rake cucumber and rake spec always use "develop" environment - ruby-on-rails

My rake tasks for running Cucumber and RSpec tests are always using my development environment.
Here are the relevant config files:
RAILS_ROOT/config/environments/cucumber.rb
# Edit at your own peril - it's recommended to regenerate this file
# in the future when you upgrade to a newer version of Cucumber.
# IMPORTANT: Setting config.cache_classes to false is known to
# break Cucumber's use_transactional_fixtures method.
# For more information see https://rspec.lighthouseapp.com/projects/16211/tickets/165
config.cache_classes = true
# Log error messages when you accidentally call methods on nil.
config.whiny_nils = true
# Show full error reports and disable caching
config.action_controller.consider_all_requests_local = true
config.action_controller.perform_caching = false
# Disable request forgery protection in test environment
config.action_controller.allow_forgery_protection = false
# Tell Action Mailer not to deliver emails to the real world.
# The :test delivery method accumulates sent emails in the
# ActionMailer::Base.deliveries array.
config.action_mailer.delivery_method = :test
# config.gem 'cucumber-rails', :lib => false, :version => '>=0.3.2' unless File.directory?(File.join(Rails.root, 'vendor/plugins/cucumber-rails'))
# config.gem 'database_cleaner', :lib => false, :version => '>=0.5.0' unless File.directory?(File.join(Rails.root, 'vendor/plugins/database_cleaner'))
# config.gem 'capybara', :lib => false, :version => '>=0.3.5' unless File.directory?(File.join(Rails.root, 'vendor/plugins/capybara'))
# config.gem 'rspec', :lib => false, :version => '>=1.3.0' unless File.directory?(File.join(Rails.root, 'vendor/plugins/rspec'))
# config.gem 'rspec-rails', :lib => false, :version => '>=1.3.2' unless File.directory?(File.join(Rails.root, 'vendor/plugins/rspec-rails'))
RAILS_ROOT/config/environments/test.rb
# Settings specified here will take precedence over those in config/environment.rb
# The test environment is used exclusively to run your application's
# test suite. You never need to work with it otherwise. Remember that
# your test database is "scratch space" for the test suite and is wiped
# and recreated between test runs. Don't rely on the data there!
config.cache_classes = true
# Log error messages when you accidentally call methods on nil.
config.whiny_nils = true
# Show full error reports and disable caching
config.action_controller.consider_all_requests_local = true
config.action_controller.perform_caching = false
# Configure memcached
FA_MEMCACHED_SERVER = '127.0.0.1'
FA_MEMCACHED_PORT = '11211'
config.cache_store = :mem_cache_store, [FA_MEMCACHED_SERVER, FA_MEMCACHED_PORT].join(':'), { :namespace => Rails.env.to_s }
# Disable request forgery protection in test environment
config.action_controller.allow_forgery_protection = false
# Tell ActionMailer not to deliver emails to the real world.
# The :test delivery method accumulates sent emails in the
# ActionMailer::Base.deliveries array.
config.action_mailer.delivery_method = :test
config.log_level = :debug
RAILS_ROOT/features/support/env.rb
# IMPORTANT: This file is generated by cucumber-rails - edit at your own peril.
# It is recommended to regenerate this file in the future when you upgrade to a
# newer version of cucumber-rails. Consider adding your own code to a new file
# instead of editing this one. Cucumber will automatically load all features/**/*.rb
# files.
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= "cucumber"
require File.expand_path(File.dirname(__FILE__) + '/../../config/environment')
require 'cucumber/formatter/unicode' # Remove this line if you don't want Cucumber Unicode support
require 'cucumber/rails/rspec'
require 'cucumber/rails/world'
require 'cucumber/rails/active_record'
require 'cucumber/web/tableish'
# allows checking outgoing email existant and content
require 'email_spec'
require 'email_spec/cucumber'
require 'capybara/rails'
require 'capybara/cucumber'
require 'capybara/session'
require 'cucumber/rails/capybara_javascript_emulation' # Lets you click links with onclick javascript handlers without using #culerity or #javascript
# Capybara defaults to XPath selectors rather than Webrat's default of CSS3. In
# order to ease the transition to Capybara we set the default here. If you'd
# prefer to use XPath just remove this line and adjust any selectors in your
# steps to use the XPath syntax.
Capybara.default_selector = :css
# If you set this to false, any error raised from within your app will bubble
# up to your step definition and out to cucumber unless you catch it somewhere
# on the way. You can make Rails rescue errors and render error pages on a
# per-scenario basis by tagging a scenario or feature with the #allow-rescue tag.
#
# If you set this to true, Rails will rescue all errors and render error
# pages, more or less in the same way your application would behave in the
# default production environment. It's not recommended to do this for all
# of your scenarios, as this makes it hard to discover errors in your application.
ActionController::Base.allow_rescue = false
# If you set this to true, each scenario will run in a database transaction.
# You can still turn off transactions on a per-scenario basis, simply tagging
# a feature or scenario with the #no-txn tag. If you are using Capybara,
# tagging with #culerity or #javascript will also turn transactions off.
#
# If you set this to false, transactions will be off for all scenarios,
# regardless of whether you use #no-txn or not.
#
# Beware that turning transactions off will leave data in your database
# after each scenario, which can lead to hard-to-debug failures in
# subsequent scenarios. If you do this, we recommend you create a Before
# block that will explicitly put your database in a known state.
Cucumber::Rails::World.use_transactional_fixtures = true
# How to clean your database when transactions are turned off. See
# http://github.com/bmabey/database_cleaner for more info.
if defined?(ActiveRecord::Base)
begin
require 'database_cleaner'
require 'database_cleaner/cucumber'
DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :truncation, {:except => %w[roles]}
rescue LoadError => ignore_if_database_cleaner_not_present
end
end
RAILS_ROOT/spec/spec_helper.rb
# This file is copied to ~/spec when you run 'ruby script/generate rspec'
# from the project root directory.
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] = 'test'
require File.expand_path(File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__),'..','config','environment'))
require 'spec/autorun'
require 'spec/rails'
# Uncomment the next line to use webrat's matchers
#require 'webrat/integrations/rspec-rails'
# Requires supporting files with custom matchers and macros, etc,
# in ./support/ and its subdirectories.
Dir[File.expand_path(File.join(File.dirname(__FILE__),'support','**','*.rb'))].each {|f| require f}
Spec::Runner.configure do |config|
# If you're not using ActiveRecord you should remove these
# lines, delete config/database.yml and disable :active_record
# in your config/boot.rb
config.use_transactional_fixtures = true
config.use_instantiated_fixtures = false
config.fixture_path = RAILS_ROOT + '/spec/fixtures/'
# == Fixtures
#
# You can declare fixtures for each example_group like this:
# describe "...." do
# fixtures :table_a, :table_b
#
# Alternatively, if you prefer to declare them only once, you can
# do so right here. Just uncomment the next line and replace the fixture
# names with your fixtures.
#
# config.global_fixtures = :table_a, :table_b
#
# If you declare global fixtures, be aware that they will be declared
# for all of your examples, even those that don't use them.
#
# You can also declare which fixtures to use (for example fixtures for test/fixtures):
#
# config.fixture_path = RAILS_ROOT + '/spec/fixtures/'
#
# == Mock Framework
#
# RSpec uses its own mocking framework by default. If you prefer to
# use mocha, flexmock or RR, uncomment the appropriate line:
#
# config.mock_with :mocha
# config.mock_with :flexmock
# config.mock_with :rr
#
# == Notes
#
# For more information take a look at Spec::Runner::Configuration and Spec::Runner
end
RAILS_ROOT/Gemfile
group :test, :cucumber do
gem "cucumber-rails", "0.3.2"
gem "rspec-rails", "1.3.3"
gem "database_cleaner", "0.5.0"
gem "capybara", "0.3.9"
gem "selenium-client", "1.2.18"
gem "sqlite3-ruby", "1.3.1"
gem "email_spec", "~> 0.6.3", :require => 'spec'
gem "factory_girl"
gem "launchy"
end
group :development do
gem "factory_girl"
gem "ruby-prof"
end

