abepetrillo/evergreen

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README.rdoc

Summary

Maintainability
Test Coverage
= Evergreen


rdoc-image:https://coveralls.io/repos/github/abepetrillo/evergreen/badge.svg?branch=master

rdoc-image:https://api.codeclimate.com/v1/badges/1bc70455454cbc60dd67/maintainability


"Because green is the new Blue(Ridge)"gi

Evergreen is a tool to run javascript unit tests for client side JavaScript. It
combines a server which allows you to serve up and run your specs in a browser,
as well as a runner which uses Capybara and any of its drivers to run your
specs. Evergreen uses the Jasmine unit testing framework for JavaScript.

http://github.com/abepetrillo/evergreen

== Philosophy

Evergreen is a unit testing tool. Its purpose is to test JavaScript in
isolation from your application. If you need a tool that tests how your
JavaScript integrates with your application you should use an integration
testing framework, such as {Capybara}[http://github.com/jnicklas/capybara].

== Maintenance note

Jonas has kindly given me push access so I can help maintain the project and manage pull requests.
If you have any questions or suggestions please feel free to {contact me}[http://github.com/abepetrillo]

== Installation

Install as a Ruby gem:

    gem install evergreen

== Usage

Evergreen assumes a file and directory structure, place all your javascript
code inside ./public and all spec files inside ./spec/javascripts. All spec
files should end in _spec.js. For example:

    public/javascripts/widget.js
    spec/javascripts/widget_spec.js

You can require files from the public directory inside your spec file:

    require('/javascripts/widget.js')

    describe('a widget', function() {
      ...
    });

You can now look at your spec files inside a browser by starting up the
Evergreen server:

    evergreen serve

Alternatively you can run the specs headlessly by running:

    evergreen run

== Integrating with Rails 3

Add Evergreen to your Gemfile:

    gem 'evergreen', :require => 'evergreen/rails'

Start your rails application and navigate to /evergreen. You should now see a
list of all spec files, click on one to run it.

There's a rake task provided for you that you can use to run your specs:

    rake spec:javascripts

== Integrating with Rails 2

Add the following line to your Rakefile:

    require 'evergreen/tasks'

This will give you the `spec:javascripts` rake task. Note that mounting is not
possible under Rails 2 and that `require 'evergreen/rails'` will fail.

== Configuration

By default, Evergreen uses Selenium to run your specs and assumes a certain
directory structure. If this standard is fine for you, then you don't need to
do anything else. If you need to configure Evergreen to suit your needs,
Evergreen will automatically look for and load the following files:

    config/evergreen.rb
    .evergreen
    ~/.evergreen

The content of these files could look like this:

    require 'capybara-webkit'

    Evergreen.configure do |config|
      config.driver = :webkit
      config.public_dir = 'public_html'
      config.template_dir = 'templates'
      config.spec_dir = 'spec'
    end

== Transactions

One problem often faced when writing unit tests for client side code is that
changes to the page are not reverted for the next example, so that successive
examples become dependent on each other. Evergreen adds a special div to your
page with an id of test. This div is automatically emptied before each example.
You should avoid appending markup to the page body and instead append it to
this test div:

    describe('transactions', function() {
      it("should add stuff in one test...", function() {
        $('#test').append('<h1 id="added">New Stuff</h1>');
        expect($('#test h1#added').length).toEqual(1);
      });

      it("... should have been removed before the next starts", function() {
        expect($('#test h1#added').length).toEqual(0);
      });
    });

== Templates

Even more powerful than that, Evergreen allows you to create HTML templates to
go along with your specs. Put the templates in their own folder like this:

    spec/javascripts/templates/one_template.html
    spec/javascripts/templates/another_template.html

You can then load the template into the test div, by calling the template
function in your specs:

    describe('transactions', function() {
      template('one_template.html')

      it("should load the template in this test", function() {
        ...
      });
    });

== Spec Helper

If you add a spec_helper file like so:

    spec/javascripts/helpers/spec_helper.js

It will automatically be loaded. This is a great place for adding custom
matchers and the like.

== CoffeeScript

Evergreen supports specs written in
{CoffeeScript}[http://github.com/jashkenas/coffee-script]. Just name your spec
file _spec.coffee and it will automatically be translated for you.

Note that since CoffeeScript files are not compiled by Sprockets (as in Rails),
the double-extension .js.coffee is not supported.

You can also add a CoffeeScript spec helper, but remember that CoffeeScript
encloses individual files in a closure, if you need something you define in the
spec helper to be available in your spec files, attach it to the window object:

    # spec/javascripts/helpers/spec_helper.coffee

    MyThing: "foo"          # local to spec helper
    window.MyThing: "foo"   # global

== Development

If you plan to work on Evergreen, you need to checkout the Jasmine gem, which
is added as a git submodule. Run the following command:

    git submodule update --init

If you're using a version of Evergreen from git with bundler, you need to tell
bundler to use submodules, this can be achieved with the following command:

    gem 'evergreen', :submodules => true, :git => 'git://github.com/abepetrillo/evergreen.git'

== License:

(The MIT License)

Copyright (c) 2009 Jonas Nicklas

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining
a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the
'Software'), to deal in the Software without restriction, including
without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish,
distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to
permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to
the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be
included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND,
EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT.
IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY
CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT,
TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE
SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.