aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
-rw-r--r--actionpack/CHANGELOG20
-rw-r--r--actionpack/lib/action_view/helpers/record_tag_helper.rb56
-rw-r--r--actionpack/test/template/record_tag_helper_test.rb24
-rw-r--r--activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb729
-rw-r--r--activerecord/test/fixtures/tasks.yml2
-rw-r--r--activesupport/lib/active_support/log_subscriber/test_helper.rb4
-rw-r--r--railties/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.textile4
-rw-r--r--railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile77
-rw-r--r--railties/guides/source/testing.textile2
-rw-r--r--railties/lib/rails/generators/actions.rb4
-rw-r--r--railties/lib/rails/generators/test_case.rb6
-rw-r--r--railties/lib/rails/generators/test_unit/model/templates/fixtures.yml2
-rw-r--r--railties/test/application/asset_debugging_test.rb8
-rw-r--r--railties/test/application/assets_test.rb18
-rw-r--r--railties/test/application/rake_test.rb6
-rw-r--r--railties/test/generators/plugin_new_generator_test.rb6
-rw-r--r--railties/test/generators/shared_generator_tests.rb4
-rw-r--r--railties/test/railties/engine_test.rb2
-rw-r--r--railties/test/railties/shared_tests.rb10
19 files changed, 568 insertions, 416 deletions
diff --git a/actionpack/CHANGELOG b/actionpack/CHANGELOG
index 71f38797ae..285ab05103 100644
--- a/actionpack/CHANGELOG
+++ b/actionpack/CHANGELOG
@@ -1,5 +1,21 @@
*Rails 3.2.0 (unreleased)*
+* content_tag_for and div_for can now take the collection of records. It will also yield the record as the first argument if you set a receiving argument in your block [Prem Sichanugrist]
+
+ So instead of having to do this:
+
+ @items.each do |item|
+ content_tag_for(:li, item) do
+ Title: <%= item.title %>
+ end
+ end
+
+ You can now do this:
+
+ content_tag_for(:li, @items) do |item|
+ Title: <%= item.title %>
+ end
+
* send_file now guess the mime type [Esad Hajdarevic]
* Mime type entries for PDF, ZIP and other formats were added [Esad Hajdarevic]
@@ -32,9 +48,9 @@
* CookieJar is now Enumerable. Fixes #2795
-* Fixed AssetNotPrecompiled error raised when rake assets:precompile is compiling certain .erb files. [Guillermo Iguaran]
+* Fixed AssetNotPrecompiled error raised when rake assets:precompile is compiling certain .erb files. See GH #2763 #2765 #2805 [Guillermo Iguaran]
-* Manifest is correctly placed in assets path when default assets prefix is changed. [Guillermo Iguaran]
+* Manifest is correctly placed in assets path when default assets prefix is changed. Fixes #2776 [Guillermo Iguaran]
* Fixed stylesheet_link_tag and javascript_include_tag to respect additional options passed by the users when debug is on. [Guillermo Iguaran]
diff --git a/actionpack/lib/action_view/helpers/record_tag_helper.rb b/actionpack/lib/action_view/helpers/record_tag_helper.rb
index 142a25f118..ad8896a2fd 100644
--- a/actionpack/lib/action_view/helpers/record_tag_helper.rb
+++ b/actionpack/lib/action_view/helpers/record_tag_helper.rb
@@ -17,6 +17,19 @@ module ActionView
#
# <div id="person_123" class="person foo"> Joe Bloggs </div>
#
+ # You can also pass an array of Active Record objects, which will then
+ # get iterates over and yield each record as an argument for the block.
+ # For example:
+ #
+ # <%= div_for(@people, :class => "foo") do |person| %>
+ # <%= person.name %>
+ # <% end %>
+ #
+ # produces:
+ #
+ # <div id="person_123" class="person foo"> Joe Bloggs </div>
+ # <div id="person_124" class="person foo"> Jane Bloggs </div>
+ #
def div_for(record, *args, &block)
content_tag_for(:div, record, *args, &block)
end
@@ -42,6 +55,21 @@ module ActionView
#
# <tr id="foo_person_123" class="person">...
#
+ # You can also pass an array of objects which this method will loop through
+ # and yield the current object to the supplied block, reduce the need for
+ # having to iterate through the object (using <tt>each</tt>) beforehand.
+ # For example (assuming @people is an array of Person objects):
+ #
+ # <%= content_tag_for(:tr, @people) do |person| %>
+ # <td><%= person.first_name %></td>
+ # <td><%= person.last_name %></td>
+ # <% end %>
+ #
+ # produces:
+ #
+ # <tr id="person_123" class="person">...</tr>
+ # <tr id="person_124" class="person">...</tr>
+ #
# content_tag_for also accepts a hash of options, which will be converted to
# additional HTML attributes. If you specify a <tt>:class</tt> value, it will be combined
# with the default class name for your object. For example:
@@ -52,12 +80,30 @@ module ActionView
#
# <li id="person_123" class="person bar">...
#
- def content_tag_for(tag_name, record, prefix = nil, options = nil, &block)
- options, prefix = prefix, nil if prefix.is_a?(Hash)
- options ||= {}
- options.merge!({ :class => "#{dom_class(record, prefix)} #{options[:class]}".strip, :id => dom_id(record, prefix) })
- content_tag(tag_name, options, &block)
+ def content_tag_for(tag_name, single_or_multiple_records, prefix = nil, options = nil, &block)
+ if single_or_multiple_records.respond_to?(:to_ary)
+ single_or_multiple_records.to_ary.map do |single_record|
+ capture { content_tag_for_single_record(tag_name, single_record, prefix, options, &block) }
+ end.join("\n")
+ else
+ content_tag_for_single_record(tag_name, single_or_multiple_records, prefix, options, &block)
+ end
end
+
+ private
+
+ # Called by <tt>content_tag_for</tt> internally to render a content tag
+ # for each record.
+ def content_tag_for_single_record(tag_name, record, prefix, options, &block)
+ options, prefix = prefix, nil if prefix.is_a?(Hash)
+ options ||= {}
+ options.merge!({ :class => "#{dom_class(record, prefix)} #{options[:class]}".strip, :id => dom_id(record, prefix) })
+ if block.arity == 0
+ content_tag(tag_name, capture(&block), options)
+ else
+ content_tag(tag_name, capture(record, &block), options)
+ end
+ end
end
end
end
diff --git a/actionpack/test/template/record_tag_helper_test.rb b/actionpack/test/template/record_tag_helper_test.rb
index 1ba14e8bc9..edc2689896 100644
--- a/actionpack/test/template/record_tag_helper_test.rb
+++ b/actionpack/test/template/record_tag_helper_test.rb
@@ -4,11 +4,12 @@ require 'controller/fake_models'
class Post
extend ActiveModel::Naming
include ActiveModel::Conversion
+ attr_writer :id, :body
def id
- 45
+ @id || 45
end
def body
- super || "What a wonderful world!"
