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karma-opal-rspec

v1.1.0

Published

Run opal-rspec tests under Karma

Downloads

13

Readme

karma-opal-rspec

Build Status Quality Version

Allow Karma to run opal-rspec tests (and pull the dependency graph from Sprockets) and speed the workflow of typical opal-rspec testing in applications

What does it do?

  • Reports opal-rspec test results into Karma
  • Loads your Sprockets asset dependency graph into Karma so Karma can watch it for changes
  • Rolls up certain assets to reduce how many requests the browser makes during testing (speed)
  • Matches up source maps to the location in the tree next to the original source
  • Works with any Karma browser/launcher

How does it speed up test runs?

  • Uses the sprockets file cache to persist dependencies/etc. between test runs (this is also easy to do with the opal-rspec rake task)
  • Usually, you will not be debugging opal or opal-rspec's internal code. Therefore the plugin, by default, will roll up any opal asset that's located in your Rubygems directory (e.g. ~/.rbenv/versions/2.2.3/lib/ruby/gems/2.2.0/gems) into 1 file per dependency. Any file in your base path (your tests and your project implementation) will be broken out separately. See below for more info.
  • If any of your source files (or other library source files) require 'opal' or opal/mini, opal will not be duplicated in the rolled up dependency.

Usage

  1. Ensure your Gemfile has at least the following:
gem 'opal-rspec', '~> 0.5'
gem 'opal', '~> 0.9'
  1. Install (assuming you already have a basic package.json setup for your project)
npm install karma karma-opal-rspec karma-chrome-launcher --save-dev
  1. Configure Karma

Follow Karma steps to create a karma.conf.js file for your project. You can see a full sample here, but the key changes are:

module.exports = function(config) {
  config.set({
    files: [
      'spec/**/*_spec.rb' // set this to wherever your Opal specs are
    ],
    frameworks: ['opal'],
    middleware: ['opal_sourcemap'],
    ...
    })
}

That's it!

If you have a lot of tests, Karma might time out waiting for opal-rspec to run all of your tests. If you find Karma is giving you a Disconnected (1 times), because no message in error followed by a No captured browser error, add a browserNoActivityTimeout setting to karma.conf.js that is greater than the default of 10,000ms.

FAQ

Why Karma?

Karma has already done a decent job of dealing with browser startup/shutdown, test reporting, and file reloading. Rather than reinvent the wheel, it made sense to see how to build on what Karma has already done.

Why is this an NPM package and not a GEM?

Since Karma and its dependencies are all NPM packages, then it made more sense for this to be an NPM package.

Other options

Rails

To ensure the Rails environment starts up and Rails asset paths are available, simply set the RAILS_ENV environment variable to the appropriate environment (e.g. test) and the tool will pick up the Rails asset paths.

Other paths

If you have additional paths you'd like added to the Opal load path, then add opal: {loadPaths: ['src_dir']} to your Karma config, where 'src_dir' is a directory you want to add.

module.exports = function(config) {
  config.set({
    ...
    opal: {
      loadPaths: ['src_dir']
    }
    ...
}

Different spec patterns

If you set Karma's files directive to something besides 'spec/**/*_spec.rb' and you want the other directory added toyour Opal load path, you should set opal: {defaultPath: 'spec/javascripts'}.

module.exports = function(config) {
  config.set({
    ...
    files: [
      'spec/javascripts/**/*_spec.rb'
    ],
    opal: {
      defaultPath: 'spec/javascripts'
    }
    ...
}

Additional requires

As of version 1.0.10, karma-opal-rspec issues a Bundler.require call when it retrieves assets from Sprockets. That means most opal GEMs will have their load paths correctly set for your tests automatically. Karma-opal-rspec does not do this if you're using Rails since Rails will take care of that with the proper Bundler groups, etc.

That said, if you need to add additional requires that Bundler's "auto require" feature does not cover, you can specify additional requires (on the MRI/server side, not within opal .rb files) that need to be added to your Opal load path like so:

module.exports = function(config) {
  config.set({
    ...
    opal: {
      mriRequires: ['opal-browser']
    }
    ...
}

Rolling up assets

As mentioned above, the plugin will roll up any opal asset that's located in your Rubygems directory (e.g. ~/.rbenv/versions/2.2.3/lib/ruby/gems/2.2.0/gems) into 1 file per dependency. If you wish to customize this, set opal: {rollUp: [/stuff/]}

module.exports = function(config) {
  config.set({
    ...
    opal: {
      // this should be an array of regex's or an array of strings. Any match on the Regex will roll up
      // that file. If a string is supplied, it must be an exact match for the base asset name 
      // (e.g. roll up string of 'opal.rb' will match /stuff/dir/opal.rb)
      rollUp: [/foo/]
    }
    ...
}

Limitations

  • Source maps
    • Are provided by stacktrace-jS.
    • They work best in Chrome because Firefox/Safari aren't including stack traces in expectation failures
    • PhantomJS stack traces work best with PhantomJS >= 2.0. 1.9.8 does not work.
    • Do not work for rolled up files (any asset coming from a GEM by default). It's hard to do this in Opal right now unless each file is broken out
    • Non opal assets (e.g. jquery.min) SMs do not work either - open issue
  • If multiple files are being rolled up and they use similar requires that are not part of opal core (e.g. stdlib), the dependency will be duplicated in the rolled up file. This is because the plugin does not interfere with sprockets' self/pipeline process
  • This is arguably a strength, but this plugin assumes Sprockets is in charge of your assets (not webpack, browserify, etc.). If it makes sense, a future version might allow excluding sprockets and instead just focus on preprocessing and opal-rspec.

License

Authors: Brady Wied

Copyright (c) 2016, BSW Technology Consulting LLC All rights reserved.

Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions are met:

  1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
  2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.

THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND CONTRIBUTORS "AS IS" AND ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE ARE DISCLAIMED. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE COPYRIGHT HOLDER OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION) HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.