1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://github.com/ruby/ruby.git synced 2022-11-09 12:17:21 -05:00
ruby--ruby/spec/bundler/commands/info_spec.rb

208 lines
6.3 KiB
Ruby
Raw Normal View History

# frozen_string_literal: true
RSpec.describe "bundle info" do
context "with a standard Gemfile" do
before do
2020-12-08 02:36:29 -05:00
build_repo2 do
build_gem "has_metadata" do |s|
s.metadata = {
"bug_tracker_uri" => "https://example.com/user/bestgemever/issues",
"changelog_uri" => "https://example.com/user/bestgemever/CHANGELOG.md",
"documentation_uri" => "https://www.example.info/gems/bestgemever/0.0.1",
"homepage_uri" => "https://bestgemever.example.io",
"mailing_list_uri" => "https://groups.example.com/bestgemever",
"source_code_uri" => "https://example.com/user/bestgemever",
"wiki_uri" => "https://example.com/user/bestgemever/wiki",
}
end
end
install_gemfile <<-G
2020-12-08 02:36:29 -05:00
source "#{file_uri_for(gem_repo2)}"
gem "rails"
gem "has_metadata"
G
end
it "creates a Gemfile.lock when invoked with a gem name" do
FileUtils.rm(bundled_app_lock)
bundle "info rails"
expect(bundled_app_lock).to exist
end
it "prints information if gem exists in bundle" do
bundle "info rails"
expect(out).to include "* rails (2.3.2)
\tSummary: This is just a fake gem for testing
\tHomepage: http://example.com
\tPath: #{default_bundle_path("gems", "rails-2.3.2")}"
end
it "prints path if gem exists in bundle" do
bundle "info rails --path"
expect(out).to eq(default_bundle_path("gems", "rails-2.3.2").to_s)
end
it "prints the path to the running bundler" do
bundle "info bundler --path"
expect(out).to eq(root.to_s)
end
it "complains if gem not in bundle" do
bundle "info missing", :raise_on_error => false
expect(err).to eq("Could not find gem 'missing'.")
end
it "warns if path no longer exists on disk" do
FileUtils.rm_rf(default_bundle_path("gems", "rails-2.3.2"))
bundle "info rails --path"
expect(err).to match(/The gem rails has been deleted/i)
expect(err).to match(default_bundle_path("gems", "rails-2.3.2").to_s)
bundle "info rail --path"
expect(err).to match(/The gem rails has been deleted/i)
expect(err).to match(default_bundle_path("gems", "rails-2.3.2").to_s)
end
context "given a default gem shippped in ruby", :ruby_repo do
it "prints information about the default gem" do
bundle "info rdoc"
expect(out).to include("* rdoc")
expect(out).to include("Default Gem: yes")
end
end
context "given a gem with metadata" do
it "prints the gem metadata" do
bundle "info has_metadata"
expect(out).to include "* has_metadata (1.0)
\tSummary: This is just a fake gem for testing
\tHomepage: http://example.com
\tDocumentation: https://www.example.info/gems/bestgemever/0.0.1
\tSource Code: https://example.com/user/bestgemever
\tWiki: https://example.com/user/bestgemever/wiki
\tChangelog: https://example.com/user/bestgemever/CHANGELOG.md
\tBug Tracker: https://example.com/user/bestgemever/issues
\tMailing List: https://groups.example.com/bestgemever
\tPath: #{default_bundle_path("gems", "has_metadata-1.0")}"
end
end
context "when gem does not have homepage" do
before do
build_repo2 do
build_gem "rails", "2.3.2" do |s|
s.executables = "rails"
s.summary = "Just another test gem"
end
end
end
it "excludes the homepage field from the output" do
expect(out).to_not include("Homepage:")
end
end
end
context "with a git repo in the Gemfile" do
before :each do
@git = build_git "foo", "1.0"
end
it "prints out git info" do
install_gemfile <<-G
source "#{file_uri_for(gem_repo1)}"
gem "foo", :git => "#{lib_path("foo-1.0")}"
G
expect(the_bundle).to include_gems "foo 1.0"
bundle "info foo"
expect(out).to include("foo (1.0 #{@git.ref_for("master", 6)}")
end
it "prints out branch names other than master" do
update_git "foo", :branch => "omg" do |s|
s.write "lib/foo.rb", "FOO = '1.0.omg'"
end
@revision = revision_for(lib_path("foo-1.0"))[0...6]
install_gemfile <<-G
source "#{file_uri_for(gem_repo1)}"
gem "foo", :git => "#{lib_path("foo-1.0")}", :branch => "omg"
G
expect(the_bundle).to include_gems "foo 1.0.omg"
bundle "info foo"