+ super || @body || "What a wonderful world!"
end
end
@@ -58,4 +59,23 @@ class RecordTagHelperTest < ActionView::TestCase
actual = div_for(@post, :class => "bar") { concat @post.body }
assert_dom_equal expected, actual
end
+
+ def test_content_tag_for_collection
+ post_1 = Post.new.tap { |post| post.id = 101; post.body = "Hello!"; post.persisted = true }
+ post_2 = Post.new.tap { |post| post.id = 102; post.body = "World!"; post.persisted = true }
+ expected = %(<li class="post" id="post_101">Hello!</li>\n<li class="post" id="post_102">World!</li>)
+ actual = content_tag_for(:li, [post_1, post_2]) { |post| concat post.body }
+ assert_dom_equal expected, actual
+ end
+
+ def test_content_tag_for_collection_is_html_safe
+ end
+
+ def test_div_for_collection
+ post_1 = Post.new.tap { |post| post.id = 101; post.body = "Hello!"; post.persisted = true }
+ post_2 = Post.new.tap { |post| post.id = 102; post.body = "World!"; post.persisted = true }
+ expected = %(<div class="post" id="post_101">Hello!</div>\n<div class="post" id="post_102">World!</div>)
+ actual = div_for([post_1, post_2]) { |post| concat post.body }
+ assert_dom_equal expected, actual
+ end
end
diff --git a/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb b/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb
index 2674430116..6f1ec7f9b3 100644
--- a/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb
+++ b/activerecord/lib/active_record/fixtures.rb
@@ -24,375 +24,368 @@ end
class FixturesFileNotFound < StandardError; end
-# Fixtures are a way of organizing data that you want to test against; in short, sample data.
-#
-# = Fixture formats
-#
-# Fixtures come in 1 flavor:
-#
-# 1. YAML fixtures
-#
-# == YAML fixtures
-#
-# This type of fixture is in YAML format and the preferred default. YAML is a file format which describes data structures
-# in a non-verbose, human-readable format. It ships with Ruby 1.8.1+.
-#
-# Unlike single-file fixtures, YAML fixtures are stored in a single file per model, which are placed
-# in the directory appointed by <tt>ActiveSupport::TestCase.fixture_path=(path)</tt> (this is
-# automatically configured for Rails, so you can just put your files in <tt><your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/</tt>).
-# The fixture file ends with the <tt>.yml</tt> file extension (Rails example:
-# <tt><your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/web_sites.yml</tt>). The format of a YAML fixture file looks like this:
-#
-# rubyonrails:
-# id: 1
-# name: Ruby on Rails
-# url: http://www.rubyonrails.org
-#
-# google:
-# id: 2
-# name: Google
-# url: http://www.google.com
-#
-# This YAML fixture file includes two fixtures. Each YAML fixture (ie. record) is given a name and is followed by an
-# indented list of key/value pairs in the "key: value" format. Records are separated by a blank line for your viewing
-# pleasure.
-#
-# Note that YAML fixtures are unordered. If you want ordered fixtures, use the omap YAML type.
-# See http://yaml.org/type/omap.html
-# for the specification. You will need ordered fixtures when you have foreign key constraints on keys in the same table.
-# This is commonly needed for tree structures. Example:
-#
-# --- !omap
-# - parent:
-# id: 1
-# parent_id: NULL
-# title: Parent
-# - child:
-# id: 2
-# parent_id: 1
-# title: Child
-#
-# = Using fixtures in testcases
-#
-# Since fixtures are a testing construct, we use them in our unit and functional tests. There are two ways to use the
-# fixtures, but first let's take a look at a sample unit test:
-#
-# require 'test_helper'
-#
-# class WebSiteTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
-# test "web_site_count" do
-# assert_equal 2, WebSite.count
-# end
-# end
-#
-# By default, the <tt>test_helper module</tt> will load all of your fixtures into your test database,
-# so this test will succeed.
-# The testing environment will automatically load the all fixtures into the database before each test.
-# To ensure consistent data, the environment deletes the fixtures before running the load.
-#
-# In addition to being available in the database, the fixture's data may also be accessed by
-# using a special dynamic method, which has the same name as the model, and accepts the
-# name of the fixture to instantiate:
-#
-# test "find" do
-# assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", web_sites(:rubyonrails).name
-# end
-#
-# Alternatively, you may enable auto-instantiation of the fixture data. For instance, take the following tests:
-#
-# test "find_alt_method_1" do
-# assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", @web_sites['rubyonrails']['name']
-# end
-#
-# test "find_alt_method_2" do
-# assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", @rubyonrails.news
-# end
-#
-# In order to use these methods to access fixtured data within your testcases, you must specify one of the
-# following in your <tt>ActiveSupport::TestCase</tt>-derived class:
-#
-# - to fully enable instantiated fixtures (enable alternate methods #1 and #2 above)
-# self.use_instantiated_fixtures = true
-#
-# - create only the hash for the fixtures, do not 'find' each instance (enable alternate method #1 only)
-# self.use_instantiated_fixtures = :no_instances
-#
-# Using either of these alternate methods incurs a performance hit, as the fixtured data must be fully
-# traversed in the database to create the fixture hash and/or instance variables. This is expensive for
-# large sets of fixtured data.
-#
-# = Dynamic fixtures with ERB
-#
-# Some times you don't care about the content of the fixtures as much as you care about the volume. In these cases, you can
-# mix ERB in with your YAML fixtures to create a bunch of fixtures for load testing, like:
-#
-# <% (1..1000).each do |i| %>
-# fix_<%= i %>:
-# id: <%= i %>
-# name: guy_<%= 1 %>
-# <% end %>
-#
-# This will create 1000 very simple YAML fixtures.
-#
-# Using ERB, you can also inject dynamic values into your fixtures with inserts like <tt><%= Date.today.strftime("%Y-%m-%d") %></tt>.