On RAILS_ROOT/Gemfile
do:
add specific test-only gems to this group:
group :test do
gem 'cucumber-rails'
gem 'capybara'
gem 'database_cleaner'
end
Instead of setting them to be used on development and everywhere else too.
This should work.
P.S: edit the code above to set the gems you'll be using for your test, I just copy/pasted the ones Im using on the project I have currently open as an example.

When you upgraded to Rails 3, did you perhaps do a global find and replace on RAILS_ENV?
Is the first line of test_helper.rb something other than this?
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] = "test"
In the actual environment variables, it should still be RAILS_ENV, not ::Rails.env, so make sure you don't have ENV["Rails.env"] = "test" for that line of code.
Make sure it looks like it used to. Not that I would know from having made this mistake personally... :-)

Not only config files are relevant to setting up rails environment.
Check your lib/tasks/cucumber.rake file and if it doesn't contain it already add one of the following lines to it depending on your rails version (I added it after 'begin' line):
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= 'cucumber' #for rails2
Rails.env ||= ActiveSupport::StringInquirer.new('cucumber') #for rails3
Notice that if you set environment to development in application.rb directly for example, then your tests will run in development.
Also there's another way to set environment to cucumber. If you're running rails with Passenger and Apache for example, then it is possible to run cucumber test in cucumber environment by adding "RailsEnv cucumber" line to your virtualhost configuration.

