41 lines
1.6 KiB
Text
41 lines
1.6 KiB
Text
== Creating the test database
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The default name for the test databases is "activerecord_versioned". If you
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want to use another database name then be sure to update the connection
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adapter setups you want to test with in test/connections/<your database>/connection.rb.
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When you have the database online, you can import the fixture tables with
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the test/fixtures/db_definitions/*.sql files.
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Make sure that you create database objects with the same user that you specified in i
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connection.rb otherwise (on Postgres, at least) tests for default values will fail.
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== Running with Rake
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The easiest way to run the unit tests is through Rake. The default task runs
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the entire test suite for all the adapters. You can also run the suite on just
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one adapter by using the tasks test_mysql_ruby, test_ruby_mysql, test_sqlite,
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or test_postresql. For more information, checkout the full array of rake tasks with "rake -T"
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Rake can be found at http://rake.rubyforge.org
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== Running by hand
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Unit tests are located in test directory. If you only want to run a single test suite,
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or don't want to bother with Rake, you can do so with something like:
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cd test; ruby -I "connections/native_mysql" base_test.rb
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That'll run the base suite using the MySQL-Ruby adapter. Change the adapter
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and test suite name as needed.
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== Faster tests
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If you are using a database that supports transactions, you can set the
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"AR_TX_FIXTURES" environment variable to "yes" to use transactional fixtures.
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This gives a very large speed boost. With rake:
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rake AR_TX_FIXTURES=yes
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Or, by hand:
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AR_TX_FIXTURES=yes ruby -I connections/native_sqlite3 base_test.rb
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