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require 'rubygems'
require 'bundler/setup'
require 'spork'
Spork.prefork do
require 'cucumber/rails'
require 'capybara/rails'
require 'capybara/cucumber'
require 'capybara/session'
require 'refinery/testing/factories'
require 'database_cleaner'
require 'database_cleaner/cucumber'
Dir[File.expand_path("../../../spec/factories/*.rb", __FILE__)].each {|f| require f}
include ::Devise::Controllers::UrlHelpers
# Capybara defaults to XPath selectors rather than Webrat's default of CSS3. In
# order to ease the transition to Capybara we set the default here. If you'd
# prefer to use XPath just remove this line and adjust any selectors in your
# steps to use the XPath syntax.
Capybara.default_selector = :css
# By default, any exception happening in your Rails application will bubble up
# to Cucumber so that your scenario will fail. This is a different from how
# your application behaves in the production environment, where an error page will
# be rendered instead.
#
# Sometimes we want to override this default behaviour and allow Rails to rescue
# exceptions and display an error page (just like when the app is running in production).
# Typical scenarios where you want to do this is when you test your error pages.
# There are two ways to allow Rails to rescue exceptions:
#
# 1) Tag your scenario (or feature) with @allow-rescue
#
# 2) Set the value below to true. Beware that doing this globally is not
# recommended as it will mask a lot of errors for you!
#
ActionController::Base.allow_rescue = false
DatabaseCleaner.strategy = :truncation
Before { DatabaseCleaner.start }
After { DatabaseCleaner.clean }
end
Spork.each_run do
# This code will be run each time you run your specs.
end
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