* New reporter interface across all reporters
* xdescribe & xit now store disabled specs
* Rewrite of HtmlReporter to support new interface and be more performant
- HTMLReporters should be rewritten to make this sort of thing easier.
- Fix HTMLReporter try/catch switch
- We can't really call resultCallback & throw, so that's been reverted
for now.
- This is necessary for the user to see spec results fill-in
progressively.
- There is a slight performance loss. 250 - 500ms seems to deliver the
same amount of loss. This is still at parity with Jasmine 1.x
- setTimeout will clear stack, prevent overflow. We run this once every
thousand specs.
- Browser users will probably want a time-based clear rather than spec
count based clear, as a thousand tests is typically quite slow. The
reporter should provide this.
- THere seems to be a performance regression. Large test suites may
throw
- Regressions: Mock Clock won't install correctly, async specs are
temporarily not supported.
- Async spec runs/waits interface is gone. Blocks are gone.
- Move most global usage into jasmine.Env constructor.
- Remove optional 'Jasmine running' from HtmlReporter -- caused
NS_FACTORY_ERROR in firefox when tested
- consequently, Runner & Suite no longer have results.
- Results come back to reporters from Spec, we should not have a need to
walk them later via suite/runner (in fact, no reporter used results on
suite/runner -- only bad tests)
- Remove/clean up tests relying on #results
- Remove integration tests that duplicate already tested behavior
- Allow users to set the pretty-printer's recursion depth
- When pretty-printing objects, don't include inherited properties.
- Change toBeCloseTo matcher to be more consistent
- Added toBeNaN matcher
- Add checkbox to test runner which toggles catching of exceptions duri
- Add config option which stops jasmine from capturing exceptions in a
Currently, jasmine's pretty printer traverses objects
to 40 levels of nesting. If an object is more deeply
nested than that, an exception is thrown. I find that
after a few levels of nesting, the output becomes
difficult to read. The process of serializing such
deep objects also sometimes crashes the browser or
causes a 'slow script' warning.
This commit exposes a 'MAX_PRETTY_PRINT_DEPTH' option.
It also causes the pretty printer to skip over
parts of an object that are nested to deeply by simply
printing out 'Object' or 'Array', rather than throwing
an exception.