An integration test spans multiple controllers and actions, tying them all together to ensure they work together as expected. It tests more completely than either unit or functional tests do, exercising the entire stack, from the dispatcher to the database.
At its simplest, you simply extend IntegrationTest
and write
your tests using the get/post methods:
require "test_helper"
class ExampleTest < ActionDispatch::IntegrationTest
fixtures :people
def test_login
# get the login page
get "/login"
assert_equal 200, status
# post the login and follow through to the home page
post "/login", username: people(:jamis).username,
password: people(:jamis).password
follow_redirect!
assert_equal 200, status
assert_equal "/home", path
end
end
However, you can also have multiple session instances open per test, and even extend those instances with assertions and methods to create a very powerful testing DSL that is specific for your application. You can even reference any named routes you happen to have defined.
require "test_helper"
class AdvancedTest < ActionDispatch::IntegrationTest
fixtures :people, :rooms
def test_login_and_speak
jamis, david = login(:jamis), login(:david)
room = rooms(:office)
jamis.enter(room)
jamis.speak(room, "anybody home?")
david.enter(room)
david.speak(room, "hello!")
end
private
module CustomAssertions
def enter(room)
# reference a named route, for maximum internal consistency!
get(room_url(id: room.id))
assert(...)
...
end
def speak(room, message)
xml_http_request "/say/#{room.id}", message: message
assert(...)
...
end
end
def login(who)
open_session do |sess|
sess.extend(CustomAssertions)
who = people(who)
sess.post "/login", username: who.username,
password: who.password
assert(...)
end
end
end
Methods
- A
- D
- U
Included Modules
- Integration::Runner
- ActionController::TemplateAssertions
- ActionDispatch::Routing::UrlFor
Class Public methods
app()
Link
app=(app)
Link
Instance Public methods
app()
Link
document_root_element()
Link