I'm looking to send raw post data (e.g. unparamaterized JSON) to one of my controllers for testing:
class LegacyOrderUpdateControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
test "sending json" do
post :index, '{"foo":"bar", "bool":true}'
end
end
but this gives me a NoMethodError: undefined method `symbolize_keys' for #<String:0x00000102cb6080>
error.
What is the correct way to send raw post data in ActionController::TestCase
?
Here is some controller code:
def inde开发者_运维问答x
post_data = request.body.read
req = JSON.parse(post_data)
end
I ran across the same issue today and found a solution.
In your test_helper.rb
define the following method inside of ActiveSupport::TestCase
:
def raw_post(action, params, body)
@request.env['RAW_POST_DATA'] = body
response = post(action, params)
@request.env.delete('RAW_POST_DATA')
response
end
In your functional test, use it just like the post
method but pass the raw post body as the third argument.
class LegacyOrderUpdateControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
test "sending json" do
raw_post :index, {}, {:foo => "bar", :bool => true}.to_json
end
end
I tested this on Rails 2.3.4 when reading the raw post body using
request.raw_post
instead of
request.body.read
If you look at the source code you'll see that raw_post
just wraps request.body.read
with a check for this RAW_POST_DATA
in the request
env hash.
Version for Rails 5:
post :create, body: '{"foo": "bar", "bool": true}'
See here - body
string parameter is treated as raw request body.
I actually solved the same issues just adding one line before simulating the rspec post request. What you do is to populate the "RAW_POST_DATA". I tried to remove the attributes var on the post :create, but if I do so, it do not find the action.
Here my solution.
def do_create(attributes) request.env['RAW_POST_DATA'] = attributes.to_json post :create, attributes end
In the controller the code you need to read the JSON is something similar to this
@property = Property.new(JSON.parse(request.body.read))
Looking at stack trace running a test you can acquire more control on request preparation: ActionDispatch::Integration::RequestHelpers.post => ActionDispatch::Integration::Session.process => Rack::Test::Session.env_for
You can pass json string as :params AND specify a content type "application/json". In other case content type will be set to "application/x-www-form-urlencoded" and your json will be parsed properly.
So all you need is to specify "CONTENT_TYPE":
post :index, '{"foo":"bar", "bool":true}', "CONTENT_TYPE" => 'application/json'
For those using Rails5+ integration tests, the (undocumented) way to do this is to pass a string in the params argument, so:
post '/path', params: raw_body, headers: { 'Content-Type' => 'application/json' }
I was searching very long for how to post raw JSON content in a integration test (Rails 5.1). I guess my solution could also help in this case.
I looked up the documentation and source code for the post
method: https://api.rubyonrails.org/v5.1/classes/ActionDispatch/Integration/RequestHelpers.html#method-i-post
This directed me to the process
method for more details: https://api.rubyonrails.org/v5.1/classes/ActionDispatch/Integration/Session.html#method-i-process
Thanks to this, I finally found out what parameters are accepted by the process
and thus post
method.
Here's what my final solution looked like:
post my_url, params: nil, headers: nil, env: {'RAW_POST_DATA' => my_body_content}, as: :json
If you are using RSpec (>= 2.12.0) and writing Request specs, the module that is included is ActionDispatch::Integration::Runner
. If you take a look at the source code you can notice that the post method calls process which accepts a rack_env
parameter.
All this means that you can simply do the following in your spec:
#spec/requests/articles_spec.rb
post '/articles', {}, {'RAW_POST_DATA' => 'something'}
And in the controller:
#app/controllers/articles_controller.rb
def create
puts request.body.read
end
Using Rails 4, I was looking to do this to test the processing of raw xml that was being posted to the controller. I was able to do it by just providing the string to the post:
raw_xml = File.read("my_raw.xml")
post :message, raw_xml, format: :xml
I believe if the parameter provided is a string, it just gets passed along to the controller as the body.
In rails, 5.1 the following work for me when doing a delete request that needed data in the body:
delete your_app_url, as: :json, env: {
"RAW_POST_DATA" => {"a_key" => "a_value"}.to_json
}
NOTE: This only works when doing an Integration test.
The post
method expects a hash of name-value pairs, so you'll need to do something like this:
post :index, :data => '{"foo":"bar", "bool":true}'
Then, in your controller, get the data to be parsed like this:
post_data = params[:data]
As of Rails 4.1.5, this was the only thing that worked for me:
class LegacyOrderUpdateControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
def setup
@request.headers["Content-Type"] = 'application/json'
end
test "sending json" do
post :index, '{"foo":"bar", "bool":true}'.to_json, { account_id: 5, order_id: 10 }
end
end
for a url at /accounts/5/orders/10/items. This gets the url params conveyed as well as the JSON body. Of course, if orders is not embedded then you can leave off the params hash.
class LegacyOrderUpdateControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
def setup
@request.headers["Content-Type"] = 'application/json'
end
test "sending json" do
post :index, '{"foo":"bar", "bool":true}'.to_json
end
end
In Rails 4 (at least in 4.2.11.3) there's no easy way to test your controllers that consume json (functional tests). For parsing json in a running server the ActionDispatch::ParamsParser
middleware is responsible. Controller tests though rely on Rack, which can't parse json to this day (not that it should).
You can do:
post :create, body_params.to_json
or:
post :update, body_parmas.to_json, url_params
But body_params
won't be accessible in the controller via params
. You've got to do JSON.parse(request.body.read)
. So the only thing that comes to mind is:
post :update, url_params.merge(body_params)
That is, in tests pass everything via parameters (application/x-www-form-urlencoded
). In production the body will be parsed by ActionDispatch::ParamsParser
to the same effect. Except that your numbers become strings (and possibly more):
# test/controllers/post_controller_test.rb
post :update, {id: 1, n: 2}
# app/controller/posts_controller.rb
def update
p params # tests:
# {"id"=>"1", "n" => "2", "controller"=>"posts", "action"=>"update"}
# production
# {"id"=>"1", "n" => 2, "controller"=>"posts", "action"=>"update"}
end
If you're willing to parse json in controllers yourself though you can do:
# test/controllers/post_controller_test.rb
post_json :update, {n: 2}.to_json, {id: 1}
# app/controller/posts_controller.rb
def update
p JSON.parse(request.body.read) # {"id"=>"1", "n" => 2, "controller"=>"posts", "action"=>"update"}
end
post :index, {:foo=> 'bar', :bool => 'true'}
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