Teaspoon.configure do |config| # Determines where the Teaspoon routes will be mounted. Changing this to "/jasmine" would allow you to browse to # `http://localhost:3000/jasmine` to run your tests. config.mount_at = "/teaspoon" # Specifies the root where Teaspoon will look for files. If you're testing an engine using a dummy application it can # be useful to set this to your engines root (e.g. `Teaspoon::Engine.root`). # Note: Defaults to `Rails.root` if nil. config.root = nil # Paths that will be appended to the Rails assets paths # Note: Relative to `config.root`. config.asset_paths = ["spec/javascripts", "spec/javascripts/stylesheets"] # Fixtures are rendered through a controller, which allows using HAML, RABL/JBuilder, etc. Files in these paths will # be rendered as fixtures. config.fixture_paths = ["spec/javascripts/fixtures"] # SUITES # # You can modify the default suite configuration and create new suites here. Suites are isolated from one another. # # When defining a suite you can provide a name and a block. If the name is left blank, :default is assumed. You can # omit various directives and the ones defined in the default suite will be used. # # To run a specific suite # - in the browser: http://localhost/teaspoon/[suite_name] # - with the rake task: rake teaspoon suite=[suite_name] # - with the cli: teaspoon --suite=[suite_name] config.suite do |suite| # Specify the framework you would like to use. This allows you to select versions, and will do some basic setup for # you -- which you can override with the directives below. This should be specified first, as it can override other # directives. # Note: If no version is specified, the latest is assumed. # # Versions: 1.3.1, 2.0.3, 2.1.3, 2.2.0 suite.use_framework :jasmine, "2.2.0" # Specify a file matcher as a regular expression and all matching files will be loaded when the suite is run. These # files need to be within an asset path. You can add asset paths using the `config.asset_paths`. suite.matcher = "{spec/javascripts,app/assets}/**/*_spec.{js,js.coffee,coffee,js.es6,es6}" # Load additional JS files, but requiring them in your spec helper is the preferred way to do this. # suite.javascripts = [] # You can include your own stylesheets if you want to change how Teaspoon looks. # Note: Spec related CSS can and should be loaded using fixtures. # suite.stylesheets = ["teaspoon"] # This suites spec helper, which can require additional support files. This file is loaded before any of your test # files are loaded. suite.helper = "spec_helper" # Partial to be rendered in the head tag of the runner. You can use the provided ones or define your own by creating # a `_boot.html.erb` in your fixtures path, and adjust the config to `"/boot"` for instance. # # Available: boot, boot_require_js suite.boot_partial = "boot" # Partial to be rendered in the body tag of the runner. You can define your own to create a custom body structure. suite.body_partial = "body" # Hooks allow you to use `Teaspoon.hook("fixtures")` before, after, or during your spec run. This will make a # synchronous Ajax request to the server that will call all of the blocks you've defined for that hook name. # suite.hook :fixtures, &proc{} # Determine whether specs loaded into the test harness should be embedded as individual script tags or concatenated # into a single file. Similar to Rails' asset `debug: true` and `config.assets.debug = true` options. By default, # Teaspoon expands all assets to provide more valuable stack traces that reference individual source files. # suite.expand_assets = true end # Example suite. Since we're just filtering to files already within the root test/javascripts, these files will also # be run in the default suite -- but can be focused into a more specific suite. # config.suite :targeted do |suite| # suite.matcher = "spec/javascripts/targeted/*_spec.