- Do not read files from app/assets directory
- Do not assert against the absolute value of a sequence-generated attribute
-
Avoid using
expect_any_instance_of
orallow_any_instance_of
in RSpec - Do not
rescue Exception
- Do not use inline JavaScript in views
- Storing assets that do not require pre-compiling
- Do not override
has_many through:
orhas_one through:
associations
Gotchas
The purpose of this guide is to document potential “gotchas” that contributors might encounter or should avoid during development of GitLab CE and EE.
Do not read files from app/assets directory
In GitLab 10.8 and later, Omnibus has dropped the app/assets
directory,
after asset compilation. The ee/app/assets
, vendor/assets
directories are dropped as well.
This means that reading files from that directory fails in Omnibus-installed GitLab instances:
file = Rails.root.join('app/assets/images/logo.svg')
# This file does not exist, read will fail with:
# Errno::ENOENT: No such file or directory @ rb_sysopen
File.read(file)
Do not assert against the absolute value of a sequence-generated attribute
Consider the following factory:
FactoryBot.define do
factory :label do
sequence(:title) { |n| "label#{n}" }
end
end
Consider the following API spec:
require 'spec_helper'
RSpec.describe API::Labels do
it 'creates a first label' do
create(:label)
get api("/projects/#{project.id}/labels", user)
expect(response).to have_gitlab_http_status(:ok)
expect(json_response.first['name']).to eq('label1')
end
it 'creates a second label' do
create(:label)
get api("/projects/#{project.id}/labels", user)
expect(response).to have_gitlab_http_status(:ok)
expect(json_response.first['name']).to eq('label1')
end
end
When run, this spec doesn’t do what we might expect:
1) API::API reproduce sequence issue creates a second label
Failure/Error: expect(json_response.first['name']).to eq('label1')
expected: "label1"
got: "label2"
(compared using ==)
This is because FactoryBot sequences are not reset for each example.
Please remember that sequence-generated values exist only to avoid having to explicitly set attributes that have a uniqueness constraint when using a factory.
Solution
If you assert against a sequence-generated attribute’s value, you should set it explicitly. Also, the value you set shouldn’t match the sequence pattern.
For instance, using our :label
factory, writing create(:label, title: 'foo')
is ok, but create(:label, title: 'label1')
is not.
Following is the fixed API spec:
require 'spec_helper'
RSpec.describe API::Labels do
it 'creates a first label' do
create(:label, title: 'foo')
get api("/projects/#{project.id}/labels", user)
expect(response).to have_gitlab_http_status(:ok)
expect(json_response.first['name']).to eq('foo')
end
it 'creates a second label' do
create(:label, title: 'bar')
get api("/projects/#{project.id}/labels", user)
expect(response).to have_gitlab_http_status(:ok)
expect(json_response.first['name']).to eq('bar')
end
end
Avoid using expect_any_instance_of
or allow_any_instance_of
in RSpec
Why
- Because it is not isolated therefore it might be broken at times.
-
Because it doesn’t work whenever the method we want to stub was defined in a prepended module, which is very likely the case in EE. We could see error like this:
1.1) Failure/Error: expect_any_instance_of(ApplicationSetting).to receive_messages(messages) Using `any_instance` to stub a method (elasticsearch_indexing) that has been defined on a prepended module (EE::ApplicationSetting) is not supported.
