Note: afterEach() functions are still run, because skipping them is
highly likely to pollute specs that run after the failure.
[Finishes #92252330]
- Fixes#577
- Fixes#807
Besides surfacing the error in the hopefully-correct place, this also
prevents the queue runners for sibling suites from interleaving, which
in turn prevents all kinds of internal state corruption.
Signed-off-by: Gregg Van Hove <gvanhove@pivotal.io>
This makes the specs green and appears to work for most cases. I have a
number of concerns about the implementation and would appreciate
ideas/feedback.
- Suite#addExpecationResult infers if it is coming from an afterAll fn
based on if the first child of the suite is finished. This assumes
that the first child of the suite is a spec (this appears to be true
as long as there is at least one spec in the suite)
- Suites behave like unfinished specs. Because suites will propagate
expectation failures to their children suites, the afterAll
expectation reporting appears to work for suites without specs
unless you have:
1) An otherwise empty suite with an afterAll
2) An afterAll'd suite whose first suite is empty (or whose first
suite's first suite is empty (and so on))
- Changed afterAllError to afterAllEvent, so it can accommodate both
errors and expectation failures. The reporter now receives a string
instead of the actual error object. The loss of the object doesn't
affect our reporters, but may be a nice-to-have for other reporters/
the future.
- The gap between the expectations caught in Suite and QueueRunner (who
triggers reporting via an injected callback) is an array injected into
QR by the Suite. The array is then flushed at some point (currently
after the attempt… functions). This works, but is a bit goofy.
[#73741654]
- QueueRunner now responsible for timing out async specs instead of
Spec
- Make sure only spec functions are timeoutable and not suites (due to
the refactor)
- Will replace rake core_specs.
- Remove obsolete dependencies & files -- most of these were for build tasks we
are no longer using. Notably, rspec and spec_helper were deleted.
Change the 'this' user functions are called with to be an empty object
instead of the QueueRunner so that if the user puts properties on it,
they won't conflict.
Also, changes async specs to be called with a proper 'this', as pointed
out by @Eric-Wright in #419 and #420.
[finishes #56030080]
Jasmine spies now have a 'and' property which allows the user to
change the spy's execution strategy-- such as '.and.callReturn(4)'
and a 'calls' property which allows inspection of the calls a spy
has received.
* This is a breaking change *
There is a CallTracker that keeps track of all calls and arguments
and a SpyStrategy which determines what the spy should do when it
is called.
- xit
- it with a null function body ( it("should be pending");
- calling pending() inside a spec
- having a spec without any expectations
Pending and Filtered specs now call Reporter interface specStarted so that reporting acts as expected.
Pending and Filtered spec names are present and styled in the HTML reporter
Using xit used to disable a spec. Disabling is now just when a spec is filtered out at run time (usually w/ the reporter).
Suites are still disabled with xdescribe and means its specs are never executed.
* New reporter interface across all reporters
* xdescribe & xit now store disabled specs
* Rewrite of HtmlReporter to support new interface and be more performant