I have found other questions on similar lines but nothing that answers my question in this particular scenario. Furthermore, there seem to be few resources which succinctly cover the subject of unit testing IO actions in Haskell.
Let's say I have this typeclass for my database communication:
data Something = Something String deriving Show
class MonadIO m => MonadDB m where
getSomething :: String -> m Something
getSomething s = do
... -- assume a DB call is made and an otherwise valid function
instance MonadDB IO
and this function which uses it:
getIt :: MonadDB m => m (Int, Something)
getIt = do
s@(Something str) <- getSomething "hi"
return (length str, s) -- excuse the contrived example
I wish to test this getIt
function with hspec but without it talking to the database, which presumably means replacing which MonadDB
it uses, but how do I achieve that?
Would this work for you?
#!/usr/bin/env stack
-- stack exec --package transformers --package hspec -- ghci
import Control.Monad.IO.Class
import Control.Monad.Trans.Identity
import Data.Char
import Test.Hspec
data Something = Something String deriving (Eq, Show)
class MonadIO m => MonadDB m where
getSomething :: String -> m Something
getSomething s = return $ Something (map toUpper s)
instance MonadDB IO
instance MonadIO m => MonadDB (IdentityT m)
getIt :: MonadDB m => m (Int, Something)
getIt = do
s@(Something str) <- getSomething "hi"
return (length str, s)
main :: IO ()
main = hspec $ do
describe "Some tests" $ do
it "test getIt" $ do
runIdentityT getIt `shouldReturn` (2, Something "HI")
it "test getIt should fail" $ do
runIdentityT getIt `shouldReturn` (1, Something "HI")
You might also be able to use ReaderT
or StateT
to "supply" data or a transformation for getSomething
to use upon test querying.
Edit: Example use from within hspec.