Alternative: expect_next_instance_of
, allow_next_instance_of
, expect_next_found_instance_of
or allow_next_found_instance_of
Instead of writing:
# Don't do this:
expect_any_instance_of(Project).to receive(:add_import_job)
# Don't do this:
allow_any_instance_of(Project).to receive(:add_import_job)
We could write:
# Do this:
expect_next_instance_of(Project) do |project|
expect(project).to receive(:add_import_job)
end
# Do this:
allow_next_instance_of(Project) do |project|
allow(project).to receive(:add_import_job)
end
# Do this:
expect_next_found_instance_of(Project) do |project|
expect(project).to receive(:add_import_job)
end
# Do this:
allow_next_found_instance_of(Project) do |project|
allow(project).to receive(:add_import_job)
end
Since Active Record is not calling the .new
method on model classes to instantiate the objects,
you should use expect_next_found_instance_of
or allow_next_found_instance_of
mock helpers to setup mock on objects returned by Active Record query & finder methods._
It is also possible to set mocks and expectations for multiple instances of the same Active Record model by using the expect_next_found_(number)_instances_of
and allow_next_found_(number)_instances_of
helpers, like so;
expect_next_found_2_instances_of(Project) do |project|
expect(project).to receive(:add_import_job)
end
allow_next_found_2_instances_of(Project) do |project|
allow(project).to receive(:add_import_job)
end
If we also want to initialize the instance with some particular arguments, we could also pass it like:
# Do this:
expect_next_instance_of(MergeRequests::RefreshService, project, user) do |refresh_service|
expect(refresh_service).to receive(:execute).with(oldrev, newrev, ref)
end
This would expect the following:
# Above expects:
refresh_service = MergeRequests::RefreshService.new(project, user)
refresh_service.execute(oldrev, newrev, ref)
Do not rescue Exception
See “Why is it bad style to rescue Exception => e
in Ruby?”.
This rule is enforced automatically by RuboCop._
Do not use inline JavaScript in views
Using the inline :javascript
Haml filters comes with a
performance overhead. Using inline JavaScript is not a good way to structure your code and should be avoided.
We’ve removed these two filters in an initializer.
Further reading
- Stack Overflow: Why you should not write inline JavaScript
Storing assets that do not require pre-compiling
Assets that need to be served to the user are stored under the app/assets
directory, which is later pre-compiled and placed in the public/
directory.
However, you cannot access the content of any file from within app/assets
from the application code, as we do not include that folder in production installations as a space saving measure.
support_bot = Users::Internal.support_bot
# accessing a file from the `app/assets` folder
support_bot.avatar = Rails.root.join('app', 'assets', 'images', 'bot_avatars', 'support_bot.png').open
support_bot.save!
While the code above works in local environments, it errors out in production installations as the app/assets
folder is not included.
Solution
The alternative is the lib/assets
folder. Use it if you need to add assets (like images) to the repository that meet the following conditions:
- The assets do not need to be directly served to the user (and hence need not be pre-compiled).
- The assets do need to be accessed via application code.
In short:
Use app/assets
for storing any asset that needs to be precompiled and served to the end user.
Use lib/assets
for storing any asset that does not need to be served to the end user directly, but is still required to be accessed by the application code.
MR for reference: !37671
Do not override has_many through:
or has_one through:
associations
Associations with the :through
option should not be overridden as we could accidentally
destroy the wrong object.
This is because the destroy()
method behaves differently when acting on
has_many through:
and has_one through:
associations.
group.users.destroy(id)
The code example above reads as if we are destroying a User
record, but behind the scenes, it is destroying a Member
record. This is because the users
association is defined on Group
as a has_many through:
association:
class Group < Namespace
has_many :group_members, -> { where(requested_at: nil).where.not(members: { access_level: Gitlab::Access::MINIMAL_ACCESS }) }, dependent: :destroy, as: :source
has_many :users, through: :group_members
end
And Rails has the following behavior on using destroy()
on such associations:
If the :through option is used, then the join records are destroyed instead, not the objects themselves.
This is why a Member
record, which is the join record connecting a User
and Group
, is being destroyed.
Now, if we override the users
association, so like:
class Group < Namespace
has_many :group_members, -> { where(requested_at: nil).where.not(members: { access_level: Gitlab::Access::MINIMAL_ACCESS }) }, dependent: :destroy, as: :source
has_many :users, through: :group_members
def users
super.where(admin: false)
end
end
The overridden method now changes the above behavior of destroy()
, such that if we execute
group.users.destroy(id)
a User
record will be deleted, which can lead to data loss.
In short, overriding a has_many through:
or has_one through:
association can prove dangerous.
To prevent this from happening, we are introducing an
automated check in !131455.
For more information, see issue 424536.