ResqueUnit provides some extra assertions and a mock Resque for testing Rails code that depends on Resque. You can install it as either a gem or a plugin:
gem install resque_unit
and in your test.rb:
config.gem 'resque_unit'
If you'd rather install it as a plugin, you should be able to run
script/plugin install git://github.com/justinweiss/resque_unit.git
inside your Rails projects.
ResqueUnit provides some extra assertions for your unit tests. For example, if you have code that queues a resque job:
class MyJob
@queue = :low
def self.perform(x)
# do stuff
end
end
def queue_job
Resque.enqueue(MyJob, 1)
end
You can write a unit test for code that queues this job:
def test_job_queued
queue_job
assert_queued(MyJob) # assert that MyJob was queued in the :low queue
end
You can also verify that a job was queued with arguments:
def test_job_queued_with_arguments
queue_job
assert_queued(MyJob, [1])
end
And you can run all the jobs in the queue, so you can verify that they run correctly:
def test_job_runs
queue_job
Resque.run!
assert stuff_was_done, "Job didn't run"
end
You can also access the queues directly:
def test_jobs_in_queue
queue_job
assert_equal 1, Resque.queue(:low).length
end
You can test enqueueing to specific queues for class constants that don't exist in your project:
def test_job_in_another_queue
Resque.enqueue_to(:another_queue, "NonexistantJobClass", "some args")
assert_queued_to(:another_queue, "NonexistantJobClass", "some args")
end
And assert the opposite
def test_job_not_enqueued
Resque.enqueue_to(:another_queue, "NonexistantJobClass", "some args")
refute_queued_to(:wrong_queue, "NonexistantJobClass", "some args")
end
Finally, you can enable hooks:
Resque.enable_hooks!
class MyJobWithHooks
@queue = :hooked
def self.perform(x)
# do stuff
end
def self.after_enqueue_mark(*args)
# called when the job is enqueued
end
def self.before_perform_mark(*args)
# called just before the +perform+ method
end
def self.after_perform_mark(*args)
# called just after the +perform+ method
end
def self.failure_perform_mark(*args)
# called if the +perform+ method raised
end
end
def queue_job
Resque.enqueue(MyJobWithHooks, 1)
end
- You should make sure that you call
Resque.reset!
in your test's setup method to clear all of the test queues. - Hooks support is optional. Just because you probably don't want to call
them during unit tests if they play with a DB. Call
Resque.enable_hooks!
in your tests's setup method to enable hooks. To disable hooks, callResque.disable_hooks!
.
By calling require 'resque_unit_scheduler'
, ResqueUnit will provide
mocks for resque-scheduler's
enqueue_at
and enqueue_in
methods, along with a few extra
assertions. These are used like this:
Resque.enqueue_in(600, MediumPriorityJob) # enqueues MediumPriorityJob in 600 seconds
assert_queued_in(600, MediumPriorityJob) # will pass
assert_not_queued_in(300, MediumPriorityJob) # will also pass
Resque.enqueue_at(Time.now + 10, MediumPriorityJob) # enqueues MediumPriorityJob at 10 seconds from now
assert_queued_at(Time.now + 10, MediumPriorityJob) # will pass
assert_not_queued_at(Time.now + 1, MediumPriorityJob) # will also pass
Resque.enqueue_in_with_queue(:another_queue, 600, "NonexistantJobClass")
assert_queued_in_with_queue(:another_queue, 600, "NonexistantJobClass") # will pass
Resque.enqueue_at_with_queue(:another_queue, Time.now + 10, "NonexistantJobClass") # enqueues MediumPriorityJob at 10 seconds from now
assert_queued_at_with_queue(:another_queue, Time.now + 10, "NonexistantJobClass") # will pass
For now, assert_queued
and assert_not_queued
will pass for any
scheduled job. Resque.run!
will run all scheduled jobs as well.
Copyright (c) 2010 Justin Weiss, released under the MIT license