-# This is however a feature to be used with some caution. The point of fixtures are that they're
-# stable units of predictable sample data. If you feel that you need to inject dynamic values, then
-# perhaps you should reexamine whether your application is properly testable. Hence, dynamic values
-# in fixtures are to be considered a code smell.
-#
-# = Transactional fixtures
-#
-# TestCases can use begin+rollback to isolate their changes to the database instead of having to
-# delete+insert for every test case.
-#
-# class FooTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
-# self.use_transactional_fixtures = true
-#
-# test "godzilla" do
-# assert !Foo.all.empty?
-# Foo.destroy_all
-# assert Foo.all.empty?
-# end
-#
-# test "godzilla aftermath" do
-# assert !Foo.all.empty?
-# end
-# end
-#
-# If you preload your test database with all fixture data (probably in the Rakefile task) and use transactional fixtures,
-# then you may omit all fixtures declarations in your test cases since all the data's already there
-# and every case rolls back its changes.
-#
-# In order to use instantiated fixtures with preloaded data, set +self.pre_loaded_fixtures+ to true. This will provide
-# access to fixture data for every table that has been loaded through fixtures (depending on the
-# value of +use_instantiated_fixtures+)
-#
-# When *not* to use transactional fixtures:
-#
-# 1. You're testing whether a transaction works correctly. Nested transactions don't commit until
-# all parent transactions commit, particularly, the fixtures transaction which is begun in setup
-# and rolled back in teardown. Thus, you won't be able to verify
-# the results of your transaction until Active Record supports nested transactions or savepoints (in progress).
-# 2. Your database does not support transactions. Every Active Record database supports transactions except MySQL MyISAM.
-# Use InnoDB, MaxDB, or NDB instead.
-#
-# = Advanced YAML Fixtures
-#
-# YAML fixtures that don't specify an ID get some extra features:
-#
-# * Stable, autogenerated IDs
-# * Label references for associations (belongs_to, has_one, has_many)
-# * HABTM associations as inline lists
-# * Autofilled timestamp columns
-# * Fixture label interpolation
-# * Support for YAML defaults
-#
-# == Stable, autogenerated IDs
-#
-# Here, have a monkey fixture:
-#
-# george:
-# id: 1
-# name: George the Monkey
-#
-# reginald:
-# id: 2
-# name: Reginald the Pirate
-#
-# Each of these fixtures has two unique identifiers: one for the database
-# and one for the humans. Why don't we generate the primary key instead?
-# Hashing each fixture's label yields a consistent ID:
-#
-# george: # generated id: 503576764
-# name: George the Monkey
-#
-# reginald: # generated id: 324201669
-# name: Reginald the Pirate
-#
-# Active Record looks at the fixture's model class, discovers the correct
-# primary key, and generates it right before inserting the fixture
-# into the database.
-#
-# The generated ID for a given label is constant, so we can discover
-# any fixture's ID without loading anything, as long as we know the label.
-#
-# == Label references for associations (belongs_to, has_one, has_many)
-#
-# Specifying foreign keys in fixtures can be very fragile, not to
-# mention difficult to read. Since Active Record can figure out the ID of
-# any fixture from its label, you can specify FK's by label instead of ID.
-#
-# === belongs_to
-#
-# Let's break out some more monkeys and pirates.
-#
-# ### in pirates.yml
-#
-# reginald:
-# id: 1
-# name: Reginald the Pirate
-# monkey_id: 1
-#
-# ### in monkeys.yml
-#
-# george:
-# id: 1
-# name: George the Monkey
-# pirate_id: 1
-#
-# Add a few more monkeys and pirates and break this into multiple files,
-# and it gets pretty hard to keep track of what's going on. Let's
-# use labels instead of IDs:
-#
-# ### in pirates.yml
-#
-# reginald:
-# name: Reginald the Pirate
-# monkey: george
-#
-# ### in monkeys.yml
-#
-# george:
-# name: George the Monkey
-# pirate: reginald
-#
-# Pow! All is made clear. Active Record reflects on the fixture's model class,
-# finds all the +belongs_to+ associations, and allows you to specify
-# a target *label* for the *association* (monkey: george) rather than
-# a target *id* for the *FK* (<tt>monkey_id: 1</tt>).
-#
-# ==== Polymorphic belongs_to
-#
-# Supporting polymorphic relationships is a little bit more complicated, since
-# Active Record needs to know what type your association is pointing at. Something
-# like this should look familiar:
-#
-# ### in fruit.rb
-#
-# belongs_to :eater, :polymorphic => true
-#
-# ### in fruits.yml
-#
-# apple:
-# id: 1
-# name: apple
-# eater_id: 1
-# eater_type: Monkey
-#
-# Can we do better? You bet!
-#
-# apple:
-# eater: george (Monkey)
-#
-# Just provide the polymorphic target type and Active Record will take care of the rest.
-#
-# === has_and_belongs_to_many
-#
-# Time to give our monkey some fruit.
-#
-# ### in monkeys.yml
-#
-# george:
-# id: 1
-# name: George the Monkey
-#
-# ### in fruits.yml
-#
-# apple:
-# id: 1
-# name: apple
-#
-# orange:
-# id: 2
-# name: orange
-#
-# grape:
-# id: 3
-# name: grape
-#
-# ### in fruits_monkeys.yml
-#
-# apple_george:
-# fruit_id: 1
-# monkey_id: 1
-#
-# orange_george:
-# fruit_id: 2
-# monkey_id: 1
-#
-# grape_george:
-# fruit_id: 3
-# monkey_id: 1
-#
-# Let's make the HABTM fixture go away.
-#
-# ### in monkeys.yml
-#
-# george:
-# id: 1
-# name: George the Monkey
-# fruits: apple, orange, grape
-#
-# ### in fruits.yml
-#
-# apple:
-# name: apple
-#
-# orange:
-# name: orange
-#
-# grape:
-# name: grape
-#
-# Zap! No more fruits_monkeys.yml file. We've specified the list of fruits
-# on George's fixture, but we could've just as easily specified a list
-# of monkeys on each fruit. As with +belongs_to+, Active Record reflects on
-# the fixture's model class and discovers the +has_and_belongs_to_many+
-# associations.
-#
-# == Autofilled timestamp columns
-#
-# If your table/model specifies any of Active Record's
-# standard timestamp columns (+created_at+, +created_on+, +updated_at+, +updated_on+),
-# they will automatically be set to <tt>Time.now</tt>.
-#
-# If you've set specific values, they'll be left alone.
