JSON comparison solution
Yields a clean but potentially large Diff:
actual = JSON.parse(response.body, symbolize_names: true)
expected = { foo: "bar" }
expect(actual).to eq expected
Example of console output from real data:
expected: {:story=>{:id=>1, :name=>"The Shire"}}
got: {:story=>{:id=>1, :name=>"The Shire", :description=>nil, :body=>nil, :number=>1}}
(compared using ==)
Diff:
@@ -1,2 +1,2 @@
-:story => {:id=>1, :name=>"The Shire"},
+:story => {:id=>1, :name=>"The Shire", :description=>nil, ...}
(Thanks to comment by @floatingrock)
String comparison solution
If you want an iron-clad solution, you should avoid using parsers which could introduce false positive equality; compare the response body against a string. e.g:
actual = response.body
expected = ({ foo: "bar" }).to_json
expect(actual).to eq expected
But this second solution is less visually friendly as it uses serialized JSON which would include lots of escaped quotation marks.
Custom matcher solution
I tend to write myself a custom matcher that does a much better job of pinpointing at exactly which recursive slot the JSON paths differ. Add the following to your rspec macros:
def expect_response(actual, expected_status, expected_body = nil)
expect(response).to have_http_status(expected_status)
if expected_body
body = JSON.parse(actual.body, symbolize_names: true)
expect_json_eq(body, expected_body)
end
end
def expect_json_eq(actual, expected, path = "")
expect(actual.class).to eq(expected.class), "Type mismatch at path: #{path}"
if expected.class == Hash
expect(actual.keys).to match_array(expected.keys), "Keys mismatch at path: #{path}"
expected.keys.each do |key|
expect_json_eq(actual[key], expected[key], "#{path}/:#{key}")
end
elsif expected.class == Array
expected.each_with_index do |e, index|
expect_json_eq(actual[index], expected[index], "#{path}[#{index}]")
end
else
expect(actual).to eq(expected), "Type #{expected.class} expected #{expected.inspect} but got #{actual.inspect} at path: #{path}"
end
end
Example of usage 1:
expect_response(response, :no_content)
Example of usage 2:
expect_response(response, :ok, {
story: {
id: 1,
name: "Shire Burning",
revisions: [ ... ],
}
})
Example output:
Type String expected "Shire Burning" but got "Shire Burnin" at path: /:story/:name
Another example output to demonstrate a mismatch deep in a nested array:
Type Integer expected 2 but got 1 at path: /:story/:revisions[0]/:version
As you can see, the output tells you EXACTLY where to fix your expected JSON.