I'm quite new to all of this. I am trying to test out a puppet module using Beaker. I keep getting this:
NoMethodError: undefined method `describe' for
#Beaker::TestCase:0x007fd6f95e6460
/Users/user1/beaker/Puppet/puppet-files/spec/classes/unit_spec.rb:3
/Users/user1/.rvm/gems/ruby-2.2.7/gems/beaker-3.24.0/bin/beaker:9
/Users/user1/.rvm/gems/ruby-2.2.7/bin/ruby_executable_hooks:15
/Users/user1/.rvm/gems/ruby-2.2.7/bin/ruby_executable_hooks:15.
This is the command that I'm running - "beaker --hosts myhost.yaml --pre-suite spec".
My unit_spec.rb contains this:
require 'puppetlabs_spec_helper/rake_tasks'
describe 'application' do
context 'applied to supported operating system' do
on_supported_os.each do |os, facts|
context "#{os}" do
let(:facts) do
facts
end
context "without any parameters" do
let(:params) {{ }}
it { is_expected.to compile.with_all_deps }
it { is_expected.to contain_class('files') }
end
end
end
end
context 'applied to unsupported operating system' do
describe 'ubuntu-14-x86_64' do
let(:facts) {{
:osfamily => 'Debian',
:operatingsystem => 'Ubuntu'
}}
it { is_expected.to raise_error(Puppet::Error, /Ubuntu not supported/) }
end
end
end
Any help would be much appreciated! Btw, I am using 'puppetlabs_spec_helper/rake_tasks' due to the fact that when I just used 'spec_helper' it gave me an error that it could not "load such file" even though it was there.
Also, I have tried doing
RSpec.Describe
That did not fix the issue either. I get the following error -
NameError: undefined local variable or method `on_supported_os' for #Class:0x007f92a61d5e58
I realise that this might be an RSpec Puppet issue, as this module was previously tested through puppet RSpec, however now I am trying to test using Beaker and not quite sure how to fully achieve that!
You're mixing up unit- and VM-based testing.
rspec-puppet (and rspec-puppet-facts'
on_supported_os
) are for catalog-based unit testing. They do not require a VM, and can give you quick feedback on syntax, and logic of your module.beaker, and the recommended beaker-rspec add-on, provide full end-to-end testing capabilities, using actual VMs, and testing a complete stack deploy (as defined in you tests).
The main entry point for existing modules is usually rake. Take a look at the existing rake tasks in the module using
rake -T
. In a well-written module it should have tasks for both rspec-puppet (usually calledspec
), and beaker (often calledbeaker
, oracceptance
).If it is your own module, you also might want to look into the new Puppet Development Kit to get the most important tools in a single installer.