-#
-# == Fixture label interpolation
-#
-# The label of the current fixture is always available as a column value:
-#
-# geeksomnia:
-# name: Geeksomnia's Account
-# subdomain: $LABEL
-#
-# Also, sometimes (like when porting older join table fixtures) you'll need
-# to be able to get a hold of the identifier for a given label. ERB
-# to the rescue:
-#
-# george_reginald:
-# monkey_id: <%= ActiveRecord::Fixtures.identify(:reginald) %>
-# pirate_id: <%= ActiveRecord::Fixtures.identify(:george) %>
-#
-# == Support for YAML defaults
-#
-# You probably already know how to use YAML to set and reuse defaults in
-# your <tt>database.yml</tt> file. You can use the same technique in your fixtures:
-#
-# DEFAULTS: &DEFAULTS
-# created_on: <%= 3.weeks.ago.to_s(:db) %>
-#
-# first:
-# name: Smurf
-# *DEFAULTS
-#
-# second:
-# name: Fraggle
-# *DEFAULTS
-#
-# Any fixture labeled "DEFAULTS" is safely ignored.
-
module ActiveRecord
+ # \Fixtures are a way of organizing data that you want to test against; in short, sample data.
+ #
+ # They are stored in YAML files, one file per model, which are placed in the directory
+ # appointed by <tt>ActiveSupport::TestCase.fixture_path=(path)</tt> (this is automatically
+ # configured for Rails, so you can just put your files in <tt><your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/</tt>).
+ # The fixture file ends with the <tt>.yml</tt> file extension (Rails example:
+ # <tt><your-rails-app>/test/fixtures/web_sites.yml</tt>). The format of a fixture file looks
+ # like this:
+ #
+ # rubyonrails:
+ # id: 1
+ # name: Ruby on Rails
+ # url: http://www.rubyonrails.org
+ #
+ # google:
+ # id: 2
+ # name: Google
+ # url: http://www.google.com
+ #
+ # This fixture file includes two fixtures. Each YAML fixture (ie. record) is given a name and
+ # is followed by an indented list of key/value pairs in the "key: value" format. Records are
+ # separated by a blank line for your viewing pleasure.
+ #
+ # Note that fixtures are unordered. If you want ordered fixtures, use the omap YAML type.
+ # See http://yaml.org/type/omap.html
+ # for the specification. You will need ordered fixtures when you have foreign key constraints
+ # on keys in the same table. This is commonly needed for tree structures. Example:
+ #
+ # --- !omap
+ # - parent:
+ # id: 1
+ # parent_id: NULL
+ # title: Parent
+ # - child:
+ # id: 2
+ # parent_id: 1
+ # title: Child
+ #
+ # = Using Fixtures in Test Cases
+ #
+ # Since fixtures are a testing construct, we use them in our unit and functional tests. There
+ # are two ways to use the fixtures, but first let's take a look at a sample unit test:
+ #
+ # require 'test_helper'
+ #
+ # class WebSiteTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
+ # test "web_site_count" do
+ # assert_equal 2, WebSite.count
+ # end
+ # end
+ #
+ # By default, <tt>test_helper.rb</tt> will load all of your fixtures into your test database,
+ # so this test will succeed.
+ #
+ # The testing environment will automatically load the all fixtures into the database before each
+ # test. To ensure consistent data, the environment deletes the fixtures before running the load.
+ #
+ # In addition to being available in the database, the fixture's data may also be accessed by
+ # using a special dynamic method, which has the same name as the model, and accepts the
+ # name of the fixture to instantiate:
+ #
+ # test "find" do
+ # assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", web_sites(:rubyonrails).name
+ # end
+ #
+ # Alternatively, you may enable auto-instantiation of the fixture data. For instance, take the
+ # following tests:
+ #
+ # test "find_alt_method_1" do
+ # assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", @web_sites['rubyonrails']['name']
+ # end
+ #
+ # test "find_alt_method_2" do
+ # assert_equal "Ruby on Rails", @rubyonrails.news
+ # end
+ #
+ # In order to use these methods to access fixtured data within your testcases, you must specify one of the
+ # following in your <tt>ActiveSupport::TestCase</tt>-derived class:
+ #
+ # - to fully enable instantiated fixtures (enable alternate methods #1 and #2 above)
+ # self.use_instantiated_fixtures = true
+ #
+ # - create only the hash for the fixtures, do not 'find' each instance (enable alternate method #1 only)
+ # self.use_instantiated_fixtures = :no_instances
+ #
+ # Using either of these alternate methods incurs a performance hit, as the fixtured data must be fully
+ # traversed in the database to create the fixture hash and/or instance variables. This is expensive for
+ # large sets of fixtured data.
+ #
+ # = Dynamic fixtures with ERB
+ #
+ # Some times you don't care about the content of the fixtures as much as you care about the volume.
+ # In these cases, you can mix ERB in with your YAML fixtures to create a bunch of fixtures for load
+ # testing, like:
+ #
+ # <% 1.upto(1000) do |i| %>
+ # fix_<%= i %>:
+ # id: <%= i %>
+ # name: guy_<%= 1 %>
+ # <% end %>
+ #
+ # This will create 1000 very simple fixtures.
+ #
+ # Using ERB, you can also inject dynamic values into your fixtures with inserts like
+ # <tt><%= Date.today.strftime("%Y-%m-%d") %></tt>.
+ # This is however a feature to be used with some caution. The point of fixtures are that they're
+ # stable units of predictable sample data. If you feel that you need to inject dynamic values, then
+ # perhaps you should reexamine whether your application is properly testable. Hence, dynamic values
+ # in fixtures are to be considered a code smell.
+ #
+ # = Transactional Fixtures
+ #
+ # Test cases can use begin+rollback to isolate their changes to the database instead of having to
+ # delete+insert for every test case.
+ #
+ # class FooTest < ActiveSupport::TestCase
+ # self.use_transactional_fixtures = true
+ #
+ # test "godzilla" do
+ # assert !Foo.all.empty?
+ # Foo.destroy_all
+ # assert Foo.all.empty?
+ # end
+ #
+ # test "godzilla aftermath" do
+ # assert !Foo.all.empty?
+ # end
+ # end
+ #
+ # If you preload your test database with all fixture data (probably in the rake task) and use
+ # transactional fixtures, then you may omit all fixtures declarations in your test cases since
+ # all the data's already there and every case rolls back its changes.
