| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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If you just try to use `ActiveSupport::Testing::TimeHelpers` standalone by requiring `active_support/testing/time_helpers`, you currently get an error: `NoMethodError: undefined method `change' for 2017-12-14 01:04:44 -0500:Time`
9f6e82ee4783e491c20f5244a613fdeb4024beb5 added a dependency on `AS::Time` by using `AS::Time#change`.
Here's a script to reproduce the error:
```ruby
require "bundler/inline"
gemfile(true) do
source "https://rubygems.org"
gem "activesupport", github: "rails/rails"
end
require "active_support/testing/time_helpers"
require "minitest/autorun"
class BugTest < Minitest::Test
include ActiveSupport::Testing::TimeHelpers
def test_stuff
travel_to Time.new(2017, 12, 14, 01, 04, 44) do
assert true
end
end
end
```
It currently fails for all 5.x.x versions and master. Ideally, this would be backported to `5-0-stable` and `5-1-stable` as well.
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When executing the test via rake, since `rake` is set for `run_via`, `ruby` should not be set.
Related 2cb6c27310452da11b93d729c3b760ce988106e1
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Closes #27614
Previously when calling `now` on a subclass of e.g. `Time` it would return an instance of `Time` instead of returning an instance of the subclass. This way, we always return the correct class.
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Actually, private methods cannot be called with `self.`, so it's not just redundant, it's a bad habit in Ruby
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The issue affects MRI 2.2.5, MRI 2.3.3, JRuby 9.1.6.0. It can be reproduced by:
```
$ cd activemodel
$ NO_FORK=1 bundle exec rake test
```
If we wrap original arguments in quotes, it will be considered as a one big single argument.
Later, [`rake/rake_test_loader.rb`](https://github.com/ruby/rake/blob/7863b97/lib/rake/rake_test_loader.rb#L15)
will iterate over ARGS and try to require that huge single "argument" (which is a list of multiple .rb files).
This leads to an exception:
```
/Users/kir/Project
s/opensource/rails/vendor/bundle/gems/rake-11.3.0/lib/rake/rake_test_loader.rb:15:in `require': cannot load such file -- /Users/kir/Projects/opensource/rails/activemodel/test/cases/
attribute_assignment_test.rb [stripped] /Users/kir/Projects/opensource/rails/activemodel/test/cases/validations/with_validation_test.rb /Users/kir/Projects/opensource/rails/activemodel/test/cases/validations_test
.rb (LoadError)
from /Users/kir/Projects/opensource/rails/vendor/bundle/gems/rake-11.3.0/lib/rake/rake_test_loader.rb:15:in `block in <main>'
from /Users/kir/Projects/opensource/rails/vendor/bundle/gems/rake-11.3.0/lib/rake/rake_test_loader.rb:4:in `select'
from /Users/kir/Projects/opensource/rails/vendor/bundle/gems/rake-11.3.0/lib/rake/rake_test_loader.rb:4:in `<main>'
```
Originally quotes were introduced in https://github.com/rails/rails/pull/19819 to fix MRI 2.2.2.
The fix solves issue on all affected platforms: MRI 2.2.5, MRI 2.3.3, JRuby 9.1.6.0.
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AS::Testing::Isolation has two ways to isolate the process:
forking and subprocessing. The second way is used on JRuby and other
platforms that don't support forking.
The way how subprocessing works is that we prepare a command to run a
new process:
```
/opt/rubies/2.3.0/bin/ruby -I{skipped_load_path} test/initializable_test.rb '' -nInitializableTests::Basic#test_Initializer_provides_context's_class_name
```
As you see, there's unescaped quote at the end of the line.
It leads to:
```
sh: -c: line 0: unexpected EOF while looking for matching `''
sh: -c: line 1: syntax error: unexpected end of file
```
This fixes tests on MRI + NO_FORK variable and on JRuby :tada:
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The Rails test runner supports three ways to run tests: directly, via rake, or ruby.
When Running with Ruby ala `ruby -Itest test/models/post_test.rb` our test file would
be evaluated first, requiring `test_helper` and then `active_support/testing/autorun`
that would then require the test file (which it hadn't been before) thus reevaluating
it. This caused exceptions if using Active Support's declarative syntax.
Fix this by shifting around when we set the how we're run to closer mimick the require
order.
If we're running with `bin/rails test` the test command file is run first and we then
set `run_with_rails_extension`, later we hit `active_support/testing/autorun` and do
nothing — because we've been run elsewhere.
If we at this point haven't set `run_with_rails_extension` we've been running with
`ruby` this whole time and thus we set that.
We should always trigger `Minitest.autorun` as it doesn't hurt to call it twice.
Consolidate the two methods into a single one that better brings out the intent of
why they're there.
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If `from` is nil, in order to avoid the blank is showed.
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ActiveSupport::Testing::Assertions.
