#-- copyright # OpenProject is a project management system. # # Copyright (C) 2012-2013 the OpenProject Team # # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or # modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License version 3. # # See doc/COPYRIGHT.rdoc for more details. #++ # 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' require 'capybara-screenshot/cucumber' # Load paths to ensure they are loaded before the plugin's paths.rbs. # Plugin's path_to functions rely on being loaded after the core's path_to # function, since they call super if they don't match and the core doesn't. # So in case a plugin's path_to is loaded first, the core's path_to will # overwrite it when loaded and the plugin's paths are not found. require_relative 'paths.rb' # 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.configure do |config| config.default_selector = :css config.default_wait_time = 10 config.exact_options = true config.ignore_hidden_elements = true config.match = :one config.visible_text_only = true end # 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 = :truncation 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