+ #
+ # In order to use instantiated fixtures with preloaded data, set +self.pre_loaded_fixtures+ to
+ # true. This will provide access to fixture data for every table that has been loaded through
+ # fixtures (depending on the value of +use_instantiated_fixtures+).
+ #
+ # When *not* to use transactional fixtures:
+ #
+ # 1. You're testing whether a transaction works correctly. Nested transactions don't commit until
+ # all parent transactions commit, particularly, the fixtures transaction which is begun in setup
+ # and rolled back in teardown. Thus, you won't be able to verify
+ # the results of your transaction until Active Record supports nested transactions or savepoints (in progress).
+ # 2. Your database does not support transactions. Every Active Record database supports transactions except MySQL MyISAM.
+ # Use InnoDB, MaxDB, or NDB instead.
+ #
+ # = Advanced Fixtures
+ #
+ # Fixtures that don't specify an ID get some extra features:
+ #
+ # * Stable, autogenerated IDs
+ # * Label references for associations (belongs_to, has_one, has_many)
+ # * HABTM associations as inline lists
+ # * Autofilled timestamp columns
+ # * Fixture label interpolation
+ # * Support for YAML defaults
+ #
+ # == Stable, Autogenerated IDs
+ #
+ # Here, have a monkey fixture:
+ #
+ # george:
+ # id: 1
+ # name: George the Monkey
+ #
+ # reginald:
+ # id: 2
+ # name: Reginald the Pirate
+ #
+ # Each of these fixtures has two unique identifiers: one for the database
+ # and one for the humans. Why don't we generate the primary key instead?
+ # Hashing each fixture's label yields a consistent ID:
+ #
+ # george: # generated id: 503576764
+ # name: George the Monkey
+ #
+ # reginald: # generated id: 324201669
+ # name: Reginald the Pirate
+ #
+ # Active Record looks at the fixture's model class, discovers the correct
+ # primary key, and generates it right before inserting the fixture
+ # into the database.
+ #
+ # The generated ID for a given label is constant, so we can discover
+ # any fixture's ID without loading anything, as long as we know the label.
+ #
+ # == Label references for associations (belongs_to, has_one, has_many)
+ #
+ # Specifying foreign keys in fixtures can be very fragile, not to
+ # mention difficult to read. Since Active Record can figure out the ID of
+ # any fixture from its label, you can specify FK's by label instead of ID.
+ #
+ # === belongs_to
+ #
+ # Let's break out some more monkeys and pirates.
+ #
+ # ### in pirates.yml
+ #
+ # reginald:
+ # id: 1
+ # name: Reginald the Pirate
+ # monkey_id: 1
+ #
+ # ### in monkeys.yml
+ #
+ # george:
+ # id: 1
+ # name: George the Monkey
+ # pirate_id: 1
+ #
+ # Add a few more monkeys and pirates and break this into multiple files,
+ # and it gets pretty hard to keep track of what's going on. Let's
+ # use labels instead of IDs:
+ #
+ # ### in pirates.yml
+ #
+ # reginald:
+ # name: Reginald the Pirate
+ # monkey: george
+ #
+ # ### in monkeys.yml
+ #
+ # george:
+ # name: George the Monkey
+ # pirate: reginald
+ #
+ # Pow! All is made clear. Active Record reflects on the fixture's model class,
+ # finds all the +belongs_to+ associations, and allows you to specify
+ # a target *label* for the *association* (monkey: george) rather than
+ # a target *id* for the *FK* (<tt>monkey_id: 1</tt>).
+ #
+ # ==== Polymorphic belongs_to
+ #
+ # Supporting polymorphic relationships is a little bit more complicated, since
+ # Active Record needs to know what type your association is pointing at. Something
+ # like this should look familiar:
+ #
+ # ### in fruit.rb
+ #
+ # belongs_to :eater, :polymorphic => true
+ #
+ # ### in fruits.yml
+ #
+ # apple:
+ # id: 1
+ # name: apple
+ # eater_id: 1
+ # eater_type: Monkey
+ #
+ # Can we do better? You bet!
+ #
+ # apple:
+ # eater: george (Monkey)
+ #
+ # Just provide the polymorphic target type and Active Record will take care of the rest.
+ #
+ # === has_and_belongs_to_many
+ #
+ # Time to give our monkey some fruit.
+ #
+ # ### in monkeys.yml
+ #
+ # george:
+ # id: 1
+ # name: George the Monkey
+ #
+ # ### in fruits.yml
+ #
+ # apple:
+ # id: 1
+ # name: apple
+ #
+ # orange:
+ # id: 2
+ # name: orange
+ #
+ # grape:
+ # id: 3
+ # name: grape
+ #
+ # ### in fruits_monkeys.yml
+ #
+ # apple_george:
+ # fruit_id: 1
+ # monkey_id: 1
+ #
+ # orange_george:
+ # fruit_id: 2
+ # monkey_id: 1
+ #
+ # grape_george:
+ # fruit_id: 3
+ # monkey_id: 1
+ #
+ # Let's make the HABTM fixture go away.
+ #
+ # ### in monkeys.yml
+ #
+ # george:
+ # id: 1
+ # name: George the Monkey
+ # fruits: apple, orange, grape
+ #
+ # ### in fruits.yml
+ #
+ # apple:
+ # name: apple
+ #
+ # orange:
+ # name: orange
+ #
+ # grape:
+ # name: grape
+ #
+ # Zap! No more fruits_monkeys.yml file. We've specified the list of fruits
+ # on George's fixture, but we could've just as easily specified a list
+ # of monkeys on each fruit. As with +belongs_to+, Active Record reflects on
+ # the fixture's model class and discovers the +has_and_belongs_to_many+
+ # associations.
+ #
+ # == Autofilled Timestamp Columns
+ #
+ # If your table/model specifies any of Active Record's
+ # standard timestamp columns (+created_at+, +created_on+, +updated_at+, +updated_on+),
+ # they will automatically be set to <tt>Time.now</tt>.
+ #
+ # If you've set specific values, they'll be left alone.
