Strategies for cleaning databases in Ruby. Can be used to ensure a clean state for testing.
Go to file
snusnu 971cdc9460 introduced common base class for truncation strategies. 2009-05-07 05:06:49 +02:00
examples basic support for transaction/truncation with datamapper 2009-05-05 17:06:02 +02:00
features basic support for transaction/truncation with datamapper 2009-05-05 17:06:02 +02:00
lib introduced common base class for truncation strategies. 2009-05-07 05:06:49 +02:00
spec Added truncation support for Postgresql. 2009-03-11 18:46:00 +00:00
.gitignore gemspec, add pending specs 2009-03-04 21:48:41 -07:00
History.txt Version bump to 0.1.3 2009-04-30 21:30:47 -06:00
LICENSE added a readme and bumped the version 2009-03-04 23:02:08 -07:00
README.textile Fixed doc typo. Thanks to Matt Morris for pointing it out. 2009-04-27 20:54:43 -07:00
Rakefile gemspec, add pending specs 2009-03-04 21:48:41 -07:00
TODO added TODO file 2009-05-06 03:58:45 +02:00
VERSION.yml Version bump to 0.1.3 2009-04-30 21:30:47 -06:00
cucumber.yml cucumber feature and example app done. Got the AR transaction strategy done as well. 2009-03-03 21:53:21 -07:00
database_cleaner.gemspec valid gemspec description to allow rake install from source 2009-05-06 03:44:33 +02:00

README.textile

h1. Database Cleaner

Database Cleaner is a set of strategies for cleaning your database in Ruby.
The original use case was to ensure a clean state during tests.  Each strategy 
is a small amount of code but is code that is usually needed in any ruby app 
that is testing with a database.

Right now the only ORM supported is ActiveRecord and it currently has two strategies:
truncation and transaction.

Support for DataMapper is built-in.  All that needs to be written are the strategies. :)

h2. How to use

<pre>
  require 'database_cleaner'
  DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :truncation

  # then, whenever you need to clean the DB
  DatabaseCleaner.clean
</pre>

With the :truncation strategy you can also pass in options, for example:
<pre>
  DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :truncation, {:only => %w[widgets dogs some_other_table]}
</pre>

<pre>
  DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :truncation, {:except => %w[widgets]}
</pre>

(I should point out the truncation strategy will never truncate your schema_migrations table.)


Some strategies require that you call DatabaseCleaner.start before calling clean 
(for example the :transaction one needs to know to open up a transaction). So
you would have:

<pre>
  require 'database_cleaner'
  DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :transaction
  
  DatabaseCleaner.start # usually this is called in setup of a test
  dirty_the_db
  DatabaseCleaner.clean # cleanup of the test
</pre>

At times you may want to do a single clean with one strategy.  For example, you may want
to start the process by truncating all the tables, but then use the faster transaction
strategy the remaining time.  To accomplish this you can say:

<pre>
  require 'database_cleaner'
  DatabaseCleaner.clean_with :truncation
  DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :transaction
  # then make the DatabaseCleaner.start and DatabaseCleaner.clean calls appropriately
</pre>

Example usage with RSpec:

<pre>
Spec::Runner.configure do |config|

  config.before(:suite) do
    DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :transaction
    DatabaseCleaner.clean_with(:truncation)
  end

  config.before(:each) do
    DatabaseCleaner.start
  end

  config.after(:each) do
    DatabaseCleaner.clean
  end

end
</pre>

For use in Cucumber please see the section below.



h2. Why?

One of my motivations for writing this library was to have an easy way to 
turn on what Rails calls "transactional_fixtures" in my non-rails 
ActiveRecord projects.  For example, Cucumber ships with a Rails world that
will wrap each scenario in a transaction.  This is great, but what if you are 
using ActiveRecord in a non-rails project?  You used to have to copy-and-paste
the needed code, but with DatabaseCleaner you can now say:

<pre>
  #env.rb
  require 'database_cleaner'
  require 'database_cleaner/cucumber'
  DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :transaction
</pre>

Now lets say you are running your features and it requires that another process be 
involved (i.e. Selenium running against your app's server.)  You can simply change
your strategy type:

<pre>
  #env.rb
  require 'database_cleaner'
  require 'database_cleaner/cucumber'
  DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :truncation
</pre>

You can have the best of both worlds and use the best one for the job:
<pre>
  #env.rb
  require 'database_cleaner'
  require 'database_cleaner/cucumber'
  DatabaseCleaner.strategy = (ENV['SELENIUM'] == 'true') ? :truncation : :transaction
</pre>

h2. COPYRIGHT

Copyright (c) 2009 Ben Mabey. See LICENSE for details.