{js,js.coffee,coffee}" # end # CONSOLE RUNNER SPECIFIC # # These configuration directives are applicable only when running via the rake task or command line interface. These # directives can be overridden using the command line interface arguments or with ENV variables when using the rake # task. # # Command Line Interface: # teaspoon --driver=phantomjs --server-port=31337 --fail-fast=true --format=junit --suite=my_suite /spec/file_spec.js # # Rake: # teaspoon DRIVER=phantomjs SERVER_PORT=31337 FAIL_FAST=true FORMATTERS=junit suite=my_suite # Specify which headless driver to use. Supports PhantomJS and Selenium Webdriver. # # Available: :phantomjs, :selenium, :capybara_webkit # PhantomJS: https://github.com/modeset/teaspoon/wiki/Using-PhantomJS # Selenium Webdriver: https://github.com/modeset/teaspoon/wiki/Using-Selenium-WebDriver # Capybara Webkit: https://github.com/modeset/teaspoon/wiki/Using-Capybara-Webkit # config.driver = :phantomjs # Specify additional options for the driver. # # PhantomJS: https://github.com/modeset/teaspoon/wiki/Using-PhantomJS # Selenium Webdriver: https://github.com/modeset/teaspoon/wiki/Using-Selenium-WebDriver # Capybara Webkit: https://github.com/modeset/teaspoon/wiki/Using-Capybara-Webkit # config.driver_options = nil # Specify the timeout for the driver. Specs are expected to complete within this time frame or the run will be # considered a failure. This is to avoid issues that can arise where tests stall. # config.driver_timeout = 180 # Specify a server to use with Rack (e.g. thin, mongrel). If nil is provided Rack::Server is used. # config.server = nil # Specify a port to run on a specific port, otherwise Teaspoon will use a random available port. # config.server_port = nil # Timeout for starting the server in seconds. If your server is slow to start you may have to bump this, or you may # want to lower this if you know it shouldn't take long to start. # config.server_timeout = 20 # Force Teaspoon to fail immediately after a failing suite. Can be useful to make Teaspoon fail early if you have # several suites, but in environments like CI this may not be desirable. # config.fail_fast = true # Specify the formatters to use when outputting the results. # Note: Output files can be specified by using `"junit>/path/to/output.xml"`. # # Available: :dot, :clean, :documentation, :json, :junit, :pride, :rspec_html, :snowday, :swayze_or_oprah, :tap, :tap_y, :teamcity # config.formatters = [:dot] # Specify if you want color output from the formatters. # config.color = true # Teaspoon pipes all console[log/debug/error] to $stdout. This is useful to catch places where you've forgotten to # remove them, but in verbose applications this may not be desirable. # config.suppress_log = false # COVERAGE REPORTS / THRESHOLD ASSERTIONS # # Coverage reports requires Istanbul (https://github.com/gotwarlost/istanbul) to add instrumentation to your code and # display coverage statistics. # # Coverage configurations are similar to suites. You can define several, and use different ones under different # conditions. # # To run with a specific coverage configuration # - with the rake task: rake teaspoon USE_COVERAGE=[coverage_name] # - with the cli: teaspoon --coverage=[coverage_name] # Specify that you always want a coverage configuration to be used. Otherwise, specify that you want coverage # on the CLI. # Set this to "true" or the name of your coverage config. # config.use_coverage = nil # You can have multiple coverage configs by passing a name to config.coverage. # e.g. config.coverage :ci do |coverage| # The default coverage config name is :default. config.coverage do |coverage| # Which coverage reports Istanbul should generate. Correlates directly to what Istanbul supports. # # Available: text-summary, text, html, lcov, lcovonly, cobertura, teamcity # coverage.reports = ["text-summary", "html"] # The path that the coverage should be written to - when there's an artifact to write to disk. # Note: Relative to `config.root`. # coverage.output_path = "coverage" # Assets to be ignored when generating coverage reports. Accepts an array of filenames or regular expressions. The # default excludes assets from vendor, gems and support libraries. # coverage.ignore = [%r{/lib/ruby/gems/}, %r{/vendor/assets/}, %r{/support/}, %r{/(.+)_helper.}] # Various thresholds requirements can be defined, and those thresholds will be checked at the end of a run. If any # aren't met the run will fail with a message. Thresholds can be defined as a percentage (0-100), or nil. # coverage.statements = nil # coverage.functions = nil # coverage.branches = nil # coverage.lines = nil end end