+ #
+ # == Fixture label interpolation
+ #
+ # The label of the current fixture is always available as a column value:
+ #
+ # geeksomnia:
+ # name: Geeksomnia's Account
+ # subdomain: $LABEL
+ #
+ # Also, sometimes (like when porting older join table fixtures) you'll need
+ # to be able to get a hold of the identifier for a given label. ERB
+ # to the rescue:
+ #
+ # george_reginald:
+ # monkey_id: <%= ActiveRecord::Fixtures.identify(:reginald) %>
+ # pirate_id: <%= ActiveRecord::Fixtures.identify(:george) %>
+ #
+ # == Support for YAML defaults
+ #
+ # You probably already know how to use YAML to set and reuse defaults in
+ # your <tt>database.yml</tt> file. You can use the same technique in your fixtures:
+ #
+ # DEFAULTS: &DEFAULTS
+ # created_on: <%= 3.weeks.ago.to_s(:db) %>
+ #
+ # first:
+ # name: Smurf
+ # *DEFAULTS
+ #
+ # second:
+ # name: Fraggle
+ # *DEFAULTS
+ #
+ # Any fixture labeled "DEFAULTS" is safely ignored.
class Fixtures
MAX_ID = 2 ** 30 - 1
diff --git a/activerecord/test/fixtures/tasks.yml b/activerecord/test/fixtures/tasks.yml
index 01c95b3a4c..402ca85faf 100644
--- a/activerecord/test/fixtures/tasks.yml
+++ b/activerecord/test/fixtures/tasks.yml
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-# Read about fixtures at http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/Fixtures.html
+# Read about fixtures at http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Fixtures.html
first_task:
id: 1
starting: 2005-03-30t06:30:00.00+01:00
diff --git a/activesupport/lib/active_support/log_subscriber/test_helper.rb b/activesupport/lib/active_support/log_subscriber/test_helper.rb
index 3e54134c5c..dcfcf0b63c 100644
--- a/activesupport/lib/active_support/log_subscriber/test_helper.rb
+++ b/activesupport/lib/active_support/log_subscriber/test_helper.rb
@@ -18,8 +18,8 @@ module ActiveSupport
# Developer.all
# wait
# assert_equal 1, @logger.logged(:debug).size
- # assert_match /Developer Load/, @logger.logged(:debug).last
- # assert_match /SELECT \* FROM "developers"/, @logger.logged(:debug).last
+ # assert_match(/Developer Load/, @logger.logged(:debug).last)
+ # assert_match(/SELECT \* FROM "developers"/, @logger.logged(:debug).last)
# end
# end
#
diff --git a/railties/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.textile b/railties/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.textile
index 351a4498b1..67761645fa 100644
--- a/railties/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.textile
+++ b/railties/guides/source/action_mailer_basics.textile
@@ -514,8 +514,8 @@ class UserMailerTest < ActionMailer::TestCase
# Test the body of the sent email contains what we expect it to
assert_equal [user.email], email.to
assert_equal "Welcome to My Awesome Site", email.subject
- assert_match /<h1>Welcome to example.com, #{user.name}<\/h1>/, email.encoded
- assert_match /Welcome to example.com, #{user.name}/, email.encoded
+ assert_match(/<h1>Welcome to example.com, #{user.name}<\/h1>/, email.encoded)
+ assert_match(/Welcome to example.com, #{user.name}/, email.encoded)
end
end
</ruby>
diff --git a/railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile b/railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile
index 5a1e8b1247..d1827c649b 100644
--- a/railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile
+++ b/railties/guides/source/action_view_overview.textile
@@ -454,6 +454,83 @@ input("post", "title") # =>
<input id="post_title" name="post[title]" size="30" type="text" value="Hello World" />
</ruby>
+h4. RecordTagHelper
+
+This module provides methods for generating a container tag, such as a +<div>+, for your record. This is the recommended way of creating a container for render your Active Record object, as it adds an appropriate class and id attributes to that container. You can then refer to those containers easily by following the convention, instead of having to think about which class or id attribute you should use.
+
+h5. content_tag_for
+
+Renders a container tag that relates to your Active Record Object.
+
+For example, given +@post+ is the object of +Post+ class, you can do:
+
+<ruby>
+<%= content_tag_for(:tr, @post) do %>
+ <td><%= @post.title %></td>
+<% end %>
+</ruby>
+
+This will generate this HTML output:
+
+<html>
+<tr id="post_1234" class="post">
+ <td>Hello World!</td>
+</tr>
+</html>
+
+You can also supply HTML attributes as an additional option hash. For example:
+
+<ruby>
+<%= content_tag_for(:tr, @post, :class => "frontpage") do %>
+ <td><%= @post.title %></td>
+<% end %>
+</ruby>
+
+Will generate this HTML output:
+
+<html>
+<tr id="post_1234" class="post frontpage">
+ <td>Hello World!</td>
+</tr>
+</html>
+
+You can pass a collection of Active Record objects. This method will loops through your objects and create a container for each of them. For example, given +@posts+ is an array of two +Post+ objects:
+
+<ruby>
+<%= content_tag_for(:tr, @posts) do |post| %>
+ <td><%= post.title %></td>
+<% end %>
+</ruby>
+
+Will generate this HTML output:
+
+<html>
+<tr id="post_1234" class="post">
+ <td>Hello World!</td>
+</tr>
+<tr id="post_1235" class="post">
+ <td>Ruby on Rails Rocks!</td>
+</tr>
+</html>
+
+h5. div_for
+
+This is actually a convenient method which calls +content_tag_for+ internally with +:div+ as the tag name. You can pass either an Active Record object or a collection of objects. For example:
+
+<ruby>
+<%= div_for(@post, :class => "frontpage") do %>
+ <td><%= @post.title %></td>
+<% end %>
+</ruby>
+
+Will generate this HTML output:
+
+<html>
+<div id="post_1234" class="post frontpage">
+ <td>Hello World!</td>
+</div>
+</html>
+
h4. AssetTagHelper
This module provides methods for generating HTML that links views to assets such as images, JavaScript files, stylesheets, and feeds.
