68 lines
3.1 KiB
Ruby
68 lines
3.1 KiB
Ruby
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# IMPORTANT: This file is generated by cucumber-rails - edit at your own peril.
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# It is recommended to regenerate this file in the future when you upgrade to a
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# newer version of cucumber-rails. Consider adding your own code to a new file
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# instead of editing this one. Cucumber will automatically load all features/**/*.rb
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# files.
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require 'rubygems'
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require 'spork'
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Spork.prefork do
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ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= "test"
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require File.expand_path(File.dirname(__FILE__) + '/../../config/environment')
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require 'cucumber/formatter/unicode' # Remove this line if you don't want Cucumber Unicode support
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require 'cucumber/rails/rspec'
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require 'cucumber/rails/world'
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require 'cucumber/rails/active_record'
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require 'cucumber/web/tableish'
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require 'capybara/rails'
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require 'capybara/cucumber'
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require 'capybara/session'
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require 'cucumber/rails/capybara_javascript_emulation' # Lets you click links with onclick javascript handlers without using @culerity or @javascript
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# Capybara defaults to XPath selectors rather than Webrat's default of CSS3. In
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# order to ease the transition to Capybara we set the default here. If you'd
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# prefer to use XPath just remove this line and adjust any selectors in your
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# steps to use the XPath syntax.
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Capybara.default_selector = :css
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end
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Spork.each_run do
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# If you set this to false, any error raised from within your app will bubble
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# up to your step definition and out to cucumber unless you catch it somewhere
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# on the way. You can make Rails rescue errors and render error pages on a
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# per-scenario basis by tagging a scenario or feature with the @allow-rescue tag.
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#
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# If you set this to true, Rails will rescue all errors and render error
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# pages, more or less in the same way your application would behave in the
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# default production environment. It's not recommended to do this for all
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# of your scenarios, as this makes it hard to discover errors in your application.
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ActionController::Base.allow_rescue = false
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# If you set this to true, each scenario will run in a database transaction.
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# You can still turn off transactions on a per-scenario basis, simply tagging
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# a feature or scenario with the @no-txn tag. If you are using Capybara,
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# tagging with @culerity or @javascript will also turn transactions off.
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#
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# If you set this to false, transactions will be off for all scenarios,
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# regardless of whether you use @no-txn or not.
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#
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# Beware that turning transactions off will leave data in your database
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# after each scenario, which can lead to hard-to-debug failures in
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# subsequent scenarios. If you do this, we recommend you create a Before
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# block that will explicitly put your database in a known state.
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Cucumber::Rails::World.use_transactional_fixtures = true
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# How to clean your database when transactions are turned off. See
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# http://github.com/bmabey/database_cleaner for more info.
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if defined?(ActiveRecord::Base)
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begin
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require 'database_cleaner'
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DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :truncation
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rescue LoadError => ignore_if_database_cleaner_not_present
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end
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end
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end
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