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Description: Webrat - Ruby Acceptance Testing for Web applications
Homepage: http://gitrdoc.com/brynary/webrat/tree/master/
Clone URL: git://github.com/brynary/webrat.git
brynary (author)
Tue Nov 18 19:56:35 -0800 2008
commit  ec8bc82c243541a1fef06de19ed1ecd338881984
tree    e89ac6ae88060c01625c8a1f96699d38822130a1
parent  0dd7ea2ae0ad699034b8fd2fe87f180c9cea33e7
webrat /
name age message
file .gitignore Sun Nov 16 20:04:34 -0800 2008 Working on running specs in separate processes [brynary]
file History.txt Loading commit data...
file MIT-LICENSE.txt Sun Mar 02 16:35:46 -0800 2008 Add hoe for gem support [brynary]
file README.txt Thu Nov 06 14:53:41 -0800 2008 Switching from Hpricot to Nokogiri [brynary]
file Rakefile
file init.rb Thu Nov 13 19:20:39 -0800 2008 Flip compound conditional to if [brynary]
file install.rb Thu Nov 13 18:18:22 -0800 2008 Fixed README filename [nando]
directory lib/
directory spec/
README.txt
=== Webrat

- [Code on GitHub](http://github.com/brynary/webrat)
- [Tickets on Lighthouse](http://webrat.lighthouseapp.com/)

=== Description

Webrat (_Ruby Acceptance Testing for Web applications_)
lets you quickly write robust and thorough acceptance tests for a Ruby
web application. By leveraging the DOM, it can run tests similarly to an
in-browser testing solution without the associated performance hit (and
browser dependency). The result is tests that are less fragile and more
effective at verifying that the app will respond properly to users.

When comparing Webrat with an in-browser testing solution like Watir or
Selenium, the primary consideration should be how much JavaScript the
application uses. In-browser testing is currently the only way to test JS, and
that may make it a requirement for your project. If JavaScript is not central
to your application, Webrat is a simpler, effective solution that will let you
run your tests much faster and more frequently.

Initial development was sponsored by [EastMedia](http://www.eastmedia.com).

=== Synopsis

    def test_sign_up
      visit "/"
      click_link "Sign up"
      fill_in "Email", :with => "good@example.com"
      select "Free account"
      click_button "Register"
      ...
    end
  
Behind the scenes, this will perform the following work:

1. Verify that loading the home page is successful
2. Verify that a "Sign up" link exists on the home page
3. Verify that loading the URL pointed to by the "Sign up" link leads to a
   successful page
4. Verify that there is an "Email" input field on the Sign Up page
5. Verify that there is an select field on the Sign Up page with an option for
   "Free account"
6. Verify that there is a "Register" submit button on the page
7. Verify that submitting the Sign Up form with the values "good@example.com"
   and "Free account" leads to a successful page

Take special note of the things _not_ specified in that test, that might cause
tests to break unnecessarily as your application evolves:

- The input field IDs or names (e.g. "user_email" or "user[email]"), which
  could change if you rename a model
- The ID of the form element (Webrat can do a good job of guessing, even if
  there are multiple forms on the page.)
- The URLs of links followed
- The URL the form submission should be sent to, which could change if you
  adjust your routes or controllers
- The HTTP method for the login request

A test written with Webrat can handle these changes to these without any modifications.

=== Merb
To avoid losing sessions, you need this in environments/test.rb:

Merb::Config.use do |c|
  c[:session_store] = 'memory' 
end  

=== Install

To install the latest release:

    sudo gem install webrat

In your stories/helper.rb:
  
    require "webrat"
  
You could also unpack the gem into vendor/plugins.

=== Authors

- Maintained by [Bryan Helmkamp](mailto:bryan@brynary.com)
- Original code written by [Seth Fitzsimmons](mailto:seth@mojodna.net)
- Many other contributors. See attributions in History.txt

=== License

Copyright (c) 2007 Bryan Helmkamp, Seth Fitzsimmons.
See MIT-LICENSE.txt in this directory.