From 7b3b7cb2ab1ccf96d4c8a1bafd87dbfbd2ac8c84 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Joshua Peek Date: Thu, 30 Apr 2009 11:55:53 -0500 Subject: Move generic assertions into ActionDispatch --- .../testing/assertions/routing.rb | 142 --------------------- 1 file changed, 142 deletions(-) delete mode 100644 actionpack/lib/action_controller/testing/assertions/routing.rb (limited to 'actionpack/lib/action_controller/testing/assertions/routing.rb') diff --git a/actionpack/lib/action_controller/testing/assertions/routing.rb b/actionpack/lib/action_controller/testing/assertions/routing.rb deleted file mode 100644 index f3f4f54fe3..0000000000 --- a/actionpack/lib/action_controller/testing/assertions/routing.rb +++ /dev/null @@ -1,142 +0,0 @@ -module ActionController - module Assertions - # Suite of assertions to test routes generated by Rails and the handling of requests made to them. - module RoutingAssertions - # Asserts that the routing of the given +path+ was handled correctly and that the parsed options (given in the +expected_options+ hash) - # match +path+. Basically, it asserts that Rails recognizes the route given by +expected_options+. - # - # Pass a hash in the second argument (+path+) to specify the request method. This is useful for routes - # requiring a specific HTTP method. The hash should contain a :path with the incoming request path - # and a :method containing the required HTTP verb. - # - # # assert that POSTing to /items will call the create action on ItemsController - # assert_recognizes {:controller => 'items', :action => 'create'}, {:path => 'items', :method => :post} - # - # You can also pass in +extras+ with a hash containing URL parameters that would normally be in the query string. This can be used - # to assert that values in the query string string will end up in the params hash correctly. To test query strings you must use the - # extras argument, appending the query string on the path directly will not work. For example: - # - # # assert that a path of '/items/list/1?view=print' returns the correct options - # assert_recognizes {:controller => 'items', :action => 'list', :id => '1', :view => 'print'}, 'items/list/1', { :view => "print" } - # - # The +message+ parameter allows you to pass in an error message that is displayed upon failure. - # - # ==== Examples - # # Check the default route (i.e., the index action) - # assert_recognizes {:controller => 'items', :action => 'index'}, 'items' - # - # # Test a specific action - # assert_recognizes {:controller => 'items', :action => 'list'}, 'items/list' - # - # # Test an action with a parameter - # assert_recognizes {:controller => 'items', :action => 'destroy', :id => '1'}, 'items/destroy/1' - # - # # Test a custom route - # assert_recognizes {:controller => 'items', :action => 'show', :id => '1'}, 'view/item1' - # - # # Check a Simply RESTful generated route - # assert_recognizes list_items_url, 'items/list' - def assert_recognizes(expected_options, path, extras={}, message=nil) - if path.is_a? Hash - request_method = path[:method] - path = path[:path] - else - request_method = nil - end - - ActionController::Routing::Routes.reload if ActionController::Routing::Routes.empty? - request = recognized_request_for(path, request_method) - - expected_options = expected_options.clone - extras.each_key { |key| expected_options.delete key } unless extras.nil? - - expected_options.stringify_keys! - routing_diff = expected_options.diff(request.path_parameters) - msg = build_message(message, "The recognized options did not match , difference: ", - request.path_parameters, expected_options, expected_options.diff(request.path_parameters)) - assert_block(msg) { request.path_parameters == expected_options } - end - - # Asserts that the provided options can be used to generate the provided path. This is the inverse of +assert_recognizes+. - # The +extras+ parameter is used to tell the request the names and values of additional request parameters that would be in - # a query string. The +message+ parameter allows you to specify a custom error message for assertion failures. - # - # The +defaults+ parameter is unused. - # - # ==== Examples - # # Asserts that the default action is generated for a route with no action - # assert_generates "/items", :controller => "items", :action => "index" - # - # # Tests that the list action is properly routed - # assert_generates "/items/list", :controller => "items", :action => "list" - # - # # Tests the generation of a route with a parameter - # assert_generates "/items/list/1", { :controller => "items", :action => "list", :id => "1" } - # - # # Asserts that the generated route gives us our custom route - # assert_generates "changesets/12", { :controller => 'scm', :action => 'show_diff', :revision => "12" } - def assert_generates(expected_path, options, defaults={}, extras = {}, message=nil) - expected_path = "/#{expected_path}" unless expected_path[0] == ?/ - # Load routes.rb if it hasn't been loaded. - ActionController::Routing::Routes.reload if ActionController::Routing::Routes.empty? - - generated_path, extra_keys = ActionController::Routing::Routes.generate_extras(options, defaults) - found_extras = options.reject {|k, v| ! extra_keys.include? k} - - msg = build_message(message, "found extras , not ", found_extras, extras) - assert_block(msg) { found_extras == extras } - - msg = build_message(message, "The generated path did not match ", generated_path, - expected_path) - assert_block(msg) { expected_path == generated_path } - end - - # Asserts that path and options match both ways; in other words, it verifies that path generates - # options and then that options generates path. This essentially combines +assert_recognizes+ - # and +assert_generates+ into one step. - # - # The +extras+ hash allows you to specify options that would normally be provided as a query string to the action. The - # +message+ parameter allows you to specify a custom error message to display upon failure. - # - # ==== Examples - # # Assert a basic route: a controller with the default action (index) - # assert_routing '/home', :controller => 'home', :action => 'index' - # - # # Test a route generated with a specific controller, action, and parameter (id) - # assert_routing '/entries/show/23', :controller => 'entries', :action => 'show', id => 23 - # - # # Assert a basic route (controller + default action), with an error message if it fails - # assert_routing '/store', { :controller => 'store', :action => 'index' }, {}, {}, 'Route for store index not generated properly' - # - # # Tests a route, providing a defaults hash - # assert_routing 'controller/action/9', {:id => "9", :item => "square"}, {:controller => "controller", :action => "action"}, {}, {:item => "square"} - # - # # Tests a route with a HTTP method - # assert_routing { :method => 'put', :path => '/product/321' }, { :controller => "product", :action => "update", :id => "321" } - def assert_routing(path, options, defaults={}, extras={}, message=nil) - assert_recognizes(options, path, extras, message) - - controller, default_controller = options[:controller], defaults[:controller] - if controller && controller.include?(?/) && default_controller && default_controller.include?(?/) - options[:controller] = "/#{controller}" - end - - assert_generates(path.is_a?(Hash) ? path[:path] : path, options, defaults, extras, message) - end - - private - # Recognizes the route for a given path. - def recognized_request_for(path, request_method = nil) - path = "/#{path}" unless path.first == '/' - - # Assume given controller - request = ActionController::TestRequest.new - request.env["REQUEST_METHOD"] = request_method.to_s.upcase if request_method - request.path = path - - ActionController::Routing::Routes.recognize(request) - request - end - end - end -end -- cgit v1.2.3