Related

Rails 6 session variables not persisting

I have a relatively new Rails 6 app (Rails 6.1.3.1), so there's not a whole lot of customization yet. However, I cannot get session variables to persist.
For example, if I put something like the following in a controller action:
class PagesController < ApplicationController
skip_before_action :authenticate_user!
def home
byebug
session[:foo] = 'bar'
end
end
I would expect session[:foo] to be nil on the first request, but I would expect it to be set to 'bar' on all subsequent requests. However, it's nil every time.
This is causing a major problem with CSRF functionality, because the session[:_csrf_token] is being reset on every request. This means that no request has a valid CSRF token, so I can't get login to work.
For the life of me, I cannot figure out what is going on. I've tried monkeying around with browser settings and environment settings, but nothing has worked.
I've been banging my head on this for a couple days now. What am I missing? What might cause the session to be reset on every request?
Here is some more context:
# Gemfile
source 'https://rubygems.org'
git_source(:github) { |repo| "https://github.com/#{repo}.git" }
ruby '3.0.1'
gem 'rails', '6.1.3.1'
gem 'pg'
gem 'puma'
gem 'bootsnap', require: false
gem 'jbuilder'
gem 'webpacker'
gem 'redis'
gem 'autoprefixer-rails'
gem 'aws-sdk-s3'
gem 'delayed_job_active_record'
gem 'devise'
gem 'image_processing'
gem 'kaminari'
gem 'money-rails'
gem 'pg_search'
gem 'postmark-rails'
gem 'pundit'
gem 'roadie-rails'
gem 'rollbar'
gem 'sassc-rails'
gem 'tailwindcss-rails'
gem 'view_component', require: 'view_component/engine'
group :development, :test do
gem 'byebug'
end
group :development do
gem 'guard'
gem 'guard-minitest'
gem 'binding_of_caller'
gem 'listen'
gem 'spring'
gem 'web-console'
end
group :test do
gem 'capybara'
gem 'minitest-focus'
gem 'minitest-rails'
gem 'minitest-reporters'
gem 'mocha'
gem 'pdf-inspector'
gem 'selenium-webdriver'
gem 'rexml'
gem 'webdrivers'
end
group :development, :production do
gem 'stripe'
end
# application.rb
require_relative "boot"
require "rails/all"
# Require the gems listed in Gemfile, including any gems
# you've limited to :test, :development, or :production.
Bundler.require(*Rails.groups)
class Env
def self.var(*args)
var = args.join('_').upcase
ENV[var] || Rails.application.credentials[Rails.env.to_sym].dig(*args)
end
end
module Foobar
class Application < Rails::Application
# Initialize configuration defaults for originally generated Rails version.
config.load_defaults 6.1
# Configuration for the application, engines, and railties goes here.
#
# These settings can be overridden in specific environments using the files
# in config/environments, which are processed later.
#
# config.time_zone = "Central Time (US & Canada)"
# config.eager_load_paths << Rails.root.join("extras")
config.autoload_paths += %W( #{config.root}/app/components )
config.autoload_paths += %W( #{config.root}/app/forms )
config.autoload_paths += %W( #{config.root}/app/utilities )
# Look in components folder when determining which classes to include.
config.assets.css_compressor = Tailwindcss::Compressor.new(files_with_class_names: Rails.root.glob("app/components/**/*.*"))
end
end
# application_controller.rb
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
include Pundit
protect_from_forgery with: :reset_session, prepend: true
before_action :authenticate_user!
default_form_builder Forms::Builder
attr_writer :title
helper_method :body_class, :title
def authorize(record, query = nil)
super([:authorization, record], query)
end
def body_class
"#{params[:controller].gsub('/', '_')}"
end
def policy_scope(scope)
super([:authorization, scope])
end
def title
#title || default_title
end
private
def default_title
controller_name.singularize.humanize.capitalize
end
end
# development.rb
require "active_support/core_ext/integer/time"
Rails.application.configure do
config.session_store :cache_store
# Settings specified here will take precedence over those in config/application.rb.
# In the development environment your application's code is reloaded any time
# it changes. This slows down response time but is perfect for development
# since you don't have to restart the web server when you make code changes.
config.cache_classes = false
# Do not eager load code on boot.
config.eager_load = false
# Show full error reports.
config.consider_all_requests_local = true
# Enable/disable caching. By default caching is disabled.
# Run rails dev:cache to toggle caching.
if Rails.root.join('tmp', 'caching-dev.txt').exist?
config.action_controller.perform_caching = true
config.action_controller.enable_fragment_cache_logging = true
config.cache_store = :memory_store
config.public_file_server.headers = {
'Cache-Control' => "public, max-age=#{2.days.to_i}"
}
else
config.action_controller.perform_caching = false
config.cache_store = :null_store
end
# Store uploaded files on the local file system (see config/storage.yml for options).
config.active_storage.service = :local
# Don't care if the mailer can't send.
config.action_mailer.raise_delivery_errors = false
config.action_mailer.perform_caching = false
config.action_mailer.default_url_options = { host: 'localhost', port: 3000 }
# Print deprecation notices to the Rails logger.
config.active_support.deprecation = :log
# Raise exceptions for disallowed deprecations.
config.active_support.disallowed_deprecation = :raise
# Tell Active Support which deprecation messages to disallow.
config.active_support.disallowed_deprecation_warnings = []
# Raise an error on page load if there are pending migrations.
config.active_record.migration_error = :page_load
# Highlight code that triggered database queries in logs.
config.active_record.verbose_query_logs = true
# Debug mode disables concatenation and preprocessing of assets.
# This option may cause significant delays in view rendering with a large
# number of complex assets.
config.assets.debug = false
# Suppress logger output for asset requests.
config.assets.quiet = true
# Raises error for missing translations.
# config.i18n.raise_on_missing_translations = true
# Annotate rendered view with file names.
# config.action_view.annotate_rendered_view_with_filenames = true
# Use an evented file watcher to asynchronously detect changes in source code,
# routes, locales, etc. This feature depends on the listen gem.
config.file_watcher = ActiveSupport::EventedFileUpdateChecker
# Uncomment if you wish to allow Action Cable access from any origin.
# config.action_cable.disable_request_forgery_protection = true
end
Ok, found the problem. Turns out that I had copied the setting config.session_store :cache_store in development.rb from a different project I had been working on. However, this setting was added as part of the StimulusReflex setup for that other project.
From the StimulusReflex docs:
Cookie-based session storage is not currently supported by StimulusReflex.
Instead, we enable caching in the development environment so that we can assign our user session data to be managed by the cache store.
The default setting for this option is cookie_store. By changing it to :cache_store without specifying a cache repo, it implements ActionDispatch::Session::CacheStore and defaults to storing it in Rails.cache, which uses the :file_store option, which dumps it in tmp/cache.
However, further down in development.rb, there is some conditional logic that assigns config.cache_store to :null_store if there is no caching-dev.txt file. This implements ActiveSupport::Cache::NullStore, which is "a cache store implementation which doesn't actually store anything."
So because I had not enabled caching with rails dev:cache for this project, the session cache was getting toasted with every request.
LESSON LEARNED: Be very careful when copying config settings from an old project to a new one!

