This matcher checks all the properties of a given spy object and checks whether at least one of the spies has been called. It returns true if one or more of the spies of the spy object has been called and false otherwise.
This is noisier, but it maintains compatibility with reporters that assume
(quite reasonably) that all specs and suites are either filtered out or
reported.
This was already done for everything except spec cleanup fns, since the
various skip policies need to know the difference between afterEach and
afterAll.
Add support for running jasmine multiple times.
```js
const Jasmine = require('jasmine');
async function main() {
const jasmine = new Jasmine({ projectBaseDir: process.cwd() });
let specId = 'spec0';
jasmine.loadConfigFile('./spec/support/jasmine.json');
jasmine.env.configure({
specFilter(sp) {
return sp.id === specId;
},
autoCleanClosures: false
});
jasmine.exit = () => {};
await jasmine.execute();
specId = 'spec2';
await jasmine.execute();
}
main().catch((err) => {
console.error(err);
process.exitCode = 1;
});
```
With `jasmine.env.configure({ autoCleanClosures: false })` you disable Jasmine's feature to automatically clean closures (functions) during the test run. This is a requirement to be able to rerun.
When `execute` is called more than once, the `topSuite.reset` is called, which will reset the state for the next run as well as reset any child suites.
Add a function `exclude` to the `Suite` and `Spec` clases. This functions similar to `pend`, but will allow the "pending" state to persist over multiple runs. This is useful when `xit` is used.
Revert changes to jasmine.js
fix: make sure to call hooks during second run
Remove jsdoc from private apis
Fix elint issue
Add new line
This should allow us to more easily support complex skipping strategies
like skipping nested cleanup fns when the corresponding befores were
skipped, or skipping specs and suites when a beforeAll fails.
* #1533