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[ci skip]
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[ci skip]
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[ci skip]
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[ci skip]
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(#28093)
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For applications that are upgrading or applications that are choosing to
skip system testing Capbyara will not be available. SystemTestCase and
friends shoud only be loaded if Capbyara is defined.
Fixes #28094
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sikachu/fix-define_attribute_method-with-symbol-in-ar
Fix `define_attribute_method` with Symbol in AR
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This issue is only appear when you try to call `define_attribute_method`
and passing a symbol in Active Record. It does not appear in isolation
in Active Model itself.
Before this patch, when you run `User.define_attribute_method :foo`, you
will get:
NoMethodError: undefined method `unpack' for :foo:Symbol
from activerecord/lib/active_record/attribute_methods/read.rb:28:in `define_method_attribute'
from activerecord/lib/active_record/attribute_methods/primary_key.rb:61:in `define_method_attribute'
from activemodel/lib/active_model/attribute_methods.rb:292:in `block in define_attribute_method'
from activemodel/lib/active_model/attribute_methods.rb:285:in `each'
from activemodel/lib/active_model/attribute_methods.rb:285:in `define_attribute_method'
This patch contains both a fix in Active Model and a test in Active
Record for this error.
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Do not display template files on API doc [ci skip]
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```
Minitest.run_via[:rails] = true
```
👆 would break because a simple alias won't catch the second
true argument there.
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Use Puma 3.7
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ref this commit seems that has not been merged into 3.7 https://github.com/puma/puma/commit/42bec4600c51ab8a1c1ee5a0e1b738a4ffd82bf2
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Fix some grammar in docs [ci skip]
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Use `response#location` instead of `#location` in redirect.
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Closes #28033
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Ensure test threads share a DB connection
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This ensures multiple threads inside a transactional test to see consistent
database state.
When a system test starts Puma spins up one thread and Capybara spins up
another thread. Because of this when tests are run the database cannot
see what was inserted into the database on teardown. This is because
there are two threads using two different connections.
This change uses the statement cache to lock the threads to using a
single connection ID instead of each not being able to see each other.
This code only runs in the fixture setup and teardown so it does not
affect real production databases.
When a transaction is opened we set `lock_thread` to `Thread.current` so
we can keep track of which connection the thread is using. When we
rollback the transaction we unlock the thread and then there will be no
left-over data in the database because the transaction will roll back
the correct connections.
[ Eileen M. Uchitelle, Matthew Draper ]
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[ci skip]
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WIP: Capybara Integration with Rails (AKA System Tests)
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There were some grammar issues and incorrect information in the system
tests documentation.
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This renames the system test helper file to be application system test
case to match what the rest of Rails does. In the future we should
consider changing the test_helper to match.
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* Override integration test default host
Integration tests automatically set the default host to
'http://example.com'. This works fine for integration tests because they
are not real browser sessions, but doesn't work fine for system tests
because they are real browser sessions.
We can override this by setting the `host!` in `before_setup. The
`Capybara.always_include_port` will allow the test to look at
`127.0.0.1:port capybara picks` and properly redirect the test.
Any application can override this by setting the `host!` in
their system test helper. Generally though, applications are going to be
using localhost.
In this commit I also moved the setup and teardown into their own module
for tidiness.
* Move teardown settings into system test case
These configuration options can be put into the system test case file
instead of the generated system tests helper file. This is an
implementation detail and therefore shouldn't be generated with the
template.
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We only want the file name to include the word `failures` if it failed,
not any time the user wants to take a screenshot during a test run.
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This serves as self documentation so users know how to change the
driver.
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* Move system tests back into Action Pack
* Rename `ActionSystemTest` to `ActionDispatch::SystemTestCase`
* Remove private base module and only make file for public
`SystemTestCase` class, name private module `SystemTesting`
* Rename `ActionSystemTestCase` to `ApplicationSystemTestCase`
* Update corresponding documentation and guides
* Delete old `ActionSystemTest` files
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I've renamed the server to `rails_puma` so that it doesn't override
Capybara's default puma server. I've also removed the hard port setting.
Users can simply use `Capybara.server_port` writer to set the port if
they require that.
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Update the documentation after rewriting a majority of the functionality
for system testing.
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This is a major rewrite of what existed previously. After discussing
this feature with DHH I realized that I was looking at the setup all
wrong.
I had originally mentally broken it into "what Rails wants" and "what
Capybara already has".
What happened after looking at it from DHH's angle was that I saw there
was no reason to group settings by Driver but instead the following
groups:
- There will always be a `Driver`
- This can selenium, poltergeist, or capybara webkit. Capybara already
provides all of these and there's no reason to break them into a
category of Rails' usese Selenium like this and Capybara uses it
like that.
- Only Selenium drivers care about `Browser`
- Because of this it was weird to set it only in the Rails end.
- Therefore only `Browser`, and not `Driver` cares about
`screen_size`.
- Puma is the default `Server` in Rails
- Therefore there's no reason to explictly support Webkit
Once I looked at it from this angle I was able to abstract all the
settings away from grouping the drivers with their options.