expect(out).to include("foo (1.0 #{@git.ref_for("omg", 6)}")
end
it "doesn't print the branch when tied to a ref" do
sha = revision_for(lib_path("foo-1.0"))
install_gemfile <<-G
source "#{file_uri_for(gem_repo1)}"
gem "foo", :git => "#{lib_path("foo-1.0")}", :ref => "#{sha}"
G
bundle "info foo"
expect(out).to include("foo (1.0 #{sha[0..6]})")
end
it "handles when a version is a '-' prerelease" do
@git = build_git("foo", "1.0.0-beta.1", :path => lib_path("foo"))
install_gemfile <<-G
source "#{file_uri_for(gem_repo1)}"
gem "foo", "1.0.0-beta.1", :git => "#{lib_path("foo")}"
G
expect(the_bundle).to include_gems "foo 1.0.0.pre.beta.1"
bundle "info foo"
expect(out).to include("foo (1.0.0.pre.beta.1")
end
end
Fix some bundler specs (#2380) * These seem to consistenly pass already * Show actual command when running `make test-bundler` Current the setup command that installs the necessary gems for testing bundler was printed, but not the actual command that runs the tests. That was a bit confusing. * Borrow trick from setproctitle specs * A title that long doesn't get set sometimes No idea why, but the test doesn't need that the title is that long. * Fix most gem helper spec ruby-core failures * Fix the rest of the gem helper failures * Fix version spec by improving the assertion * Remove unnecessary `BUNDLE_RUBY` environment var We can use `RUBY` when necessary, and `BUNDLE_RUBY` is not a good name because bundler considers `BUNDLE_*` variables as settings. * Rename `BUNDLE_GEM` to `GEM_COMMAND` This is more descriptive I think, and also friendlier for bundler because `BUNDLE_` env variables are interpreted by bundler as settings, and this is not a bundler setting. This fixes one bundler spec failure in config specs against ruby-core. * Fix quality spec when run in core Use the proper path helper. * Fix dummy lib builder to never load default gems If a dummy library is named as a default gem, when requiring the library from its executable, the default gem would be loaded when running from core, because in core all default gems share path with bundler, and thus they are always in the $LOAD_PATH. We fix the issue by loading lib relatively inside dummy lib executables. * More exact assertions Sometimes I have the problem that I do some "print debugging" inside specs, and suddently the spec passes. This happens when the assertion is too relaxed, and the things I print make it match, specially when they are simple strings like "1.0" than can be easily be part of gem paths that I print for debugging. I fix this by making a more exact assertion. * Detect the correct shebang when ENV["RUBY"] is set * Relax assertion So that the spec passes even if another paths containing "ext" are in the load path. This works to fix a ruby-core issue, but it's a better assertion in general. We just want to know that the extension path was added. * Use folder structure independent path helper It should fix this spec for ruby-core. * Fix the last failing spec on ruby-core * Skip `bundle open <default_gem>` spec when no default gems
2019-08-19 20:46:31 -04:00
context "with a valid regexp for gem name" do
it "presents alternatives", :readline do
install_gemfile <<-G
source "#{file_uri_for(gem_repo1)}"
gem "rack"
gem "rack-obama"
G
bundle "info rac"
expect(out).to match(/\A1 : rack\n2 : rack-obama\n0 : - exit -(\n>)?\z/)
end
end
context "with an invalid regexp for gem name" do
it "does not find the gem" do
install_gemfile <<-G
source "#{file_uri_for(gem_repo1)}"
gem "rails"
G
invalid_regexp = "[]"
bundle "info #{invalid_regexp}", :raise_on_error => false
expect(err).to include("Could not find gem '#{invalid_regexp}'.")
end
end
2021-04-14 23:47:04 -04:00
context "with without configured" do
it "does not find the gem, but gives a helpful error" do
bundle "config without test"
install_gemfile <<-G
source "#{file_uri_for(gem_repo1)}"
gem "rails", group: :test
G
bundle "info rails", :raise_on_error => false
expect(err).to include("Could not find gem 'rails', because it's in the group 'test', configured to be ignored.")
end
end
end