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ruby--ruby/spec
David Rodríguez 526c9359ca [rubygems/rubygems] Don't cleanup paths from gems already activated from $LOAD_PATH
This way, if some default gem has been required before bundler, and
rubygems has enhanced the `$LOAD_PATH` to use the latest version in the
system, further requires of that default gem after bundler has been
activated will use the same version and don't cause redefinition
warnings or worse problems derived from the fact of mixing up two
different versions. That, unless the gem is a `Gemfile` dependency. In
that case, we'll get a mismatch error anyways as we do now.

This fix doesn't mean that all default gems internally used by
bundler/rubygems are now supported inside `Gemfile`'s. That should be
handled case by case, but it will now bite people only when they try to
add the gem to their `Gemfile`, not before.

https://github.com/rubygems/rubygems/commit/7325530547
2021-12-07 01:53:39 +09:00
..
bundler [rubygems/rubygems] Don't cleanup paths from gems already activated from $LOAD_PATH 2021-12-07 01:53:39 +09:00
mspec Update to ruby/mspec@098b320 2021-11-29 15:50:26 +01:00
ruby [win32] skip example about STDIN encodings 2021-12-01 18:54:26 +09:00
default.mspec Fix error when srcdir not found 2021-10-18 11:44:20 +09:00
README.md Run specs against the latest release of 2.4 2020-01-28 18:12:24 +01:00

spec/bundler

spec/bundler is rspec examples for bundler library(lib/bundler.rb, lib/bundler/*).

Running spec/bundler

To run rspec for bundler:

make test-bundler

spec/ruby

ruby/spec (https://github.com/ruby/spec/) is a test suite for the Ruby language.

Once a month, @eregon merges the in-tree copy under spec/ruby with the upstream repository, preserving the commits and history. The same happens for other implementations such as JRuby and TruffleRuby.

Feel welcome to modify the in-tree spec/ruby. This is the purpose of the in-tree copy, to facilitate contributions to ruby/spec for MRI developers.

New features, additional tests for existing features and regressions tests are all welcome in ruby/spec. There is very little behavior that is implementation-specific, as in the end user programs tend to rely on every behavior MRI exhibits. In other words: If adding a spec might reveal a bug in another implementation, then it is worth adding it. Currently, the only module which is MRI-specific is RubyVM.

Changing behavior and versions guards

Version guards (ruby_version_is) must be added for new features or features which change behavior or are removed. This is necessary for other Ruby implementations to still be able to run the specs and contribute new specs.

For example, change:

describe "Some spec" do
  it "some example" do
    # Old behavior for Ruby < 2.7
  end
end

to:

describe "Some spec" do
  ruby_version_is ""..."2.7" do
    it "some example" do
      # Old behavior for Ruby < 2.7
    end
  end

  ruby_version_is "2.7" do
    it "some example" do
      # New behavior for Ruby >= 2.7
    end
  end
end

See spec/ruby/CONTRIBUTING.md for more documentation about guards.

To verify specs are compatible with older Ruby versions:

cd spec/ruby
$RUBY_MANAGER use 2.4.9
../mspec/bin/mspec -j

Running ruby/spec

To run all specs:

make test-spec

Extra arguments can be added via MSPECOPT. For instance, to show the help:

make test-spec MSPECOPT=-h

You can also run the specs in parallel, which is currently experimental. It takes around 10s instead of 60s on a quad-core laptop.

make test-spec MSPECOPT=-j

To run a specific test, add its path to the command:

make test-spec MSPECOPT=spec/ruby/language/for_spec.rb

If ruby trunk is your current ruby in $PATH, you can also run mspec directly:

# change ruby to trunk
ruby -v # => trunk
spec/mspec/bin/mspec spec/ruby/language/for_spec.rb

ruby/spec and test/

The main difference between a "spec" under spec/ruby/ and a test under test/ is that specs are documenting what they test. This is extremely valuable when reading these tests, as it helps to quickly understand what specific behavior is tested, and how a method should behave. Basic English is fine for spec descriptions. Specs also tend to have few expectations (assertions) per spec, as they specify one aspect of the behavior and not everything at once. Beyond that, the syntax is slightly different but it does the same thing: assert_equal 3, 1+2 is just (1+2).should == 3.

Example:

describe "The for expression" do
  it "iterates over an Enumerable passing each element to the block" do
    j = 0
    for i in 1..3
      j += i
    end
    j.should == 6
  end
end

For more details, see spec/ruby/CONTRIBUTING.md.