| # Licensed to the Apache Software Foundation (ASF) under one |
| # or more contributor license agreements. See the NOTICE file |
| # distributed with this work for additional information |
| # regarding copyright ownership. The ASF licenses this file |
| # to you under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the |
| # "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance |
| # with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| # |
| # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| # |
| # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| # limitations under the License. |
| |
| # This file was generated by the `rspec --init` command. Conventionally, all |
| # specs live under a `spec` directory, which RSpec adds to the `$LOAD_PATH`. |
| # The generated `.rspec` file contains `--require spec_helper` which will cause |
| # this file to always be loaded, without a need to explicitly require it in any |
| # files. |
| # |
| # Given that it is always loaded, you are encouraged to keep this file as |
| # light-weight as possible. Requiring heavyweight dependencies from this file |
| # will add to the boot time of your test suite on EVERY test run, even for an |
| # individual file that may not need all of that loaded. Instead, consider making |
| # a separate helper file that requires the additional dependencies and performs |
| # the additional setup, and require it from the spec files that actually need |
| # it. |
| # |
| # See https://rubydoc.info/gems/rspec-core/RSpec/Core/Configuration |
| |
| require 'skywalking' |
| |
| RSpec.configure do |config| |
| # rspec-expectations config goes here. You can use an alternate |
| # assertion/expectation library such as wrong or the stdlib/minitest |
| # assertions if you prefer. |
| config.expect_with :rspec do |expectations| |
| # This option will default to `true` in RSpec 4. It makes the `description` |
| # and `failure_message` of custom matchers include text for helper methods |
| # defined using `chain`, e.g.: |
| # be_bigger_than(2).and_smaller_than(4).description |
| # # => "be bigger than 2 and smaller than 4" |
| # ...rather than: |
| # # => "be bigger than 2" |
| expectations.include_chain_clauses_in_custom_matcher_descriptions = true |
| end |
| |
| # rspec-mocks config goes here. You can use an alternate test double |
| # library (such as bogus or mocha) by changing the `mock_with` option here. |
| config.mock_with :rspec do |mocks| |
| # Prevents you from mocking or stubbing a method that does not exist on |
| # a real object. This is generally recommended, and will default to |
| # `true` in RSpec 4. |
| mocks.verify_partial_doubles = true |
| end |
| |
| # This option will default to `:apply_to_host_groups` in RSpec 4 (and will |
| # have no way to turn it off -- the option exists only for backwards |
| # compatibility in RSpec 3). It causes shared context metadata to be |
| # inherited by the metadata hash of host groups and examples, rather than |
| # triggering implicit auto-inclusion in groups with matching metadata. |
| config.shared_context_metadata_behavior = :apply_to_host_groups |
| |
| # The settings below are suggested to provide a good initial experience |
| # with RSpec, but feel free to customize to your heart's content. |
| # # This allows you to limit a spec run to individual examples or groups |
| # # you care about by tagging them with `:focus` metadata. When nothing |
| # # is tagged with `:focus`, all examples get run. RSpec also provides |
| # # aliases for `it`, `describe`, and `context` that include `:focus` |
| # # metadata: `fit`, `fdescribe` and `fcontext`, respectively. |
| # config.filter_run_when_matching :focus |
| # |
| # # Allows RSpec to persist some state between runs in order to support |
| # # the `--only-failures` and `--next-failure` CLI options. We recommend |
| # # you configure your source control system to ignore this file. |
| # config.example_status_persistence_file_path = "spec/examples.txt" |
| # |
| # # Limits the available syntax to the non-monkey patched syntax that is |
| # # recommended. For more details, see: |
| # # https://rspec.info/features/3-12/rspec-core/configuration/zero-monkey-patching-mode/ |
| # config.disable_monkey_patching! |
| # |
| # # This setting enables warnings. It's recommended, but in some cases may |
| # # be too noisy due to issues in dependencies. |
| # config.warnings = true |
| # |
| # # Many RSpec users commonly either run the entire suite or an individual |
| # # file, and it's useful to allow more verbose output when running an |
| # # individual spec file. |
| # if config.files_to_run.one? |
| # # Use the documentation formatter for detailed output, |
| # # unless a formatter has already been configured |
| # # (e.g. via a command-line flag). |
| # config.default_formatter = "doc" |
| # end |
| # |
| # # Print the 10 slowest examples and example groups at the |
| # # end of the spec run, to help surface which specs are running |
| # # particularly slow. |
| # config.profile_examples = 10 |
| # |
| # # Run specs in random order to surface order dependencies. If you find an |
| # # order dependency and want to debug it, you can fix the order by providing |
| # # the seed, which is printed after each run. |
| # # --seed 1234 |
| # config.order = :random |
| # |
| # # Seed global randomization in this process using the `--seed` CLI option. |
| # # Setting this allows you to use `--seed` to deterministically reproduce |
| # # test failures related to randomization by passing the same `--seed` value |
| # # as the one that triggered the failure. |
| # Kernel.srand config.seed |
| end |