diff --git a/railties/guides/source/testing.textile b/railties/guides/source/testing.textile
index cc55d1f756..caa0d91a83 100644
--- a/railties/guides/source/testing.textile
+++ b/railties/guides/source/testing.textile
@@ -931,7 +931,7 @@ class UserControllerTest < ActionController::TestCase
assert_equal "You have been invited by me@example.com", invite_email.subject
assert_equal 'friend@example.com', invite_email.to[0]
- assert_match /Hi friend@example.com/, invite_email.body
+ assert_match(/Hi friend@example.com/, invite_email.body)
end
end
</ruby>
diff --git a/railties/lib/rails/generators/actions.rb b/railties/lib/rails/generators/actions.rb
index 49e8a4a37d..575f4bb106 100644
--- a/railties/lib/rails/generators/actions.rb
+++ b/railties/lib/rails/generators/actions.rb
@@ -144,8 +144,8 @@ module Rails
if commands.is_a?(Symbol)
run "git #{commands}"
else
- commands.each do |command, options|
- run "git #{command} #{options}"
+ commands.each do |cmd, options|
+ run "git #{cmd} #{options}"
end
end
end
diff --git a/railties/lib/rails/generators/test_case.rb b/railties/lib/rails/generators/test_case.rb
index ee85b70bb5..7319fb79f6 100644
--- a/railties/lib/rails/generators/test_case.rb
+++ b/railties/lib/rails/generators/test_case.rb
@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ module Rails
#
# assert_file "app/controller/products_controller.rb" do |controller|
# assert_instance_method :index, content do |index|
- # assert_match /Product\.all/, index
+ # assert_match(/Product\.all/, index)
# end
# end
#
@@ -148,7 +148,7 @@ module Rails
#
# assert_migration "db/migrate/create_products.rb" do |migration|
# assert_class_method :up, migration do |up|
- # assert_match /create_table/, up
+ # assert_match(/create_table/, up)
# end
# end
#
@@ -161,7 +161,7 @@ module Rails
#
# assert_file "app/controller/products_controller.rb" do |controller|
# assert_instance_method :index, content do |index|
- # assert_match /Product\.all/, index
+ # assert_match(/Product\.all/, index)
# end
# end
#
diff --git a/railties/lib/rails/generators/test_unit/model/templates/fixtures.yml b/railties/lib/rails/generators/test_unit/model/templates/fixtures.yml
index d4138ca2f5..5c8780aa64 100644
--- a/railties/lib/rails/generators/test_unit/model/templates/fixtures.yml
+++ b/railties/lib/rails/generators/test_unit/model/templates/fixtures.yml
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-# Read about fixtures at http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/Fixtures.html
+# Read about fixtures at http://api.rubyonrails.org/classes/ActiveRecord/Fixtures.html
<% unless attributes.empty? -%>
one:
diff --git a/railties/test/application/asset_debugging_test.rb b/railties/test/application/asset_debugging_test.rb
index 707abe7191..1b99af22a4 100644
--- a/railties/test/application/asset_debugging_test.rb
+++ b/railties/test/application/asset_debugging_test.rb
@@ -45,8 +45,8 @@ module ApplicationTests
# the debug_assets params isn't used if compile is off
get '/posts?debug_assets=true'
- assert_match /<script src="\/assets\/application-([0-z]+)\.js" type="text\/javascript"><\/script>/, last_response.body
- assert_no_match /<script src="\/assets\/xmlhr-([0-z]+)\.js" type="text\/javascript"><\/script>/, last_response.body
+ assert_match(/<script src="\/assets\/application-([0-z]+)\.js" type="text\/javascript"><\/script>/, last_response.body)
+ assert_no_match(/<script src="\/assets\/xmlhr-([0-z]+)\.js" type="text\/javascript"><\/script>/, last_response.body)
end
test "assets aren't concatened when compile is true is on and debug_assets params is true" do
@@ -58,8 +58,8 @@ module ApplicationTests
class ::PostsController < ActionController::Base ; end
get '/posts?debug_assets=true'
- assert_match /<script src="\/assets\/application-([0-z]+)\.js\?body=1" type="text\/javascript"><\/script>/, last_response.body
- assert_match /<script src="\/assets\/xmlhr-([0-z]+)\.js\?body=1" type="text\/javascript"><\/script>/, last_response.body
+ assert_match(/<script src="\/assets\/application-([0-z]+)\.js\?body=1" type="text\/javascript"><\/script>/, last_response.body)
+ assert_match(/<script src="\/assets\/xmlhr-([0-z]+)\.js\?body=1" type="text\/javascript"><\/script>/, last_response.body)
end
end
end
diff --git a/railties/test/application/assets_test.rb b/railties/test/application/assets_test.rb
index a412b7d99b..1e0a26918b 100644
--- a/railties/test/application/assets_test.rb
+++ b/railties/test/application/assets_test.rb
@@ -77,8 +77,8 @@ module ApplicationTests
manifest = "#{app_path}/public/assets/manifest.yml"
assets = YAML.load_file(manifest)
- assert_match /application-([0-z]+)\.js/, assets["application.js"]
- assert_match /application-([0-z]+)\.css/, assets["application.css"]
+ assert_match(/application-([0-z]+)\.js/, assets["application.js"])
+ assert_match(/application-([0-z]+)\.css/, assets["application.css"])
end
test "precompile creates a manifest file in a custom path with all the assets listed" do
@@ -96,8 +96,8 @@ module ApplicationTests
manifest = "#{app_path}/shared/manifest.yml"
assets = YAML.load_file(manifest)
- assert_match /application-([0-z]+)\.js/, assets["application.js"]
- assert_match /application-([0-z]+)\.css/, assets["application.css"]
+ assert_match(/application-([0-z]+)\.js/, assets["application.js"])
+ assert_match(/application-([0-z]+)\.css/, assets["application.css"])
end
@@ -113,7 +113,7 @@ module ApplicationTests
manifest = "#{app_path}/public/x/manifest.yml"
assets = YAML.load_file(manifest)
- assert_match /application-([0-z]+)\.js/, assets["application.js"]
+ assert_match(/application-([0-z]+)\.js/, assets["application.js"])
end
test "precompile does not append asset digests when config.assets.digest is false" do
@@ -176,8 +176,8 @@ module ApplicationTests
class ::PostsController < ActionController::Base ; end
get '/posts'
- assert_match /AssetNotPrecompiledError/, last_response.body
- assert_match /app.js isn't precompiled/, last_response.body
+ assert_match(/AssetNotPrecompiledError/, last_response.body)
+ assert_match(/app.js isn't precompiled/, last_response.body)
end
test "precompile appends the md5 hash to files referenced with asset_path and run in the provided RAILS_ENV" do
@@ -189,7 +189,7 @@ module ApplicationTests