Rails: Missing helper file post_comments_helper.rb_helper.rb/Unitialized constant C Error Message

I'm trying to run my tests in rails but whenever I do I get this error:
C:/Ruby22/lib/ruby/gems/2.2.0/gems/actionpack-4.2.6/lib/abstract_controller/helpers.rb:151:in `rescue in block in modules_for_helpers': Missing helper file helpers/c:/users/adamg/desktop/baseball_blog/app/helpers/post_comments_helper.rb_helper.rb (AbstractController::Helpers::MissingHelperError)
This makes no sense because it doubles the helper.rb at the end of the helper file. I noticed that in the error message it shows that my Users file is lowercase, but on my pc it's uppercase, I was wondering if this could possibly be part of the problem?
Also I can run my rails server n problem with everything working perfectly, so I'm certain that it has to be a problem with something in my tests and not my actual project files.
This is my rails_helper.rb file:
# This file is copied to spec/ when you run 'rails generate rspec:install'
ENV['RAILS_ENV'] ||= 'test'
require File.expand_path('../../config/environment', __FILE__)
# Prevent database truncation if the environment is production
abort("The Rails environment is running in production mode!") if Rails.env.production?
require 'spec_helper'
require 'rspec/rails'
require 'capybara/rails'
require 'capybara/rspec'
require 'factory_girl'
# Add additional requires below this line. Rails is not loaded until this point!
# Requires supporting ruby files with custom matchers and macros, etc, in
# spec/support/ and its subdirectories. Files matching `spec/**/*_spec.rb` are
# run as spec files by default. This means that files in spec/support that end
# in _spec.rb will both be required and run as specs, causing the specs to be
# run twice. It is recommended that you do not name files matching this glob to
# end with _spec.rb. You can configure this pattern with the --pattern
# option on the command line or in ~/.rspec, .rspec or `.rspec-local`.
#
# The following line is provided for convenience purposes. It has the downside
# of increasing the boot-up time by auto-requiring all files in the support
# directory. Alternatively, in the individual `*_spec.rb` files, manually
# require only the support files necessary.
#
Dir[Rails.root.join('spec/support/**/*.rb')].each { |f| require f }
# Checks for pending migration and applies them before tests are run.
# If you are not using ActiveRecord, you can remove this line.
ActiveRecord::Migration.maintain_test_schema!
RSpec.configure do |config|
# Remove this line if you're not using ActiveRecord or ActiveRecord fixtures
config.fixture_path = "#{::Rails.root}/spec/fixtures"
# This file is copied to spec/ when you run 'rails generate rspec:install'
ENV['RAILS_ENV'] ||= 'test'
require File.expand_path('../../config/environment', __FILE__)
# Prevent database truncation if the environment is production
abort("The Rails environment is running in production mode!") if Rails.env.production?
require 'spec_helper'
require 'rspec/rails'
require 'capybara/rails'
require 'capybara/rspec'
require 'factory_girl'
# Add additional requires below this line. Rails is not loaded until this point!
# Requires supporting ruby files with custom matchers and macros, etc, in
# spec/support/ and its subdirectories. Files matching `spec/**/*_spec.rb` are
# run as spec files by default. This means that files in spec/support that end
# in _spec.rb will both be required and run as specs, causing the specs to be
# run twice. It is recommended that you do not name files matching this glob to
# end with _spec.rb. You can configure this pattern with the --pattern
# option on the command line or in ~/.rspec, .rspec or `.rspec-local`.
#
# The following line is provided for convenience purposes. It has the downside
# of increasing the boot-up time by auto-requiring all files in the support
# directory. Alternatively, in the individual `*_spec.rb` files, manually
# require only the support files necessary.
#
Dir[Rails.root.join('spec/support/**/*.rb')].each { |f| require f }
# Checks for pending migration and applies them before tests are run.
# If you are not using ActiveRecord, you can remove this line.
ActiveRecord::Migration.maintain_test_schema!
RSpec.configure do |config|
# Remove this line if you're not using ActiveRecord or ActiveRecord fixtures
config.fixture_path = "#{::Rails.root}/spec/fixtures"
# If you're not using ActiveRecord, or you'd prefer not to run each of your
# examples within a transaction, remove the following line or assign false
# instead of true.
config.use_transactional_fixtures = true
config.include RailsDomIdHelper, type: :feature
config.include PostHelpers, type: :feature
config.include UsersHelpers, type: :feature
# RSpec Rails can automatically mix in different behaviours to your tests
# based on their file location, for example enabling you to call `get` and
# `post` in specs under `spec/controllers`.
#
# You can disable this behaviour by removing the line below, and instead
# explicitly tag your specs with their type, e.g.:
#
# RSpec.describe UsersController, :type => :controller do
# # ...
# end
#
# The different available types are documented in the features, such as in
# https://relishapp.com/rspec/rspec-rails/docs
config.infer_spec_type_from_file_location!
# Filter lines from Rails gems in backtraces.
config.filter_rails_from_backtrace!
