require 'action_controller/vendor/html-scanner' require 'active_support/core_ext/object/inclusion' #-- # Copyright (c) 2006 Assaf Arkin (http://labnotes.org) # Under MIT and/or CC By license. #++ module ActionDispatch module Assertions NO_STRIP = %w{pre script style textarea} # Adds the +assert_select+ method for use in Rails functional # test cases, which can be used to make assertions on the response HTML of a controller # action. You can also call +assert_select+ within another +assert_select+ to # make assertions on elements selected by the enclosing assertion. # # Use +css_select+ to select elements without making an assertions, either # from the response HTML or elements selected by the enclosing assertion. # # In addition to HTML responses, you can make the following assertions: # # * +assert_select_encoded+ - Assertions on HTML encoded inside XML, for example for dealing with feed item descriptions. # * +assert_select_email+ - Assertions on the HTML body of an e-mail. # # Also see HTML::Selector to learn how to use selectors. module SelectorAssertions # Select and return all matching elements. # # If called with a single argument, uses that argument as a selector # to match all elements of the current page. Returns an empty array # if no match is found. # # If called with two arguments, uses the first argument as the base # element and the second argument as the selector. Attempts to match the # base element and any of its children. Returns an empty array if no # match is found. # # The selector may be a CSS selector expression (String), an expression # with substitution values (Array) or an HTML::Selector object. # # ==== Examples # # Selects all div tags # divs = css_select("div") # # # Selects all paragraph tags and does something interesting # pars = css_select("p") # pars.each do |par| # # Do something fun with paragraphs here... # end # # # Selects all list items in unordered lists # items = css_select("ul>li") # # # Selects all form tags and then all inputs inside the form # forms = css_select("form") # forms.each do |form| # inputs = css_select(form, "input") # ... # end # def css_select(*args) # See assert_select to understand what's going on here. arg = args.shift if arg.is_a?(HTML::Node) root = arg arg = args.shift elsif arg == nil raise ArgumentError, "First argument is either selector or element to select, but nil found. Perhaps you called assert_select with an element that does not exist?" elsif defined?(@selected) && @selected matches = [] @selected.each do |selected| subset = css_select(selected, HTML::Selector.new(arg.dup, args.dup)) subset.each do |match| matches << match unless matches.any? { |m| m.equal?(match) } end end return matches else root = response_from_page end case arg when String selector = HTML::Selector.new(arg, args) when Array selector = HTML::Selector.new(*arg) when HTML::Selector selector = arg else raise ArgumentError, "Expecting a selector as the first argument" end selector.select(root) end # An assertion that selects elements and makes one or more equality tests. # # If the first argument is an element, selects all matching elements # starting from (and including) that element and all its children in # depth-first order. # # If no element if specified, calling +assert_select+ selects from the # response HTML unless +assert_select+ is called from within an +assert_select+ block. # # When called with a block +assert_select+ passes an array of selected elements # to the block. Calling +assert_select+ from the block, with no element specified, # runs the assertion on the complete set of elements selected by the enclosing assertion. # Alternatively the array may be iterated through so that +assert_select+ can be called # separately for each element. # # # ==== Example # If the response contains two ordered lists, each with four list elements then: # assert_select "ol" do |elements| # elements.each do |element| # assert_select element, "li", 4 # end # end # # will pass, as will: # assert_select "ol" do # assert_select "li", 8 # end # # The selector may be a CSS selector expression (String), an expression # with substitution values, or an HTML::Selector object. # # === Equality Tests # # The equality test may be one of the following: # * true - Assertion is true if at least one element selected. # * false - Assertion is true if no element selected. # * String/Regexp - Assertion is true if the text value of at least # one element matches the string or regular expression. # * Integer - Assertion is true if exactly that number of # elements are selected. # * Range - Assertion is true if the number of selected # elements fit the range. # If no equality test specified, the assertion is true if at least one # element selected. # # To perform more than one equality tests, use a hash with the following keys: # * :text - Narrow the selection to elements that have this text # value (string or regexp). # * :html - Narrow the selection to elements that have this HTML # content (string or regexp). # * :count - Assertion is true if the number of selected elements # is equal to this value. # * :minimum - Assertion is true if the number of selected # elements is at least this value. # * :maximum - Assertion is true if the number of selected # elements is at most this value. # # If the method is called with a block, once all equality tests are # evaluated the block is called with an array of all matched elements. # # ==== Examples # # # At least one form element # assert_select "form" # # # Form element includes four input fields # assert_select "form input", 4 # # # Page title is "Welcome" # assert_select "title", "Welcome" # # # Page title is "Welcome" and there is only one title element # assert_select "title", {:count => 1, :text => "Welcome"}, # "Wrong title or more than one title element" # # # Page contains no forms # assert_select "form", false, "This page must contain no forms" # # # Test the content and style # assert_select "body div.header ul.menu" # # # Use substitution values # assert_select "ol>li#?", /item-\d+/ # # # All input fields in the form have a name # assert_select "form input" do # assert_select "[name=?]", /.+/ # Not empty # end def assert_select(*args, &block) # Start with optional element followed by mandatory selector. arg = args.shift @selected ||= nil if arg.is_a?