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Jasminerice

Utilizing Jasmine and taking full advantage of the Rails 3.1 asset pipeline Jasminerice removes any excuse YOU have for not testing your out of control sprawl of CoffeeScript files.

This project rocks and uses the MIT-LICENSE.

Development Notice

Brad Phelan is no longer actively developing this project but is accepting reasonable pull requests, so continue on with contributing.

This project is looking for a home :)

2013/1/17:

Brad (bradphelan) posted a notice saying that he wasn't actively maintaining the project and that it was looking for a home.

2013/1/27:

I (jejacks0n) offered to contribute to the project, and Brad granted me collaboration privileges. I added some specs and integration tests that will make contributing a little easier.

We'll be managing pull requests and issues together, and if someone would like to take over and move it to a different home you should contact Brad directly.

Headless Testing

See guard-jasmine for details.

Installation

This gem has been tested and run with Rails 3.1 and 3.2. It should also run on Rails 4.

Just include it in your Gemfile:

group :development, :test do
  gem "jasminerice", :git => 'https://github.com/bradphelan/jasminerice.git'
end

The engine is automatically mounted into your application in the development and test environments. If you'd like to change that behavior, you can change which groups the gem is included in via the gemfile.

Optionally, you can run the installer.

rails g jasminerice:install

This will add the required spec.js.coffee, an example spec, and fixture to help get you started. It will also add a intializer config/initializers/jasminerice.rb which can be used for easy setup of Jasminerice's options.

Usage

CoffeeScripts

Create a file spec/javascripts/spec.js.coffee (or run the install generator), and add the following content.

#= require_tree ./

In the case where you need access to all your application javascripts then you can use something like the following, which will pull in all the files from your application and all specs from the javascripts directory.

#= require_tree ./
#= require_tree ../../app/assets/javascripts

The Rails 3.1 asset pipeline using Sprockets and Tilt ensure conversion to javascript.

You can also use the #= require directive in your specs to pull in dependencies manually. Here's an example spec/javascripts/example_spec.js.coffee:

#= require foo
#= require bar

describe "Foo", ->
  it "it is not bar", ->
    v = new Foo()
    expect(v.bar()).toEqual(false)

describe "Bar", ->
  it "it is not foo", ->
    v = new Bar()
    expect(v.foo()).toEqual(false)

Stylesheets

For including stylesheets in your specs, Jasminerice uses spec/javascripts/spec.css. You can use Sprockets directives to include css files here.

/*= require application
 */

Fixtures

Jasminerice makes files located in the spec/javascripts/fixtures directory available as fixture. For example, if you put a file named example_fixture.html.haml in that path it will be available at the /jasmine/fixtures/example_fixture URL.

spec/javascripts/fixtures/example_fixture.html.haml

%h2 Test Fixture
%p Using fixtures

Since Jasminerice automatically makes a patched version of jasmine-jquery available in your specs, you can load the example fixture in your spec with the following.

loadFixtures('example_fixture')

You can also load JSON fixtures, e.g. spec/javascripts/fixtures/json/bar.json

getJSONFixture('bar')

Helper Methods

You can declare Jasminerice::SpecHelper (perhaps put inside lib/) to make helpers available to jasminerice fixtures.

So in your lib directory, create the helper, e.g. lib/jasminerice/spec_helper.rb

module Jasminerice
  module SpecHelper
    def print_a_test
      "foo"
    end
  end
end

Then you can use it in your fixtures.

spec/javascripts/fixtures/example_fixture.html.haml

%h1 Here is my helper
= print_a_test

Running Specs

Start your server...

rails s

Browse to...

http://localhost:3000/jasmine

Watch your specs run.

Asset debugging

You can override your current environment's config.assets.debug configuration per request by adding ?debug=false or ?debug=true to the jasmine path, eg.

http://localhost:3000/jasmine?debug=false

This will concatenate all your css and javascript into single file which can improve your suite's loading speed significantly.

Compatibility with Require.js

If you use Require.js in your project and need to load your modules in your jasmine specs, there is an option to prevent jasminerice from automatically executing the test runner before the modules are defined. This enables you to start the execution manually whenever you want in your spec/javascripts/spec.js.coffee file:

#= require your/specs/and/other/stuff
# at the end of this file add:

jasmine.rice.autoExecute = false

define 'jasmine.waitsfor.requirejs', ->
require ['jasmine.waitsfor.requirejs'], jasmine.getEnv().execute

The shown example defines a dummy module in require.js that is required immediately on the next line. This is a simple hack to wait until require.js has initialized all modules and start the jasmine runner after that.

Of course you can use jasmine.rice.autoExecute = false also for all other cases where you need to control when your specs should be executed!

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