Now all the driver, server, and browser settings are abstracted away and
not part of the public facing API.
This means there's no requirement to initialize new classes to change
the default settings and the public options API is much smaller.
All of Rails preferred defaults are still there (selenium with port
21800 using the chrome browser with a screen size of 1400x1400) but
changing these no longer requires initializing a new class or
understanding which driver you're using underneath (rails defaults or
capybaras defaults respectively). Rails opinions are now simple defaults
instead of doing a them versus us setup with Drivers and explicit
options.
Changing the defaults is simple. Call `driven_by` with different
settings to change the defaults which will on their own initialize new
classes and change the default settings.
Use poltergeist with port 3000 for Puma
```
driven_by :poltergeist, on: 3000
```
Use selenium with the Chrome browser and a screen size of 800x800
```
driven_by :selenium, using: :firefox, screen_size: [ 800, 800 ]
```
The entire setup of how browser and drivers interact with each other are
abstracted away and the only required argument is the driver name.
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This adds the required guides for how to write and use system tests in
your application.
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1. Clean up screenshot helper
Updates documentation to be clearer and separates the concerns of saving
the image, setting the image path, and displaying the image.
2. Remove Rails provided assertions for selectors
This was moved upstream to Capybara and is no longer necessary to be
included in Rails
3. Remove form helper
The form helper is pretty specific to Basecamp's needs and may not be
helpful outside of Rails.
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Since I've moved the teardown code that contains the screenshot handling
to be generated when the application is generated this code was
interfering with the screenshot taking.
Because this runs before any app teardown code we would be resetting
sessions before taking the screenshot, resulting in a blank browser
window. The code to reset the sessions must come AFTER a screenshot has
been taken.
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If this is not set Webrick will log **everything** to STDOUT and
distract from the running tests. This will instead log to the log file.
This example was extracted from the Capybara source code.
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Call doesn't make as much sense here, we're really starting to run the
driver.
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Many changes have been made since the beginning so documentation needed
a refresher.
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Originally I had set up system testing to have one configuration option
to be set in the test environment. After thinking it over I think a
generated class on app creation would be best. The reason for this is
Capybara has a ton of configuration options that I'm sure some folks
want to use.
Thinking about how we handle screenshots, database transactions, and a
whole bunch of other settings it would be better for users to be able to
turn all of that on and off.
When an app or scaffold is generated a `test/system_test_helper.rb` test
helper will be generated as well. This will contain the class for tests
to inherit from `ActionSystemTestCase` which will inherit from
`ActionSystemTest::Base`. Here is where users can change the test
driver, remove the screenshot helper, and add their additional Capybara
configuration.
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By moving to the TestUnit Railtie, and doing the file requirement
inside the onload call we can avoid loading ActionSystemTest in
production and load it in the test env.
This is important for performance reasons - loading up unnecessary files
and object is expensive, especially when they should never be used in
production.
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Renames `Rails::SystemTestCase` to `ActionSystemTest` and moves it to a
gem under the Rails name.
We need to name the class `ActionSystemTestCase` because the gem expects
a module but tests themselves expect a class.
Adds MIT-LICENSE, CHANGELOG, and README for the future.
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Rubocop / code climate don't like single quotes and prefer doubles.
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Puma is the default webserver of Rails. Because of this it doesn't make
sense to run tests in Webkit if the default server is Puma.
Here I've refactored the webserver to be it's own standalone module so
it can be shared between Rails' selenium default driver and Capybara's
defaut drivers.
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This change adds support, tests, and documentation for the screenshot
helper.
If taking screenshots is supported by the driver (for example Rack Test
doesn't support screenshots) then a screenshot will be taken if the test
fails.
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This removes the useless Rack Test Driver that Rails was providing and
moves to a shim like approach for default adapters.
If someone wants to use one of the default Capybara Drivers then we will
initialize a new `CapybaraDriver` that simply sets the default driver.
Rails though is much more opinionated than Capybara and to make system
testing a "works out of the box" framework in Rails we have the
`RailsSeleniumDriver`. This driver sets defaults that Rails deems
important for selenium testing. The purpose of this is to simply add a
test and it just works.
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* Document Rails::SystemTestCase
* Document setting drivers with the configration options
* Document using the getter/setter for driver adapters
* Document the CapybaraRackTestDriver and defaults
* Document the CapybaraSeleniumDriver and defaults
* Document custom assertions provided by System Testing
* Document custom form helpers provided by System Testing
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* Adds test case test
* Adds driver adapter test
* Adds tests for capybara seleium driver (testing the settings not
actually opening the browser to test capybara w/ selenium because that
would so so so slow)
* Adds tests for rack test driver
* Adds tests for generators
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This will clean up the railtie quite a bit, rather than passing a set of
hash keys call the new class directly like we do with ActiveJob.
Only call driver once when tests start rather than in every single test
setup. This is more performant, and the other way was creating
unnecessary calls.
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