# arbitrary gems may also be filtered via:
# config.filter_gems_from_backtrace("gem name")
end
Shoulda::Matchers.configure do |config|
config.integrate do |with|
with.test_framework :rspec
with.library :rails
end
RSpec.configure do |config|
config.include FactoryGirl::Syntax::Methods
end
end
This is my spec_helper file:
# This file was generated by the `rails generate rspec:install` command. Conventionally, all
# specs live under a `spec` directory, which RSpec adds to the `$LOAD_PATH`.
# The generated `.rspec` file contains `--require spec_helper` which will cause
# this file to always be loaded, without a need to explicitly require it in any
# files.
#
# Given that it is always loaded, you are encouraged to keep this file as
# light-weight as possible. Requiring heavyweight dependencies from this file
# will add to the boot time of your test suite on EVERY test run, even for an
# individual file that may not need all of that loaded. Instead, consider making
# a separate helper file that requires the additional dependencies and performs
# the additional setup, and require it from the spec files that actually need
# it.
#
# The `.rspec` file also contains a few flags that are not defaults but that
# users commonly want.
#
# See http://rubydoc.info/gems/rspec-core/RSpec/Core/Configuration
RSpec.configure do |config|
# rspec-expectations config goes here. You can use an alternate
# assertion/expectation library such as wrong or the stdlib/minitest
# assertions if you prefer.
config.expect_with :rspec do |expectations|
# This option will default to `true` in RSpec 4. It makes the `description`
# and `failure_message` of custom matchers include text for helper methods
# defined using `chain`, e.g.:
# be_bigger_than(2).and_smaller_than(4).description
# # => "be bigger than 2 and smaller than 4"
# ...rather than:
# # => "be bigger than 2"
expectations.include_chain_clauses_in_custom_matcher_descriptions = true
end
# rspec-mocks config goes here. You can use an alternate test double
# library (such as bogus or mocha) by changing the `mock_with` option here.
config.mock_with :rspec do |mocks|
# Prevents you from mocking or stubbing a method that does not exist on
# a real object. This is generally recommended, and will default to
# `true` in RSpec 4.
mocks.verify_partial_doubles = true
end
# The settings below are suggested to provide a good initial experience
# with RSpec, but feel free to customize to your heart's content.
=begin
# These two settings work together to allow you to limit a spec run
# to individual examples or groups you care about by tagging them with
# `:focus` metadata. When nothing is tagged with `:focus`, all examples
# get run.
config.filter_run :focus
config.run_all_when_everything_filtered = true
# Allows RSpec to persist some state between runs in order to support
# the `--only-failures` and `--next-failure` CLI options. We recommend
# you configure your source control system to ignore this file.
config.example_status_persistence_file_path = "spec/examples.txt"
# Limits the available syntax to the non-monkey patched syntax that is
# recommended. For more details, see:
# - http://rspec.info/blog/2012/06/rspecs-new-expectation-syntax/
# - http://www.teaisaweso.me/blog/2013/05/27/rspecs-new-message-expectation-syntax/
# - http://rspec.info/blog/2014/05/notable-changes-in-rspec-3/#zero-monkey-patching-mode
config.disable_monkey_patching!
# This setting enables warnings. It's recommended, but in some cases may
# be too noisy due to issues in dependencies.
config.warnings = true
# Many RSpec users commonly either run the entire suite or an individual
# file, and it's useful to allow more verbose output when running an
# individual spec file.
if config.files_to_run.one?
# Use the documentation formatter for detailed output,
# unless a formatter has already been configured
# (e.g. via a command-line flag).
config.default_formatter = 'doc'
end
# Print the 10 slowest examples and example groups at the
# end of the spec run, to help surface which specs are running
# particularly slow.
config.profile_examples = 10
# Run specs in random order to surface order dependencies. If you find an
# order dependency and want to debug it, you can fix the order by providing
# the seed, which is printed after each run.
# --seed 1234
config.order = :random
# Seed global randomization in this process using the `--seed` CLI option.
# Setting this allows you to use `--seed` to deterministically reproduce
# test failures related to randomization by passing the same `--seed` value
# as the one that triggered the failure.
Kernel.srand config.seed
=end
end
I don't have any helpers in my PostComments module and so therefore I haven't tested anything inside of the spec file.
When I do add the post_comments_helper.rb_helper.rb file I get this error message:
C:/Ruby22/lib/ruby/gems/2.2.0/gems/activesupport-4.2.6/lib/active_support/inflector/methods.rb:261:in `const_get': uninitialized constant C (NameError)
Any help would be greatly appreciated!
It seems that there's a bug with Ruby 2.2. There's an issue on Rails' bug tracker that suggests that having an all downcase path will help. Either try moving the app from the desktop or try upgrading to Ruby 2.3.
I ended up just downgrading Ruby back to 2.4 and it seemed to work.

