* Top level private APIs (e.g. jasmine.private.whatever) are no longer
exposed
* jasmineRequire is no longer exposed
* core is self-booting
* Globals are automatically created in browsers. (They can subsequently
be removed by user code if desired.)
* Globals are *not* automatically created in Node. An installGlobals
function is exported instead. The jasmine package calls installGlobals
unless configured not to do so.
* In Node, the same instance is returned each time jasmine-core is
imported. A reset function is exported. It effectively resets all state
by discarding the env and creating a new one. This allows mulitple
sequential runs within the same process to be independent of each
other, but does not allow multiple concurrent runs. (That probably never
worked anyway.)
Fixes#2094
This isn't officially compatible with the oldest version of Node that
Jasmine supports, but it works. If it stops working, we can always disable
linting in CI builds on older Node versions.
These might be useful for a function with a more restricted domain. But for
equals, which accepts two of literally anything, the short run was too short
to catch any problems and the long run tended to exceed the CircleCi timeout.
This was a holdover from 1.x that should have been removed in 2.0,
but was missed. Suite is meant to be private, and almost none of
its methods can be safely called by user code.
Jasmine 1.x exposed Suite objects to user code as the `this` in describe
functions. That should have been removed in 2.0 but it was missed. It
will be removed in 4.0. This change adds a deprecation warning if anything
on a describe's `this` is accessed.
The deprecation warning relies on Proxy, and won't work in environments
that don't have it. Among Jasmine's supported environments, that's Safari 9,
Safari 8, and all versions of IE. In those browsers, a describe's `this`
will still be a Suite for now, but there will be no deprecation warnings.
* Don't run them in browsers in the regular CI build
* Run them in browsers in a special nightly build
* Run them in Node in the regular CI build
* Run them when developers manually run the suite
This should allow the regular CI build to give us a more useful signal,
while keeping us from losing sight of the flaky specs.
* Include stack traces. This makes it easier to find the matcher that
needs to be updated, particularly when it comes from a library rather
than the user's own code.
* Show each deprecation only once unless `config.verboseDeprecations`
is set. Since matchers are often added in a global `beforeEach`, logging
deprecations every time can be overwhelming.
Property tests can only run in Node, so they were previously in another
directory that only gets run in Node. Now they're next to the related
non-property tests and marked pending in the browser. This makes it more
likely that a developer who normally only runs tests in the browser will
notice and run them.
* See #1764 from @dubzzz
* Property tests are only run in Node, not browser.
* The Travis build sets JASMINE_LONG_PROPERTY_TESTS to enable much more
thorough (but slow) testing.