The Changelog has a complete list of everything that changed, but here are more detailed explanations for those items that warrant them.
Now you can just type
rspec
to run all the specs in the spec
directory. If you keep your specs in a
different directory, you can override the default with the --default_path
argument in a config file:
# in .rspec
--default_path specs
Use either of the following to run the examples declared on lines
37 and 42 of a_spec.rb
:
rspec path/to/a_spec.rb --line_number 37 --line_number 42
rspec path/to/a_spec.rb:37:42
RSpec's rake task invokes the rspec
command in a subshell. If you invoke
bundle exec rake
or include Bundler.setup
in your Rakefile
, then
Bundler will be activated in the subshell as well.
Previously, the rake task managed this for you based on the presence of a
Gemfile
. In 2.7.0.rc1, this is done based on the presence of the
BUNDLE_GEMFILE
environment variable, which is set in the parent shell by Bundler.
In 2.7.0.rc2 (not yet released), the rake task doesn't do anything at all. Turns out Bundler just does the right thing, so rspec doesn't need to do anything.
Use shared_context
together with include_context
to share before/after
hooks, let declarations, and method definitions across example groups.
Use shared_examples
together with include_examples
to share examples
across different contexts.
All of the old APIs are still supported, but these 4 are easy to remember, and serve most use cases.
See shared_context
and shared_examples
under "Example Groups" for more
information.
Yes it's a long name, but it's a great feature, and it's going to be the default behavior in rspec-3. This lets you add metadata to a group or example like this:
describe "something", :awesome do
...
And then you can run that group (or example) using the tags feature:
rspec spec --tag awesome
We're making this an opt-in for rspec-2.6 because describe "string", :symbol
is a perfectly legal construct in pre-2.6 releases and we want to maintain
compatibility in minor releases as much as is possible.
Use this to configure RSpec to use rspec/expectations (default), stdlib assertions (Test::Unit with Ruby 1.8, MiniTest with Ruby 1.9), or both:
RSpec.configure do |config|
config.expect_with :rspec # => rspec/expectations
config.expect_with :stdlib # => Test::Unit or MinitTest
config.expect_with :rspec, :stdlib # => both
end
Now you can tag groups and examples using metadata and access those tags from
the command line. So if you have a group with :foo => true
:
describe "something", :foo => true do
it "does something" do
# ...
end
end
... now you can run just that group like this:
rspec spec --tags foo
Add this flag to the command line to tell rspec to clean up and exit after the first failure:
rspec spec --fail-fast
Use :if and :unless keys to conditionally run examples with simple boolean expressions:
describe "something" do
it "does something", :if => RUBY_VERSION == 1.8.6 do
# ...
end
it "does something", :unless => RUBY_VERSION == 1.8.6 do
# ...
end
end
Make examples pending based on a condition. This is most useful when you have an example that runs in multiple contexts and fails in one of those due to a bug in a third-party dependency that you expect to be fixed in the future.
describe "something" do
it "does something that doesn't yet work right on JRuby" do
pending("waiting for the JRuby team to fix issue XYZ", :if => RUBY_PLATFORM == 'java') do
# the content of your spec
end
end
end
This example would run normally on all ruby interpretters except JRuby. On JRuby,
it uses the block form of pending
, which causes the example to still be run and
will remain pending as long as it fails. In the future, if you upgraded your
JRuby installation to a newer release that allows the example to pass, RSpec
will report it as a failure (Expected pending '...' to fail. No Error was raised.
),
so that know that you can remove the call to pending
.
The new runner for rspec-2 comes from Micronaut.
In rspec-2, every example and example group comes with metadata information
like the file and line number on which it was declared, the arguments passed to
describe
and it
, etc. This metadata can be appended to through a hash
argument passed to describe
or it
, allowing us to pre and post-process
each example in a variety of ways.
The most obvious use is for filtering the run. For example:
# in spec/spec_helper.rb
RSpec.configure do |c|
c.filter_run :focus => true
end
# in any spec file
describe "something" do
it "does something", :focus => true do
# ....
end
end
When you run the rspec
command, rspec will run only the examples that have
:focus => true
in the hash.
You can also add run_all_when_everything_filtered
to the config:
RSpec.configure do |c|
c.filter_run :focus => true
c.run_all_when_everything_filtered = true
end
Now if there are no examples tagged with :focus => true
, all examples
will be run. This makes it really easy to focus on one example for a
while, but then go back to running all of the examples by removing that
argument from it
. Works with describe
too, in which case it runs
all of the examples in that group.