Dir.chdir(app_path){ `bundle exec rake assets:precompile RAILS_ENV=test` }
# end
file = Dir["#{app_path}/public/assets/application-*.css"].first
- assert_match /\/assets\/rails-([0-z]+)\.png/, File.read(file)
+ assert_match(/\/assets\/rails-([0-z]+)\.png/, File.read(file))
end
test "precompile appends the md5 hash to files referenced with asset_path and run in production as default even using RAILS_GROUPS=assets" do
@@ -201,7 +201,7 @@ module ApplicationTests
Dir.chdir(app_path){ `bundle exec rake assets:precompile RAILS_GROUPS=assets` }
end
file = Dir["#{app_path}/public/assets/application-*.css"].first
- assert_match /\/assets\/rails-([0-z]+)\.png/, File.read(file)
+ assert_match(/\/assets\/rails-([0-z]+)\.png/, File.read(file))
end
test "assets are cleaned up properly" do
diff --git a/railties/test/application/rake_test.rb b/railties/test/application/rake_test.rb
index cc65a674c9..0e03c3dc2d 100644
--- a/railties/test/application/rake_test.rb
+++ b/railties/test/application/rake_test.rb
@@ -79,9 +79,9 @@ module ApplicationTests
silence_stderr do
output = Dir.chdir(app_path){ `rake test` }
- assert_match /Errors running test:units! #<ActiveRecord::AdapterNotSpecified/, output
- assert_match /Errors running test:functionals! #<RuntimeError/, output
- assert_match /Errors running test:integration! #<RuntimeError/, output
+ assert_match(/Errors running test:units! #<ActiveRecord::AdapterNotSpecified/, output)
+ assert_match(/Errors running test:functionals! #<RuntimeError/, output)
+ assert_match(/Errors running test:integration! #<RuntimeError/, output)
end
end
diff --git a/railties/test/generators/plugin_new_generator_test.rb b/railties/test/generators/plugin_new_generator_test.rb
index b49945f153..9183945619 100644
--- a/railties/test/generators/plugin_new_generator_test.rb
+++ b/railties/test/generators/plugin_new_generator_test.rb
@@ -197,8 +197,8 @@ class PluginNewGeneratorTest < Rails::Generators::TestCase
assert_file "app/helpers/bukkits/application_helper.rb", /module Bukkits\n module ApplicationHelper/
assert_file "app/views/layouts/bukkits/application.html.erb" do |contents|
assert_match "<title>Bukkits</title>", contents
- assert_match /stylesheet_link_tag\s+['"]bukkits\/application['"]/, contents
- assert_match /javascript_include_tag\s+['"]bukkits\/application['"]/, contents
+ assert_match(/stylesheet_link_tag\s+['"]bukkits\/application['"]/, contents)
+ assert_match(/javascript_include_tag\s+['"]bukkits\/application['"]/, contents)
end
end
@@ -241,7 +241,7 @@ class PluginNewGeneratorTest < Rails::Generators::TestCase
run_generator [destination_root, "--skip-test-unit"]
assert_no_file "test"
assert_file "bukkits.gemspec" do |contents|
- assert_no_match /s.test_files = Dir\["test\/\*\*\/\*"\]/, contents
+ assert_no_match(/s.test_files = Dir\["test\/\*\*\/\*"\]/, contents)
end
end
diff --git a/railties/test/generators/shared_generator_tests.rb b/railties/test/generators/shared_generator_tests.rb
index d3074afd91..1534f0d828 100644
--- a/railties/test/generators/shared_generator_tests.rb
+++ b/railties/test/generators/shared_generator_tests.rb
@@ -191,11 +191,11 @@ module SharedCustomGeneratorTests
end
def test_builder_option_with_http
- path = "http://gist.github.com/103208.txt"
+ url = "http://gist.github.com/103208.txt"
template = "class #{builder_class}; end"
template.instance_eval "def read; self; end" # Make the string respond to read
- generator([destination_root], :builder => path).expects(:open).with(path, 'Accept' => 'application/x-thor-template').returns(template)
+ generator([destination_root], :builder => url).expects(:open).with(url, 'Accept' => 'application/x-thor-template').returns(template)
quietly { generator.invoke_all }
default_files.each{ |path| assert_no_file(path) }
diff --git a/railties/test/railties/engine_test.rb b/railties/test/railties/engine_test.rb
index 0ff1e0f180..06a60cd858 100644
--- a/railties/test/railties/engine_test.rb
+++ b/railties/test/railties/engine_test.rb
@@ -400,7 +400,7 @@ module RailtiesTest
boot_rails
get("/bukkits/posts/new")
- assert_match /name="post\[title\]"/, last_response.body
+ assert_match(/name="post\[title\]"/, last_response.body)
end
test "isolated engine should set correct route module prefix for nested namespace" do
diff --git a/railties/test/railties/shared_tests.rb b/railties/test/railties/shared_tests.rb
index 9a64b7c64e..21fde49ff7 100644
--- a/railties/test/railties/shared_tests.rb
+++ b/railties/test/railties/shared_tests.rb
@@ -61,21 +61,21 @@ module RailtiesTest
assert File.exists?("#{app_path}/db/migrate/2_create_users.rb")
assert File.exists?("#{app_path}/db/migrate/3_add_last_name_to_users.rb")
- assert_match /Copied migration 2_create_users.rb from bukkits/, output
- assert_match /Copied migration 3_add_last_name_to_users.rb from bukkits/, output
- assert_match /NOTE: Migration 3_create_sessions.rb from bukkits has been skipped/, output
+ assert_match(/Copied migration 2_create_users.rb from bukkits/, output)
+ assert_match(/Copied migration 3_add_last_name_to_users.rb from bukkits/, output)
+ assert_match(/NOTE: Migration 3_create_sessions.rb from bukkits has been skipped/, output)
assert_equal 3, Dir["#{app_path}/db/migrate/*.rb"].length
output = `bundle exec rake railties:install:migrations`.split("\n")
assert File.exists?("#{app_path}/db/migrate/4_create_yaffles.rb")
- assert_no_match /2_create_users/, output.join("\n")
+ assert_no_match(/2_create_users/, output.join("\n"))
yaffle_migration_order = output.index(output.detect{|o| /Copied migration 4_create_yaffles.rb from acts_as_yaffle/ =~ o })
bukkits_migration_order = output.index(output.detect{|o| /NOTE: Migration 3_create_sessions.rb from bukkits has been skipped/ =~ o })
assert_not_nil yaffle_migration_order, "Expected migration to be copied"
assert_not_nil bukkits_migration_order, "Expected migration to be skipped"
- assert_equal (railties.index('acts_as_yaffle') > railties.index('bukkits')) , (yaffle_migration_order > bukkits_migration_order)
+ assert_equal(railties.index('acts_as_yaffle') > railties.index('bukkits'), yaffle_migration_order > bukkits_migration_order)
migrations_count = Dir["#{app_path}/db/migrate/*.rb"].length
output = `bundle exec rake railties:install:migrations`