We have a separate module in which have defined Rails' own custom
assertions. So it would be good to keep all custom Rails' assertions in
one place i.e. in this module.
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Style/SpaceBeforeBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideHashLiteralBraces
Fix all violations in the repository.
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A few have been left for aesthetic reasons, but have made a pass
and removed most of them.
Note that if the method `foo` returns an array, `foo << 1`
is a regular push, nothing to do with assignments, so
no self required.
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The current code base is not uniform. After some discussion,
we have chosen to go with double quotes by default.
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Where appropriate prefer the more concise Regexp#match?, String#include?,
String#start_with?, and String#end_with?
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Those are assertions that I really do miss from the standard
`ActiveSupport::TestCase`. Think of those as a more general version of
`assert_difference` and `assert_no_difference` (those can be implemented
by assert_changes, should this change be accepted).
Why do we need those? They are useful when you want to check a
side-effect of an operation. `assert_difference` do cover a really
common case, but we `assert_changes` gives us more control. Having a
global error flag? You can test it easily with `assert_changes`. In
fact, you can be really specific about the initial state and the
terminal one.
```ruby
error = Error.new(:bad)
assert_changes -> { Error.current }, from: nil, to: error do
expected_bad_operation
end
```
`assert_changes` follows `assert_difference` and a string can be given
for evaluation as well.
```ruby
error = Error.new(:bad)
assert_changes 'Error.current', from: nil, to: error do
expected_bad_operation
end
```
Check out the test cases if you wanna see more examples.
:beers:
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as this can lead to confusing time stubbing.
Instead of:
travel_to 2.days.from_now do
# 2 days from today
travel_to 3.days.from_now do
# 5 days from today
end
end
preferred way to achieve above is:
travel_to 2.days.from_now
# 2 days from today
travel_back
travel_to 5.days.from_now
# 5 days from today
Closes #24690
Fixes #24689
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Time.new is a Ruby method that uses system timezone. Traveling in time
using it is a recipe for confusion. Instead, Time.zone.local should
be used since it uses the Rails timezone.
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We used to have `assert_blank` and `assert_presence`. [ci skip]
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Should have been removed by 3073c531983de243219fb55be93fbcebfdd9c44e.
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The line filter parsing added to ActiveSupport::TestCase is only half the story
to enable line filtering. The other half, of adding the patterns to the options,
is done in the Minitest plugin that Railties has.
Thus it makes more sense to have the filter in Railties with the other half and
all the line filtering tests.
Move the filter and extend Active Support in an initializer, so that when users
or `rails/all.rb` require `rails/test_unit/railtie` we can still filter by line.
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Add tests for ActiveSupport::Deprecation.deprecate_methods
Modify ActiveSupport::Testing::Deprecation to allow a custom deprecator
Leverage ActiveSupport::Testing::Deprecation assert_deprecated
Update documentation for ActiveSupport::Deprecation.deprecate_methods
Use cases:
Using the default deprecator => "removed from Rails X.Y"
Passing a custom deprecator in the options hash => "removed from MyGem next-release"
Deprecating methods directly from custom deprecator => "removed from MyGem next-release"
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this should fix the error where isolation tests raise an exception and
we just get a marshal error
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With this we can perform new assertions on the returned value without having
to cache it with an outer variable or wrapping all subsequent assertions inside
the `assert_difference` block.
Before:
```
post = nil
assert_difference -> { Post.count }, 1 do
Post.create
end
assert_predicate post, :persisted?
```
Now:
```
post = assert_difference -> { Post.count } do
Post.create
end
assert_predicate post, :persisted?
```
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Add `assert_called` and `assert_not_called` to boil down the boilerplate we need to write
to assert methods are called certain number of times.
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This makes it possible to easily get the runner working with existing
setups that rely on `active_support/testing/autorun.rb`.
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Improve Test Runner's Minitest integration.
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This also adds free mix and matching of directories, files and lines filters.
Like so:
bin/rails test models/post_test.rb test/integration models/person_test.rb:26
You can also mix in a traditional Minitest filter:
bin/rails test test/integration -n /check_it_out/
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[Robin Dupret & Shunsuke Aida]
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[ci skip]
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Extracted silence_stream method to new module in activesupport/testing
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- Added include for the same in ActiveSupport::Test.
- Removed occurrences of silence_stream being used elsewhere.
- Reordered activesupport testcase requires alphabetically.
- Removed require of silence stream from test_case
- Moved quietly method to stream helper
- Moved capture output to stream helper module and setup requires for the same elsewhere
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It's a thin layer to provide easy access to sample files throughout
test-cases. This adds the directory `test/fixtures/files` to newly
generated applications.
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Process.respond_to?(:fork) returns false if fork is not available.
More on http://www.ruby-doc.org/core-2.0.0/Process.html#method-c-fork
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