[reifyhealth/specmonstah "2.1.0"]
Specmonstah (Boston for "Specmonster") lets you write test fixtures that are clear, concise, and easy to maintain. It's great for dramatically reducing test boilerplate.
Say you want to test a scenario where a forum post has gotten three
likes by three different users. You'd first have to create a hierarchy
of records for the post, topic, topic category, and users. You have to
make sure that all the foreign keys are correct (e.g. the post's
:topic-id
is set to the topic's :id
) and that everything is inserted
in the right order.
With Specmonstah, all you have to do is write code like this:
(insert {:like [[3]]})
and these records get inserted in a database (in the order displayed):
[[:user {:id 1 :username "T2TD3pAB79X5"}]
[:user {:id 2 :username "ziJ9GnvNMOHcaUz"}]
[:topic-category {:id 3 :created-by-id 2 :updated-by-id 2}]
[:topic {:id 6
:topic-category-id 3
:title "4juV71q9Ih9eE1"
:created-by-id 2
:updated-by-id 2}]
[:post {:id 10 :topic-id 6 :created-by-id 2 :updated-by-id 2}]
[:like {:id 14 :post-id 10 :created-by-id 1}]
[:like {:id 17 :post-id 10 :created-by-id 2}]
[:user {:id 20 :username "b73Ts5BoO"}]
[:like {:id 21 :post-id 10 :created-by-id 20}]]
If you like tools that help you write code that's clear, concise, and easy to maintain, then check out the tutorial and learn how to use Specmonstah :)
If you're more of a gimme fun now kind of person, then try out this little interactive example. First, clone Specmonstah:
git clone https://github.com/reifyhealth/specmonstah.git
Open examples/short-sweet/short_sweet.clj
in your favorite editor
and start a REPL. I've also included the code below in case for
example you don't have access to a REPL because, say, you're in some
kind of Taken situation and you only have access to a phone and you're
using your precious battery life to go through this README.
The first ~66 lines of code include all the setup necessary for the examples to run, followed by snippets to try out with example output. Definitely play with the snippets 😀 Can you generate multiple todos or todo lists?
(ns short-sweet
(:require [reifyhealth.specmonstah.core :as sm]
[reifyhealth.specmonstah.spec-gen :as sg]
[clojure.spec.alpha :as s]
[clojure.spec.gen.alpha :as gen]))
;;-------*****--------
;; Begin example setup
;;-------*****--------
;; ---
;; Define specs for our domain entities
;; The ::id should be a positive int, and to generate it we increment
;; the number stored in `id-seq`. This ensures unique ids and produces
;; values that are easier for humans to understand
(def id-seq (atom 0))
(s/def ::id (s/with-gen pos-int? #(gen/fmap (fn [_] (swap! id-seq inc)) (gen/return nil))))
(s/def ::not-empty-string (s/and string? not-empty #(< (count %) 10)))
(s/def ::username ::not-empty-string)
(s/def ::user (s/keys :req-un [::id ::username]))
(s/def ::created-by-id ::id)
(s/def ::content ::not-empty-string)
(s/def ::post (s/keys :req-un [::id ::created-by-id ::content]))
(s/def ::post-id ::id)
(s/def ::like (s/keys :req-un [::id ::post-id ::created-by-id]))
;; ---
;; The schema defines specmonstah `ent-types`, which roughly
;; correspond to db tables. It also defines the `:spec` for generting
;; ents of that type, and defines ent `relations` that specify how
;; ents reference each other
(def schema
{:user {:prefix :u
:spec ::user}
:post {:prefix :p
:spec ::post
:relations {:created-by-id [:user :id]}}
:like {:prefix :l
:spec ::like
:relations {:post-id [:post :id]
:created-by-id [:user :id]}
:constraints {:created-by-id #{:uniq}}}})
;; Our "db" is a vector of inserted records we can use to show that
;; entities are inserted in the correct order
(def mock-db (atom []))
(defn insert*
"Simulates inserting records in a db by conjing values onto an
atom. ent-tye is `:user`, `:post`, or `:like`, corresponding to the
keys in the schema. `spec-gen` is the map generated by clojure.spec"
[{:keys [data] :as db} {:keys [ent-type spec-gen]}]
(swap! mock-db conj [ent-type spec-gen]))
(defn insert [query]
(reset! id-seq 0)
(reset! mock-db [])
(-> (sg/ent-db-spec-gen {:schema schema} query)
(sm/visit-ents-once :inserted-data insert*))
;; normally you'd return the expression above, but return nil for
;; the example to not produce overwhelming output
nil)
;;-------*****--------
;; Begin snippets to try in REPL
;;-------*****--------
;; Return a map of user entities and their spec-generated data
(-> (sg/ent-db-spec-gen {:schema schema} {:user [[3]]})
(sm/attr-map :spec-gen))
;; You can specify a username and id
(-> (sg/ent-db-spec-gen {:schema schema} {:user [[1 {:spec-gen {:username "Meeghan"
:id 100}}]]})
(sm/attr-map :spec-gen))
;; Generating a post generates the user the post belongs to, with
;; foreign keys correct
(-> (sg/ent-db-spec-gen {:schema schema} {:post [[1]]})
(sm/attr-map :spec-gen))
;; Generating a like also generates a post and user
(-> (sg/ent-db-spec-gen {:schema schema} {:like [[1]]})
(sm/attr-map :spec-gen))
;; The `insert` function shows that records are inserted into the
;; simulate "database" (`mock-db`) in correct dependency order:
(insert {:like [[1]]})
@mock-db
This is meant as a quick reference. If none of the terms below make sense, check out the tutorial.