How can I setup capybara with rails 4

I have capybara and when I run my Featured tests raised an error, it says about pending migrations in test environment, but when a run other type of test everything is good. I've already run all my migrations in test environment, I've already run rails in test and development envs.
this is my gemfile
group :development, :test do
.... other gems ....
gem 'rspec-rails'
gem 'factory_girl_rails'
gem 'database_cleaner'
gem 'capybara', '~> 2.5.0'
gem 'capybara-webkit', '~> 1.7.1'
gem 'selenium-webdriver'
gem 'poltergeist'
gem 'launchy-rails', '~> 0.0.1'
end
this is my test
# spec/features/sign_in_spec.rb
require 'rails_helper'
feature 'Visitor signs up' do
it "signs me in", :type => :feature do
visit new_user_session_path
puts "page: #{page.html.inspect}"
save_and_open_page
end
end
Thanks!
UPDATE:
I just try with this command:
bin/rake db:drop db:create db:migrate RAILS_ENV=test
Everything is ok with that command. Then I run my server with:
rails s -e test
Same error in my browser, "ActiveRecord::PendingMigrationError"
http://localhost:3000/
Then I run migrate command
bin/rake db:migrate RAILS_ENV=test
But it raised an error "ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid: PG::DuplicateTable: ERROR: relation "users" already exists"
And same error when a I run the features tests.
Here are my helpers: https://gist.github.com/israelb/e2f4b10ba5f94e1e8df2
There may be some kind of migration issue. Try rake db:test:prepare see if that helps.
I found the solution, I was a problem in my config/enviroment/test.rb file, I had to change by this one:
Rails.application.configure do
# Settings specified here will take precedence over those in config/application.rb.
# The test environment is used exclusively to run your application's
# test suite. You never need to work with it otherwise. Remember that
# your test database is "scratch space" for the test suite and is wiped
# and recreated between test runs. Don't rely on the data there!
config.cache_classes = true
# Do not eager load code on boot. This avoids loading your whole application
# just for the purpose of running a single test. If you are using a tool that
# preloads Rails for running tests, you may have to set it to true.
config.eager_load = false
# Configure static file server for tests with Cache-Control for performance.
config.serve_static_files = true
config.static_cache_control = 'public, max-age=3600'
# Show full error reports and disable caching.
config.consider_all_requests_local = true
config.action_controller.perform_caching = false
# Raise exceptions instead of rendering exception templates.
config.action_dispatch.show_exceptions = false
# Disable request forgery protection in test environment.
config.action_controller.allow_forgery_protection = false
# Tell Action Mailer not to deliver emails to the real world.
# The :test delivery method accumulates sent emails in the
# ActionMailer::Base.deliveries array.
config.action_mailer.delivery_method = :test
# Randomize the order test cases are executed.
config.active_support.test_order = :random
# Print deprecation notices to the stderr.
config.active_support.deprecation = :stderr
# Raises error for missing translations
# config.action_view.raise_on_missing_translations = true
end