The configuration will accept a lambda, which provides a lot of flexibility in filtering examples. Say, for example, you have a spec for functionality that behaves slightly differently in Ruby 1.8 and Ruby 1.9. We have that in rspec-core, and here's how we're getting the right stuff to run under the right version:
# in spec/spec_helper.rb
RSpec.configure do |c|
c.exclusion_filter = { :ruby => lambda {|version|
!(RUBY_VERSION.to_s =~ /^#{version.to_s}/)
}}
end
# in any spec file
describe "something" do
it "does something", :ruby => 1.8 do
# ....
end
it "does something", :ruby => 1.9 do
# ....
end
end
In this case, we're using exclusion_filter
instead of filter_run
or
filter
, which indicate inclusion filters. So each of those examples is
excluded if we're not running the version of Ruby they work with.
Shared example groups are now run in a nested group within the including group
(they used to be run in the same group). Nested groups inherit before
, after
,
around
, and let
hooks, as well as any methods that are defined in the parent
group.
This new approach provides better encapsulation, better output, and an
opportunity to add contextual information to the shared group via a block
passed to it_should_behave_like
.
See features/example_groups/shared_example_group.feature for more information.
NOTICE: The including example groups no longer have access to any of the methods, hooks, or state defined inside a shared group. This will break rspec-1 specs that were using shared example groups to extend the behavior of including groups.
The command to run specs is now rspec
instead of spec
.
rspec ./spec
Early beta versions of RSpec-2 included a spec
command, which conflicted with
the RSpec-1 spec
command because RSpec-1's was installed by the rspec gem,
while RSpec-2's is installed by the rspec-core gem.
If you installed one of these early versions, the safest bet is to uninstall rspec-1 and rspec-core-2, and then reinstall both. After you do this, you will be able to run rspec-2 like this:
rspec ./spec
... and rspec-1 like this:
spec _1.3.1_ ./spec
Rubygems inspects the first argument to any gem executable to see if it's
formatted like a version number surrounded by underscores. If so, it uses that
version (e.g. 1.3.1
). If not, it uses the most recent version (e.g.
2.0.0
).
A few things changed in the Rake task used to run specs:
-
The file in which it is defined changed from
spec/rake/spectask
torspec/core/rake_task
-
The
spec_opts
accessor has been deprecated in favor ofrspec_opts
. Also, therspec
command no longer supports the--options
command line option so the options must be embedded directly in the Rakefile, or stored in the.rspec
files mentioned above. -
In RSpec-1, the rake task would read in rcov options from an
rcov.opts
file. This is ignored by RSpec-2. RCov options are now set directly on the Rake task:RSpec::Core::RakeTask.new(:rcov) do |t| t.rcov_opts = %q[--exclude "spec"] end
-
The
spec_files
accessor has been replaced bypattern
.# rspec-1 require 'spec/rake/spectask' Spec::Rake::SpecTask.new do |t| t.spec_opts = ['--options', "\"spec/spec.opts\""] t.spec_files = FileList['spec/**/*.rb'] end # rspec-2 require 'rspec/core/rake_task' RSpec::Core::RakeTask.new do |t| t.rspec_opts = ["-c", "-f progress", "-r ./spec/spec_helper.rb"] t.pattern = 'spec/**/*_spec.rb' end
autospec
is dead. Long live autotest
.
The root namespace (top level module) is now RSpec
instead of Spec
, and
the root directory under lib
within all of the rspec
gems is rspec
instead of spec
.
Typically in spec/spec_helper.rb
, configuration is now done like this:
RSpec.configure do |c|
# ....
end
Command line options can be persisted in a .rspec
file in a project. You
can also store a .rspec
file in your home directory (~/.rspec
) with global
options. Precedence is:
command line
./.rspec
~/.rspec
We removed context
from the main object because it was creating conflicts with
IRB and some users who had Context
domain objects. describe
is still there,
so if you want to use context
at the top level, just alias it:
alias :context :describe
Of course, you can still use context
to declare a nested group:
describe "something" do
context "in some context" do
it "does something" do
# ...
end
end
end
In RSpec-1, the runner set $KCODE
to 'u'
, which impacts, among other
things, the behaviour of Regular Expressions when applied to non-ascii
characters. This is no longer the case in RSpec-2.