In Specmonstah, you add ents to an ent db using a schema and query. You associate ents with attributes (and perform side effects like db insertion) using visiting functions.
A schema is a map of ent types to ent type schemas:
;; example schema
(def schema
{:user {:prefix :u}
:post {:prefix :p}
:like {:prefix :l
:spec ::like
:relations {:post-id [:post :id]
:created-by-id [:user :id]}
:constraints {:created-by-id #{:uniq}}}})
:prefix
key. This is used to
name the ents Specmonstah generates.:spec
is used by the reifyhealth.specmonstah.spec-gen/spec-gen
visiting function to generate values for ents using clojure.spec:relations
specify how ents of different types reference each other:constraints
provide additional rules around ent generation and visitation:
:uniq
means that every generated ent must reference a unique ent
of the given type. In the schema above, multiple :like
s must
each reference a distinct :user
.:coll
indicates that the given attribute can reference multiple
ents. See the
tutorial:required
is used to indicate ent sort order when your ent graph has a cycleYou can also add arbitrary keys to the schema matching the
visit-key
s you give to visiting functions. The schema will be
available to the visiting function under the key schema-opts
.
You specify ents to add to an ent db using a query:
(sm/add-ents {:schema schema} {:like [[3]]})
Above, {:like [[3]]}
is a query meaning "Add 3 likes to the ent db,
as well as the hierarchy of ents necessary for 3 likes to be present."
When you add ents to the ent db, that means that Specmonstah has created a graph node to represent the ent and added it an internal graph that represents all their ents and their relationships.
You can apply a function to each ent's graph node in topologically sorted (topsort) order and associate the return value as a node attribute.
(Topsort means that if a :post
references a :user
, then the
:user
will be placed before the :post
in the sort.)
(-> (sm/add-ents {:schema good-schema} {:like [[3]]})
(sm/visit-ents :prn (fn [db {:keys [ent-name ent-type]}]
(prn [ent-name ent-type]))))
[:u1 :user]
[:p0 :post]
[:l1 :like]
[:u0 :user]
[:l0 :like]
[:u2 :user]
[:l2 :like]
In the example above, sm/visit-ents
is used to apply an anonymous
function to every ent, printing the ent's name and type. The :prn
key is called the visit key. The return value of the visiting
function is associated with each ent node using the visit key.
The first argument to the visit function is always the entire ent db. The second argument is a map that includes the following keys:
:ent-name
: :u0
, :u1
and the like:attrs
: a map of all node attrs for the ent. These attrs are also
merged into the map passed to the visit function:visit-val
- current value of the visit attr for this node. Could
be present from previous visits.:visit-key
, the key used to associate the return value of the
visit fn with the node:query-opts
: any options you might have included in the query used
to generate this node:visit-query-opts
: just looks up the value of :visit-key
in the
:query-opts
map:schema-opts
: any options set for :visit-key
in the schema:bind
syntaxwrap-gen-data-visiting-fn
Can you improve this documentation? These fine people already did:
Daniel Higginbotham, Natxo Cabré, khiemlam, David Chelimsky, Andrea Crotti, mitchkyle-reify, Arsene Rei, Christian Romney, Jakub Holy, Taylor Wood & Alan DipertEdit on GitHub
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