RSpec 3.1 undefined method `feature' for main:Object

I´m going through the rather painful upgrade to RSpec 3.1. I have several feature specs which worked in RSpec 2.99 that raise:
undefined method `feature' for main:Object
I noticed that I have to use RSpec.describe in my other specs since they are are no longer attached to the main object. What would the equivalent call for feature be?
In my features I require 'rails_helper'
require 'rails_helper'
feature 'Facebook Authentiation' do
...
end
spec/rails_helper.rb
# This file is copied to spec/ when you run 'rails generate rspec:install'
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= 'test'
require 'spec_helper'
require File.expand_path("../../config/environment", __FILE__)
require 'rspec/rails'
require 'rails/application'
# Add additional requires below this line. Rails is not loaded until this point!
ActiveRecord::Migration.maintain_test_schema!
RSpec.configure do |config|
# If you're not using ActiveRecord, or you'd prefer not to run each of your
# examples within a transaction, remove the following line or assign false
# instead of true.
config.use_transactional_fixtures = false
# RSpec Rails can automatically mix in different behaviours to your tests
# based on their file location
config.infer_spec_type_from_file_location!
end
spec/spec_helper.rb
#
See http://rubydoc.info/gems/rspec-core/RSpec/Core/Configuration
RSpec.configure do |config|
# rspec-expectations config goes here. You can use an alternate
# assertion/expectation library such as wrong or the stdlib/minitest
# assertions if you prefer.
config.expect_with :rspec do |expectations|
# This option will default to `true` in RSpec 4. It makes the `description`
# and `failure_message` of custom matchers include text for helper methods
expectations.include_chain_clauses_in_custom_matcher_descriptions = true
end
# rspec-mocks config goes here. You can use an alternate test double
# library (such as bogus or mocha) by changing the `mock_with` option here.
config.mock_with :rspec do |mocks|
# Prevents you from mocking or stubbing a method that does not exist on
# a real object. This is generally recommended, and will default to
# `true` in RSpec 4.
mocks.verify_partial_doubles = true
end
# These two settings work together to allow you to limit a spec run
# to individual examples or groups you care about by tagging them with
# `:focus` metadata. When nothing is tagged with `:focus`, all examples
# get run.
config.filter_run :focus
config.run_all_when_everything_filtered = true
# Limits the available syntax to the non-monkey patched syntax that is recommended.
# For more details, see:
# - http://myronmars.to/n/dev-blog/2012/06/rspecs-new-expectation-syntax
# - http://teaisaweso.me/blog/2013/05/27/rspecs-new-message-expectation-syntax/
# - http://myronmars.to/n/dev-blog/2014/05/notable-changes-in-rspec-3#new__config_option_to_disable_rspeccore_monkey_patching
config.disable_monkey_patching!
# Many RSpec users commonly either run the entire suite or an individual
# file, and it's useful to allow more verbose output when running an
# individual spec file.
if config.files_to_run.one?
# Use the documentation formatter for detailed output,
# unless a formatter has already been configured
# (e.g. via a command-line flag).
config.default_formatter = 'doc'
end
# Print the 10 slowest examples and example groups at the
# end of the spec run, to help surface which specs are running
# particularly slow.
config.profile_examples = 10
# Run specs in random order to surface order dependencies. If you find an
# order dependency and want to debug it, you can fix the order by providing
# the seed, which is printed after each run.
# --seed 1234
config.order = :random
# Seed global randomization in this process using the `--seed` CLI option.
# Setting this allows you to use `--seed` to deterministically reproduce
# test failures related to randomization by passing the same `--seed` value
# as the one that triggered the failure.
Kernel.srand config.seed
end
Gemfile
# ...
group :development, :test do
gem 'rspec-rails', '~> 3.1.0'
end
# ...
group :test do
# ...
gem 'capybara', '~> 2.4.3'
end
It looks like your forgot to require capybara at your spec/rails_helper.rb
require 'capybara/rspec'
Also you can try to remove this line:
config.disable_monkey_patching!
Or check if capybara adds feature method to Rspec namespace:
RSpec.feature "My feature" do
...
end
I've faced the same issue with rails 4.2 even though I've had
require 'capybara/rspec' in rails_helper.rb
and
require 'spec_helper' in feature spec.
Solution is to require 'rails_helper' in feature spec as well.
In my case the problem was that I had the
require "spec_helper"
line lower in rails_helper.rb.
When I moved it at the top, everything went back to normal.
For your reference, my rails_helper.rb first lines now are:
require "spec_helper"
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= "test"
require File.expand_path("../../config/environment", __FILE__)
abort("The Rails environment is running in production mode!") if Rails.env.production?
require "rspec/rails"
I had to use the following in my problem which is a combination of previous answers:
spec/features/visitors/navigation_spec.rb
require 'spec_helper'
require 'capybara/rspec'
RSpec.feature 'Navigation links', :devise do
...
end
spec/rails_helper.rb
require 'capybara/rspec'
spec/spec_helper.rb
config.disable_monkey_patching = false

