Developing dittodb

Jonathan Keane

2024-04-08

We welcome contributions from anyone, no matter how small or trivial. Documentation additions or typo fixes are especially welcome. For larger, more-functional changes, either see if there is an issue open on GitHub already, or open one with a proposal of the change you would like to make. Please also see our code of conduct and contributing guide.

Developing dittodb requires is a bit more complication than developing other R packages for a few reasons:

  1. setting up all of the databases to fully test recording is complicated (which is in some ways the exact reason dittodb exists, so you don’t have to do this!)
  2. some of the mechanisms that make dittodb work aren’t commonly used in other R packages.

Setting up databases

In order to fully test that dittodb works, we aim to have full coverage and test as many database backends as possible for both recording and using as a mocked database. To do this on continuous integration (CI for short) can be finicky to get working (and on the CI front, we did it once, so that you can use dittodb and you won’t have to setup your own database backend just to run tests!). Frankly, even doing this set up locally on a second computer can be a pain! We include in the repository a few scripts that make it (relatively) easy to setup testing database backends, as well as some scripts that we use to setup database backends on GitHub Actions.

What we test

We currently test against the following database backends with GitHub Actions for CI:

How to setup test databases locally

All of these (with the exception of SQLite) are tested in the test file test-dbi-generic-integration.R. However, tests for each database are only run if specific environment variables are set that trigger them. The reason for this is so that it is easy to test locally without needing to setup databases, but we are covered by these tests being run on GitHub Actions. If you would like to run these tests locally, you can set the following environment variables and run tests as usual (e.g. with R CMD check, devtools::check(), devtools::test())

There are a few scripts included in the db-setup folder that are helpful for setting up databases. For local tests, we highly recommend using the docker scripts:

If you’ve already got databases running on the default ports (3306 for MariaDB and 5432 for Postgres) and you want to use the docker scripts, we recommend that you change the ports that docker is using for any databases you’re already running. You can use the DITTODB_MARIA_TEST_PORT and DITTODB_PG_TEST_PORT environment variables to change which port dittodb uses to connect to the test databases. The docker scripts above will use these environment variables to map ports if they are set (and exported) for convenience. One thing to note: during dittodb tests, if some database drivers attempt to connect to not-running or on-the-wrong-port database backends, they can segfault instead of erroring with a more informative error. If you see this, the first thing to check is that the port variables are being set correctly and that the database backend is up and running normally.

Both of these utilize a few SQL (Structured Query Language) scripts for their respective backends. These might be useful if you’re manually adding the test data into a database you already have running, but if you’re using the docker scripts above, you shouldn’t need to use them at all.

☠️ What not to run ☠️

The other scripts (e.g. db-setup/[mariadb|postgres]-brew.sh and db-setup/[mariadb|postgres]-docker-container-only.sh) are only intended for use on GitHub Actions and should not be run locally. They include commands that will remove files necessary to reset database setups that allow for tests to be run. Running them locally will delete files that you might care about.

Some of the tricky bits that dittodb uses

In order to provide a seamless experience between using a real database connection and using the mocked version of the database dittodb uses some features of R that are pretty uncommon. This is not intended to be a comprehensive description of dittodb’s architecture, but a few things that are uncommon or a little strange.

Recording

In order to record fixtures while using a real database connection, we use base::trace() to add code that inspects the queries (to define unique hashes) and saves the results so that they can be used later. This tracing only happens when using the start_db_capturing() functions and should generally not be used during testing by packages that use dittodb. Rather, this functionality should generally be used to see what interactions a piece of code to be tested is having with a database and either use or edit and use the fixtures it produces in testing.

Using a mocked database

When using fixtures (i.e. with a mocked database), we use some internals to mock the DBI::dbConnect() function and replace the true connection with a special mock connection class from dittodb (DBIMockConnection, though there are specific sub-classes for some drivers, e.g. DBIMockRPostgresConnection). Then dittodb relies on standard S4 method dispatch to find the appropriate fixture for queries being run during testing.