I have a rails application using cancan, and there are several different roles that I am testing. I'm looking for the most DRY way to setup these tests across several controllers.
This is a shortened version of what I have so far. Is there a better way to do this? It still feels kinda heavy to me.
describe OrganizationsController do
render_views
before do
# User roles
@unauthenticated = User.new
@org_admin = Factory.create(:organization_admin)
@org_staff = Factory.create(:org_staff)
@customer = Factory.create(:customer)
@admin = Factory.create(:admin)
@organization = Factory.create(:organization)
@org_for_admin = Factory.create(:organization, :user_group_id => @org_admin.user_group_id)
@org_attr = FactoryGirl.attributes_for(:organization)
end
describe "GET 'show'" do
authorized = %w(org_admin admin org_staff customer)
not_authorized = %w(unauthenticated)
not_authorized.each do |u|
context "an organization by a user with role: #{u}" do
before do
user = instance_variable_get("@#{u}")
get :show, :id => @organization.id, :format => 'json'
end
it { should_not respond_with :success }
it { should respond_with :forbidden }
end
end
authorized.each do |u|
context "an organization by a user with role: #{u}" do
before do
user = instance_variable_get("@#{u}")
get :show, :id => @organization.id, :format => 'json', :token => user.token
end
it { should respond_with :success }
it { should render_template :show }
it { should respond_with_content_type(/json/) }
it { should assign_to(:organization).with_kind_of(Organization) }
end
end
end
describe "GET 'update'" do
authorized = [%w(admin organization), %w(org_admin org_for_admin)]
not_authorized = [%w(unauthenticated organization), %w(org_staff org_for_admin), %w(customer organization), %w(org_admin organization)]
not_authorized.each do |u, o|
context "an organization by a user with role: #{u}" do
before do
user = instance_variable_get("@#{u}")
organization = instance_variable_get("@#{o}")
put :update, :id => organization.id, :organization => @org_attr, :format => 'json'
end
it { should_not respond_with :success }
it { should respond_with :forbidden }
end
end
authorized.each do |u, o|
context "an organization by a user with role: #{u}" do
before do
user = instance_variable_get("@#{u}")
organization = instance_variable_get("@#{o}")
put :update, :id => organization.id, :organization => @org_attr, :format => 'json', :token => user.token
end
it { should respond_with :success }
it { should render_template :update }
it { should respond_with_content_type(/json/) }
it { should assign_to(:organization).with_kind_of(Organization) }
end
end
end
end
Or, should I be using the cancan matchers and move these types of ability tests into the model specs and just have a successful and a forbidden test for each controller action? Any other comments on my tests in terms of anti-patterns/stylistic suggestions are also welcome.
Thanks!
The wiki describes the "pain point" you're feeling:
It can be difficult to thoroughly test user permissions at the functional/integration level because there are often many branching possibilities.
.. if you want to test the controller behavior independently from what is inside the Ability class, it is easy to stub out the ability with any behavior you want.
def setup
@ability = Object.new
@ability.extend(CanCan::Ability)
@controller.stubs(:current_ability).returns(@ability)
end
test "render index if have read ability on project" do
@ability.can :read, Project
get :index
assert_template :index
end
Good question. I've often wondered this myself. Next time, I'm going to try the wiki's suggestion.