undefined method `find_link' for #<Cucumber::Rails::World:0x818e02e8> (NoMethodError)

Rspec obviously hates me. I kinda hate him back.
#features/step_definitions/custom_steps.rb
Then /^I should see the link "([^\"]*)"$/ do |linked_text|
find_link(linked_text)
end
#link.feature
Then I should see the link "foo"
From terminal:
undefined method `find_link' for #<Cucumber::Rails::World:0x818e02e8> (NoMethodError)
./features/step_definitions/custom_steps.rb:115:in `/^I should see the link "([^\"]*)"$/'
My env.rb file:
#features/support/env.rb
# IMPORTANT: This file is generated by cucumber-rails - edit at your own peril.
# It is recommended to regenerate this file in the future when you upgrade to a
# newer version of cucumber-rails. Consider adding your own code to a new file
# instead of editing this one. Cucumber will automatically load all features/**/*.rb
# files.
ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= "cucumber"
require File.expand_path(File.dirname(__FILE__) + '/../../config/environment')
require 'cucumber/formatter/unicode' # Remove this line if you don't want Cucumber Unicode support
require 'cucumber/rails/world'
require 'cucumber/rails/active_record'
require 'cucumber/web/tableish'
require 'webrat'
require 'webrat/core/matchers'
require 'spec/stubs/cucumber'
Scenes::load
Webrat.configure do |config|
config.mode = :rails
config.open_error_files = false # Set to true if you want error pages to pop up in the browser
end
# If you set this to false, any error raised from within your app will bubble
# up to your step definition and out to cucumber unless you catch it somewhere
# on the way. You can make Rails rescue errors and render error pages on a
# per-scenario basis by tagging a scenario or feature with the #allow-rescue tag.
#
# If you set this to true, Rails will rescue all errors and render error
# pages, more or less in the same way your application would behave in the
# default production environment. It's not recommended to do this for all
# of your scenarios, as this makes it hard to discover errors in your application.
ActionController::Base.allow_rescue = false
# If you set this to true, each scenario will run in a database transaction.
# You can still turn off transactions on a per-scenario basis, simply tagging
# a feature or scenario with the #no-txn tag. If you are using Capybara,
# tagging with #culerity or #javascript will also turn transactions off.
#
# If you set this to false, transactions will be off for all scenarios,
# regardless of whether you use #no-txn or not.
#
# Beware that turning transactions off will leave data in your database
# after each scenario, which can lead to hard-to-debug failures in
# subsequent scenarios. If you do this, we recommend you create a Before
# block that will explicitly put your database in a known state.
Cucumber::Rails::World.use_transactional_fixtures = true
# How to clean your database when transactions are turned off. See
# http://github.com/bmabey/database_cleaner for more info.
if defined?(ActiveRecord::Base)
begin
require 'database_cleaner'
DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :truncation
rescue LoadError => ignore_if_database_cleaner_not_present
end
end
What is wrong? Thank you.
This error is telling you none of your steps or helpers define this method.
Are you trying to use one of the helpers buried in Webrat? It sounds like you want:
Webrat::Locators.find_link

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