module RSpec module Mocks # @private class MethodDouble # @private attr_reader :method_name, :object, :expectations, :stubs, :method_stasher # @private def initialize(object, method_name, proxy) @method_name = method_name @object = object @proxy = proxy @original_visibility = nil @method_stasher = InstanceMethodStasher.new(object, method_name) @method_is_proxied = false @expectations = [] @stubs = [] end def original_implementation_callable # If original method is not present, uses the `method_missing` # handler of the object. This accounts for cases where the user has not # correctly defined `respond_to?`, and also 1.8 which does not provide # method handles for missing methods even if `respond_to?` is correct. @original_implementation_callable ||= original_method || Proc.new do |*args, &block| @object.__send__(:method_missing, @method_name, *args, &block) end end alias_method :save_original_implementation_callable!, :original_implementation_callable def original_method @original_method ||= @method_stasher.original_method || @proxy.original_method_handle_for(method_name) end # @private def visibility @proxy.visibility_for(@method_name) end # @private def object_singleton_class class << @object; self; end end # @private def configure_method @original_visibility = visibility @method_stasher.stash unless @method_is_proxied define_proxy_method end # @private def define_proxy_method return if @method_is_proxied save_original_implementation_callable! definition_target.class_exec(self, method_name, visibility) do |method_double, method_name, visibility| define_method(method_name) do |*args, &block| method_double.proxy_method_invoked(self, *args, &block) end __send__(visibility, method_name) end @method_is_proxied = true end # The implementation of the proxied method. Subclasses may override this # method to perform additional operations. # # @private def proxy_method_invoked(_obj, *args, &block) @proxy.message_received method_name, *args, &block end # @private def restore_original_method return show_frozen_warning if object_singleton_class.frozen? return unless @method_is_proxied remove_method_from_definition_target @method_stasher.restore if @method_stasher.method_is_stashed? restore_original_visibility @method_is_proxied = false end # @private def show_frozen_warning RSpec.warn_with( "WARNING: rspec-mocks was unable to restore the original `#{@method_name}` " \ "method on #{@object.inspect} because it has been frozen. If you reuse this " \ "object, `#{@method_name}` will continue to respond with its stub implementation.", :call_site => nil, :use_spec_location_as_call_site => true ) end # @private def restore_original_visibility return unless @original_visibility && MethodReference.method_defined_at_any_visibility?(object_singleton_class, @method_name) object_singleton_class.__send__(@original_visibility, method_name) end # @private def verify expectations.each { |e| e.verify_messages_received } end # @private def reset restore_original_method clear end # @private def clear expectations.clear stubs.clear end # The type of message expectation to create has been extracted to its own # method so that subclasses can override it. # # @private def message_expectation_class MessageExpectation end # @private def add_expectation(error_generator, expectation_ordering, expected_from, opts, &implementation) configure_method expectation = message_expectation_class.new(error_generator, expectation_ordering, expected_from, self, :expectation, opts, &implementation) expectations << expectation expectation end # @private def build_expectation(error_generator, expectation_ordering) expected_from = IGNORED_BACKTRACE_LINE message_expectation_class.new(error_generator, expectation_ordering, expected_from, self) end # @private def add_stub(error_generator, expectation_ordering, expected_from, opts={}, &implementation) configure_method stub = message_expectation_class.new(error_generator, expectation_ordering, expected_from, self, :stub, opts, &implementation) stubs.unshift stub stub end # A simple stub can only return a concrete value for a message, and # cannot match on arguments. It is used as an optimization over # `add_stub` / `add_expectation` where it is known in advance that this # is all that will be required of a stub, such as when passing attributes # to the `double` example method. They do not stash or restore existing method # definitions. # # @private def add_simple_stub(method_name, response) setup_simple_method_double method_name, response, stubs end # @private def add_simple_expectation(method_name, response, error_generator, backtrace_line) setup_simple_method_double method_name, response, expectations, error_generator, backtrace_line end # @private def setup_simple_method_double(method_name, response, collection, error_generator=nil, backtrace_line=nil) define_proxy_method me = SimpleMessageExpectation.new(method_name, response, error_generator, backtrace_line) collection.unshift me me end # @private def add_default_stub(*args, &implementation) return if stubs.any? add_stub(*args, &implementation) end # @private def remove_stub raise_method_not_stubbed_error if stubs.empty? remove_stub_if_present end # @private def remove_stub_if_present expectations.empty? ? reset : stubs.clear end # @private def raise_method_not_stubbed_error RSpec::Mocks.error_generator.raise_method_not_stubbed_error(method_name) end # In Ruby 2.0.0 and above prepend will alter the method lookup chain. # We use an object's singleton class to define method doubles upon, # however if the object has had its singleton class (as opposed to # its actual class) prepended too then the the method lookup chain # will look in the prepended module first, **before** the singleton # class. # # This code works around that by providing a mock definition target # that is either the singleton class, or if necessary, a prepended module # of our own. # if Support::RubyFeatures.module_prepends_supported? private # We subclass `Module` in order to be able to easily detect our prepended module. RSpecPrependedModule = Class.new(Module) def definition_target @definition_target ||= usable_rspec_prepended_module || object_singleton_class end def usable_rspec_prepended_module @proxy.prepended_modules_of_singleton_class.each do |mod| # If we have one of our modules prepended before one of the user's # modules that defines the method, use that, since our module's # definition will take precedence. return mod if RSpecPrependedModule === mod # If we hit a user module with the method defined first, # we must create a new prepend module, even if one exists later, # because ours will only take precedence if it comes first. return new_rspec_prepended_module if mod.method_defined?(method_name) end nil end def new_rspec_prepended_module RSpecPrependedModule.new.tap do |mod| object_singleton_class.__send__ :prepend, mod end end else private def definition_target object_singleton_class end end private def remove_method_from_definition_target definition_target.__send__(:remove_method, @method_name) rescue NameError # This can happen when the method has been monkeyed with by # something outside RSpec. This happens, for example, when # `file.write` has been stubbed, and then `file.reopen(other_io)` # is later called, as `File#reopen` appears to redefine `write`. # # Note: we could avoid rescuing this by checking # `definition_target.instance_method(@method_name).owner == definition_target`, # saving us from the cost of the expensive exception, but this error is # extremely rare (it was discovered on 2014-12-30, only happens on # RUBY_VERSION < 2.0 and our spec suite only hits this condition once), # so we'd rather avoid the cost of that check for every method double, # and risk the rare situation where this exception will get raised. RSpec.warn_with( "WARNING: RSpec could not fully restore #{@object.inspect}." \ "#{@method_name}, possibly because the method has been redefined " \ "by something outside of RSpec." ) end end end end