add cucumber stup

pull/1186/head
Martin Linkhorst 12 years ago
parent 5f89c5497e
commit dbf78a6485
  1. 8
      config/cucumber.yml
  2. 59
      features/support/env.rb
  3. 10
      script/cucumber

@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
<%
rerun = File.file?('rerun.txt') ? IO.read('rerun.txt') : ""
rerun_opts = rerun.to_s.strip.empty? ? "--format #{ENV['CUCUMBER_FORMAT'] || 'progress'} features" : "--format #{ENV['CUCUMBER_FORMAT'] || 'pretty'} #{rerun}"
std_opts = "--format #{ENV['CUCUMBER_FORMAT'] || 'pretty'} --strict --tags ~@wip"
%>
default: <%= std_opts %> features
wip: --tags @wip:3 --wip features
rerun: <%= rerun_opts %> --format rerun --out rerun.txt --strict --tags ~@wip

@ -0,0 +1,59 @@
# IMPORTANT: This file is generated by cucumber-rails - edit at your own peril.
# It is recommended to regenerate this file in the future when you upgrade to a
# newer version of cucumber-rails. Consider adding your own code to a new file
# instead of editing this one. Cucumber will automatically load all features/**/*.rb
# files.
require 'cucumber/rails'
# Capybara defaults to XPath selectors rather than Webrat's default of CSS3. In
# order to ease the transition to Capybara we set the default here. If you'd
# prefer to use XPath just remove this line and adjust any selectors in your
# steps to use the XPath syntax.
Capybara.default_selector = :css
# By default, any exception happening in your Rails application will bubble up
# to Cucumber so that your scenario will fail. This is a different from how
# your application behaves in the production environment, where an error page will
# be rendered instead.
#
# Sometimes we want to override this default behaviour and allow Rails to rescue
# exceptions and display an error page (just like when the app is running in production).
# Typical scenarios where you want to do this is when you test your error pages.
# There are two ways to allow Rails to rescue exceptions:
#
# 1) Tag your scenario (or feature) with @allow-rescue
#
# 2) Set the value below to true. Beware that doing this globally is not
# recommended as it will mask a lot of errors for you!
#
ActionController::Base.allow_rescue = false
# Remove/comment out the lines below if your app doesn't have a database.
# For some databases (like MongoDB and CouchDB) you may need to use :truncation instead.
begin
DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :transaction
rescue NameError
raise "You need to add database_cleaner to your Gemfile (in the :test group) if you wish to use it."
end
# You may also want to configure DatabaseCleaner to use different strategies for certain features and scenarios.
# See the DatabaseCleaner documentation for details. Example:
#
# Before('@no-txn,@selenium,@culerity,@celerity,@javascript') do
# # { :except => [:widgets] } may not do what you expect here
# # as tCucumber::Rails::Database.javascript_strategy overrides
# # this setting.
# DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :truncation
# end
#
# Before('~@no-txn', '~@selenium', '~@culerity', '~@celerity', '~@javascript') do
# DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :transaction
# end
#
# Possible values are :truncation and :transaction
# The :transaction strategy is faster, but might give you threading problems.
# See https://github.com/cucumber/cucumber-rails/blob/master/features/choose_javascript_database_strategy.feature
Cucumber::Rails::Database.javascript_strategy = :truncation

@ -0,0 +1,10 @@
#!/usr/bin/env ruby
vendored_cucumber_bin = Dir["#{File.dirname(__FILE__)}/../vendor/{gems,plugins}/cucumber*/bin/cucumber"].first
if vendored_cucumber_bin
load File.expand_path(vendored_cucumber_bin)
else
require 'rubygems' unless ENV['NO_RUBYGEMS']
require 'cucumber'
load Cucumber::BINARY
end
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