(HTML::Node) # First argument is a node (tag or text, but also HTML root), # so we know what we're selecting from. root = arg arg = args.shift elsif arg == nil # This usually happens when passing a node/element that # happens to be nil. raise ArgumentError, "First argument is either selector or element to select, but nil found. Perhaps you called assert_select with an element that does not exist?" elsif @selected root = HTML::Node.new(nil) root.children.concat @selected else # Otherwise just operate on the response document. root = response_from_page end # First or second argument is the selector: string and we pass # all remaining arguments. Array and we pass the argument. Also # accepts selector itself. case arg when String selector = HTML::Selector.new(arg, args) when Array selector = HTML::Selector.new(*arg) when HTML::Selector selector = arg else raise ArgumentError, "Expecting a selector as the first argument" end # Next argument is used for equality tests. equals = {} case arg = args.shift when Hash equals = arg when String, Regexp equals[:text] = arg when Integer equals[:count] = arg when Range equals[:minimum] = arg.begin equals[:maximum] = arg.end when FalseClass equals[:count] = 0 when NilClass, TrueClass equals[:minimum] = 1 else raise ArgumentError, "I don't understand what you're trying to match" end # By default we're looking for at least one match. if equals[:count] equals[:minimum] = equals[:maximum] = equals[:count] else equals[:minimum] = 1 unless equals[:minimum] end # Last argument is the message we use if the assertion fails. message = args.shift #- message = "No match made with selector #{selector.inspect}" unless message if args.shift raise ArgumentError, "Not expecting that last argument, you either have too many arguments, or they're the wrong type" end matches = selector.select(root) # If text/html, narrow down to those elements that match it. content_mismatch = nil if match_with = equals[:text] matches.delete_if do |match| text = "" stack = match.children.reverse while node = stack.pop if node.tag? stack.concat node.children.reverse else content = node.content text << content end end text.strip! unless NO_STRIP.include?(match.name) text.sub!(/\A\n/, '') if match.name == "textarea" unless match_with.is_a?(Regexp) ? (text =~ match_with) : (text == match_with.to_s) content_mismatch ||= sprintf("<%s> expected but was\n<%s>.", match_with, text) true end end elsif match_with = equals[:html] matches.delete_if do |match| html = match.children.map(&:to_s).join html.strip! unless NO_STRIP.include?(match.name) unless match_with.is_a?(Regexp) ? (html =~ match_with) : (html == match_with.to_s) content_mismatch ||= sprintf("<%s> expected but was\n<%s>.", match_with, html) true end end end # Expecting foo found bar element only if found zero, not if # found one but expecting two. message ||= content_mismatch if matches.empty? # Test minimum/maximum occurrence. min, max, count = equals[:minimum], equals[:maximum], equals[:count] # FIXME: minitest provides messaging when we use assert_operator, # so is this custom message really needed? message = message || %(Expected #{count_description(min, max, count)} matching "#{selector.to_s}", found #{matches.size}.) if count assert_equal matches.size, count, message else assert_operator matches.size, :>=, min, message if min assert_operator matches.size, :<=, max, message if max end # If a block is given call that block. Set @selected to allow # nested assert_select, which can be nested several levels deep. if block_given? && !matches.empty? begin in_scope, @selected = @selected, matches yield matches ensure @selected = in_scope end end # Returns all matches elements. matches end def count_description(min, max, count) #:nodoc: pluralize = lambda {|word, quantity| word << (quantity == 1 ? '' : 's')} if min && max && (max != min) "between #{min} and #{max} elements" elsif min && max && max == min && count "exactly #{count} #{pluralize['element', min]}" elsif min && !(min == 1 && max == 1) "at least #{min} #{pluralize['element', min]}" elsif max "at most #{max} #{pluralize['element', max]}" end end # Extracts the content of an element, treats it as encoded HTML and runs # nested assertion on it. # # You typically call this method within another assertion to operate on # all currently selected elements. You can also pass an element or array # of elements. # # The content of each element is un-encoded, and wrapped in the root # element +encoded+. It then calls the block with all un-encoded elements. # # ==== Examples # # Selects all bold tags from within the title of an Atom feed's entries (perhaps to nab a section name prefix) # assert_select "feed[xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom']" do # # Select each entry item and then the title item # assert_select "entry>title" do # # Run assertions on the encoded title elements # assert_select_encoded do # assert_select "b" # end # end # end # # # # Selects all paragraph tags from within the description of an RSS feed # assert_select "rss[version=2.0]" do # # Select description element of each feed item. # assert_select "channel>item>description" do # # Run assertions on the encoded elements. # assert_select_encoded do # assert_select "p" # end # end # end def assert_select_encoded(element = nil, &block) case element when Array elements = element when HTML::Node elements = [element] when nil unless elements = @selected raise ArgumentError, "First argument is optional, but must be called from a nested assert_select" end else raise ArgumentError, "Argument is optional, and may be node or array of nodes" end fix_content = lambda do |node| # Gets around a bug in the Rails 1.1 HTML parser. node.content.gsub(/)?/m) { Rack::Utils.escapeHTML($1) } end selected = elements.map do |_element| text = _element.children.select{ |c| not c.tag? }.map{ |c| fix_content[c] }.join root = HTML::Document.new(CGI.unescapeHTML("#{text}")).root css_select(root, "encoded:root", &block)[0] end begin old_selected, @selected = @selected, selected assert_select ":root", &block ensure @selected = old_selected end end # Extracts the body of an email and runs nested assertions on it. # # You must enable deliveries for this assertion to work, use: # ActionMailer::Base.perform_deliveries = true # # ==== Examples # # assert_select_email do # assert_select "h1", "Email alert" # end # # assert_select_email do # items = assert_select "ol>li" # items.each do # # Work with items here... # end # end # def assert_select_email(&block) deliveries = ActionMailer::Base.deliveries assert !deliveries.empty?, "No e-mail in delivery list" deliveries.each do |delivery| (delivery.parts.empty? ? [delivery] : delivery.parts).each do |part| if part["Content-Type"].to_s =~ /^text\/html\W/ root = HTML::Document.new(part.body.to_s).root assert_select root, ":root", &block end end end end protected # +assert_select+ and +css_select+ call this to obtain the content in the HTML page. def response_from_page html_document.root end end end end