The method you found will certainly work to test a little bit of functionality but seems pretty fragile—your dummy class (actually just a Struct
in your solution) may or may not behave like a real class that include
s your concern. Additionally if you're trying to test model concerns, you won't be able to do things like test the validity of objects or invoke ActiveRecord callbacks unless you set up the database accordingly (because your dummy class won't have a database table backing it). Moreover, you'll want to not only test the concern but also test the concern's behavior inside your model specs.
So why not kill two birds with one stone? By using RSpec's shared example groups, you can test your concerns against the actual classes that use them (e.g., models) and you'll be able to test them everywhere they're used. And you only have to write the tests once and then just include them in any model spec that uses your concern. In your case, this might look something like this:
# app/models/concerns/personable.rb
module Personable
extend ActiveSupport::Concern
def full_name
"#{first_name} #{last_name}"
end
end
# spec/concerns/personable_spec.rb
require 'spec_helper'
shared_examples_for "personable" do
let(:model) { described_class } # the class that includes the concern
it "has a full name" do
person = FactoryBot.build(model.to_s.underscore.to_sym, first_name: "Stewart", last_name: "Home")
expect(person.full_name).to eq("Stewart Home")
end
end
# spec/models/master_spec.rb
require 'spec_helper'
require Rails.root.join "spec/concerns/personable_spec.rb"
describe Master do
it_behaves_like "personable"
end
# spec/models/apprentice_spec.rb
require 'spec_helper'
describe Apprentice do
it_behaves_like "personable"
end
The advantages of this approach become even more obvious when you start doing things in your concern like invoking AR callbacks, where anything less than an AR object just won't do.
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