dittodb
is a package that makes testing against databases easy. When writing code that relies on interactions with databases, testing has been difficult without recreating test databases in your continuous integration (aka CI) environment, or resorting to using SQLite databases instead of the database engines you have in production. Both have their downsides: recreating database infrastructure is slow, error prone, and hard to iterate with. Using SQLite works well, right up until you use a feature (like a full outer join) or has quirks that might differ from your production database. dittodb
solves this by recording database interactions, saving them as mocks, and then replaying them seamlessly during testing. This means that if you can get a query from your database, you can record the response and reliably reproduce that response in tests.
dittodb
is heavily inspired by {httptest}, if you’ve used {httptest} before, you’ll find many of the interactions similar.
Say we have a database with some {nycflights} data in it and we are writing functions that query this data that we want to test.
For example, we have the simple function that retrieves one airline:
get_an_airline <- function(con) {
return(dbGetQuery(con, "SELECT carrier, name FROM airlines LIMIT 1"))
}
But we want to make sure that this function returns what we expect. To do this, we first record the response we get from the production database:
start_db_capturing()
con <- DBI::dbConnect(
RMariaDB::MariaDB(),
dbname = "nycflights"
)
get_an_airline(con)
DBI::dbDisconnect(con)
stop_db_capturing()
start_db_capturing()
con <- DBI::dbConnect(
RPostgres::Postgres(),
dbname = "nycflights"
)
get_an_airline(con)
DBI::dbDisconnect(con)
stop_db_capturing()
start_db_capturing()
con <- DBI::dbConnect(RSQLite::SQLite(), "nycflights")
get_an_airline(con)
DBI::dbDisconnect(con)
stop_db_capturing()
This will run the query from get_an_airline()
, and save the response in a mock directory and file. Then, when we are testing, we can use the following:
with_mock_db({
con <- DBI::dbConnect(
RMariaDB::MariaDB(),
dbname = "nycflights"
)
test_that("We get one airline", {
one_airline <- get_an_airline(con)
expect_s3_class(one_airline, "data.frame")
expect_equal(nrow(one_airline), 1)
expect_equal(one_airline$carrier, "9E")
expect_equal(one_airline$name, "Endeavor Air Inc.")
})
})
with_mock_db({
con <- DBI::dbConnect(
RPostgres::Postgres(),
dbname = "nycflights"
)
test_that("We get one airline", {
one_airline <- get_an_airline(con)
expect_s3_class(one_airline, "data.frame")
expect_equal(nrow(one_airline), 1)
expect_equal(one_airline$carrier, "9E")
expect_equal(one_airline$name, "Endeavor Air Inc.")
})
})
with_mock_db({
con <- DBI::dbConnect(RSQLite::SQLite(), "nycflights")
test_that("We get one airline", {
one_airline <- get_an_airline(con)
expect_s3_class(one_airline, "data.frame")
expect_equal(nrow(one_airline), 1)
expect_equal(one_airline$carrier, "9E")
expect_equal(one_airline$name, "Endeavor Air Inc.")
})
})
All without having to ever set a database up on Travis or GitHub Actions 🎉
Currently, dittodb
is on CRAN (The Comprehensive R Archive Network), so you can install it with install.packages("dittodb")
.
If you would like to use the development version, you can install from GitHub with: remotes::install_github("ropensci/dittodb")
Note You may need to add @main
at the end if you are using a version of {remotes} prior to 2.2.0. Alternatively, you can use remotes::install_git()
directly: remotes::install_git("https://github.com/ropensci/dittodb.git")
dittodb
Use the function dittodb::use_dittodb()
to easily get started using dittodb
. It will add dittodb
to Suggests
in the DESCRIPTION
file and add library(dittodb)
to tests/testthat/helper.R
.
There is extensive information about developing dittodb
in the vignette Developing dittodb
, please read that before trying to make changes to dittodb
or running any of the scripts provided in the db-setup
directory.
In order to test dittodb
recording functionality locally or on continuous integration, it is helpful to have databases with test data available. This can be accomplished using the scripts in the db-setup
directory. By default, dittodb
does not run any tests that require database infrastructure locally.
To get local databases, the easiest way is to use docker and run either the db-setup/local-mariadb-docker-setup.sh
or db-setup/local-postgres-docker-setup.sh
which will pull a docker image and set up a test database with the user and passwords that the dittodb
tests are expecting (and will stop and remove the docker images if they are present).
On continuous integration, (using GitHub Actions) these scripts in the db-setup
directory are used to set up these test databases so we can run integration tests (predominantly in the file tests/testthat/test-dbi-generic-integration.R
).
Please note that the dittodb
project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.