Feature: automatically load step definitions Background: When I successfully run `bundle exec rails new testapp` And I cd to "testapp" And I add "factory_girl_rails" from this project as a dependency And I add "test-unit" as a dependency And I run `bundle install` with a clean environment And I write to "db/migrate/1_create_users.rb" with: """ class CreateUsers < ActiveRecord::Migration def self.up create_table :users do |t| t.string :name end end end """ When I run `bundle exec rake db:migrate` with a clean environment And I write to "app/models/user.rb" with: """ class User < ActiveRecord::Base end """ Scenario: generate a Rails application and use factory definitions When I write to "test/factories.rb" with: """ FactoryGirl.define do factory :user do name "Frank" end end """ When I write to "test/unit/user_test.rb" with: """ require 'test_helper' class UserTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase test "use factory" do user = FactoryGirl.create(:user) assert_equal 'Frank', user.name end end """ When I run `bundle exec rake test` with a clean environment Then the output should contain "1 assertions, 0 failures, 0 errors" Scenario: use factories advertised by railties/engines/3rd-party gems When I append to "config/application.rb" with: """ require File.expand_path('../../lib/some_railtie/railties.rb', __FILE__) """ When I write to "lib/some_railtie/railties.rb" with: """ module SomeRailtie class Railtie < ::Rails::Engine initializer "some_railtie.factories", :after => "factory_girl.set_factory_paths" do FactoryGirl.definition_file_paths << File.expand_path('../factories', __FILE__) end end end """ When I write to "lib/some_railtie/factories.rb" with: """ FactoryGirl.define do factory :factory_from_some_railtie, class: 'User' do name 'Artem' end end """ When I write to "test/unit/user_test.rb" with: """ require 'test_helper' class UserTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase test "use factory of some_railtie" do user = FactoryGirl.create(:factory_from_some_railtie) assert_equal 'Artem', user.name end end """ When I run `bundle exec rake test` with a clean environment Then the output should contain "1 assertions, 0 failures, 0 errors"