateTime.now
  datetime_service.expect(:datetime_now, now)
  pause.expect(:completed_at, nil)
  pause.expect(:update_attributes, true, [completed_at: now])
  success.expect(:call, true, ["Pause completed", pause])
  UseCases::Pauses::Complete.new.run(pause, datetime_service, success, failure)
  datetime_service.verify
  failure.verify
  success.verify
  pause.verify
end

What I don’t like in the code above is the verbosity in the setup (and verification) of mock objects. I’m relying quite heavily on mocks, as I don’t want to pass real objects to my unit tests, and this kind of repetition is not good.

Also I want to have a way to distinguish mock objects from “real” objects. This could help seeing if there is too much “real” stuff inside the test, or if I’m correctly mocking all the dependencies and collaborators of the method under test.

What I came up with is Mocked, a small module to streamline these operations.

# test/utils/mocked.rb
module Mocked
  def add_mocks(*names)
    names.each { |name| add_mock(name) }
  end

  def add_mock(name)
    @mocks[name] = MiniTest::Mock.new
  end

  def mocked(name)
    @mocks[name]
  end

  def verify_mocks
    @mocks.each do |_, mock|
      mock.verify
    end
  end

  def setup_mocks
    @mocks = Hash.new
  end
end

# test/test_helper.rb

#...
require 'utils/mocked'
# ...
class ActiveSupport::TestCase
  include Mocked
  setup :setup_mocks
  teardown :verify_mocks
end

We are just keeping an hash of mock objects, and verifying them on teardown of the test; we are also giving a mocked(mock_name) accessor to retrieve mock objects.

With this we can rewrite the test above like this:

test 'a pause can be completed' do
  add_mocks(:datetime_service, :pause, :success, :failure)
  now = DateTime.now
  mocked(:datetime_service).expect(:datetime_now, now)
  mocked(:pause).expect(:completed_at, nil)
  mocked(:pause).expect(:update_attributes, true, [completed_at: now])
  mocked(:success).expect(:call, true, ["Pause completed", mocked(:pause)])
  UseCases::Pauses::Complete.new.run(
    mocked(:pause),
    mocked(:datetime_service),
    mocked(:success),
    mocked(:failure)
  )
end

The code looks better IMHO, and I like that if I decided - i.e. - to replace the pause mock with a real object it would read like:

test 'a pause can be completed' do
  add_mocks(:datetime_service, :success, :failure)
  now = DateTime.now
  mocked(:datetime_service).expect(:datetime_now, now)
  pause = FactoryGirl.create(:pause, completed_at: nil)
  mocked(:success).expect(:call, true, ["Pause completed", pause])
  UseCases::Pauses::Complete.new.run(
    pause,
    mocked(:datetime_service),
    mocked(:success),
    mocked(:failure)
  )
  assert_equal now, pause.completed_at
end

Here you can clearly see at a first glance that the only real object is pause, whereas other objects are all mocked. It also really helps when refactoring tests.

What do you think about this? Would you like to be built into a gem, do you have any suggestions or criticism on this? Let me know and have a great day!