| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Use double quoted strings, come down hard on some typos.
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Implement custom url helpers and polymorphic mapping
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Use a separate method called `resolve` for the custom polymorphic
mapping to clarify the API.
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Using `undef_method` means that when a route is removed any other
implementations of that method in the ancestor chain are inaccessible
so instead use `remove_method` which restores access to the ancestor.
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Allow the use of `direct` to specify custom mappings for polymorphic_url, e.g:
resource :basket
direct(class: "Basket") { [:basket] }
This will then generate the following:
>> link_to "Basket", @basket
=> <a href="/basket">Basket</a>
More importantly it will generate the correct url when used with `form_for`.
Fixes #1769.
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Allow the definition of custom url helpers that will be available
automatically wherever standard url helpers are available. The
current solution is to create helper methods in ApplicationHelper
or some other helper module and this isn't a great solution since
the url helper module can be called directly or included in another
class which doesn't include the normal helper modules.
Reference #22512.
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The singleton url_for on Rails.application.routes.url_helpers isn't the
same as the url_for you get when you include the module in your class as
the latter has support for polymorphic style routes, etc. whereas the
former accepts only a hash and is the underlying implementation defined
on ActionDispatch::Routing::RouteSet.
This commit changes the singleton method to call through a proxy instance
so that it gets the full range of features specified in the documentation
for url_for.
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[ci skip]
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Use `response#location` instead of `#location` in redirect.
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Closes #28033
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[ci skip]
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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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* 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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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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There's no real benefit to the using the `Base` class here because
`SystemTestCase` is already a very small class.
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Rails itself is not a Rails application so instead of including
`capybara/rails` we should use the code in there to set up the test. The
only reason capybara needs to include capybara/rails in the first place
is because Rails didn't yet support it.
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This makes it easier to ask the system test what driver adapter it is
currently using, and makes it easier to change that setting when
necessary.
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Integration tests already handle all the fancy url mapping we need to do
so inherting from that allows us to not need to reinvent the wheel in
terms of loading up the route handling required to use `visit
users_path` over `visit /users`.
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Adds assertions that are not part of Capybara but may be useful to Rails
users writing system tests.
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This allows any application to change the driver adapter based on the
config settings in the test env.
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These FormHelpers are selectors that aren't a capybara default but are
considered useful for Rails applications.
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This is not yet configurable but is the minimum required to make
Capybara work with the Selenium driver. A lot of this will change as the
tests get fleshed out and the initialization requirements will eventually
be configurable via the application.
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Capybara defaults to Rack Test for it's driver and works out of the box
but this adds the headers and allows for future configurable adapters
for system testing.
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This skelton is the bare minimum to get system tests to actually run in
an application. This of course doesn't yet actually run a test but it is
enough for `bin/rails test:system` to attempt to run files in
`test/system` that inherit from `Rails::SystemTestCase`.
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