- Make `champ.dossier` a requirement;
- Move the dossier_id assignation to `before_validation` (otherwise
the record is invalid, and never gets saved);
- Allow specs to only build the champ (instead of saving it to the
database), which bypasses the requirement to have a dossier.
We currently have many failed VirusScannerJob enqueued, because the
underlying blob is missing.
This PR fixes the issue by discarding the job in those cases (because if
the blob is gone, the job is never going to succeed).
The implementation is based on a similar issue encoutered by the
ActiveStorage::AnalyzeJob. See 06f8baf73c
When the job is invoked directly, the serialization and de-serialization
of the job arguments is not actually tested.
Using `perform_later` inside a `perform_enqueued_jobs` allows to
exercise the serialization.
Test helpers are separated between two files: spec_helper and
rails_helper. This separation is meant to allow tests that do not
require Rails (like testing standalone libs) to boot faster.
The spec_helper file is always loaded, through `--require spec_helper`
in the `.rspec` config file. When needed, the rails_helper file is
expected to be required manually.
This is fine, but:
- Many test files have a redundant `require 'spec_helper'` line;
- Many test files should require `rails_helper`, but don't.
Not requiring `rails_helper` will cause the Rails-concerned section of
the test environment not to be configured–which may cause subtle bugs
(like the test database not being properly initialized).
Moreover, Spring loads all the Rails files on preloading anyway. So the
gains from using only `spec_helper` are thin.
To streamline this process, this commit:
- Configures `.rspec` to require `rails_helper` by default;
- Remove all manual requires to spec_helper or rails_helper.
Reference: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/24145329/how-is-spec-rails-helper-rb-different-from-spec-spec-helper-rb-do-i-need-it