# This file is copied to spec/ when you run 'rails generate rspec:install' require "spec_helper" ENV["RAILS_ENV"] ||= "test" require File.expand_path("../config/environment", __dir__) # Prevent database truncation if the environment is production abort("The Rails environment is running in production mode!") if Rails.env.production? require "rspec/rails" require "capybara/rspec" require "selenium-webdriver" require "view_component/test_helpers" Capybara.register_driver :headless do |app| options = Selenium::WebDriver::Firefox::Options.new options.add_argument("--headless") Capybara::Selenium::Driver.new(app, browser: :firefox, capabilities: options) end Capybara.javascript_driver = :headless # Add additional requires below this line. Rails is not loaded until this point! # Requires supporting ruby files with custom matchers and macros, etc, in # spec/support/ and its subdirectories. Files matching `spec/**/*_spec.rb` are # run as spec files by default. This means that files in spec/support that end # in _spec.rb will both be required and run as specs, causing the specs to be # run twice. It is recommended that you do not name files matching this glob to # end with _spec.rb. You can configure this pattern with the --pattern # option on the command line or in ~/.rspec, .rspec or `.rspec-local`. # # The following line is provided for convenience purposes. It has the downside # of increasing the boot-up time by auto-requiring all files in the support # directory. Alternatively, in the individual `*_spec.rb` files, manually # require only the support files necessary. # # Dir[Rails.root.join('spec', 'support', '**', '*.rb')].sort.each { |f| require f } # Checks for pending migrations and applies them before tests are run. # If you are not using ActiveRecord, you can remove these lines. begin ActiveRecord::Migration.maintain_test_schema! rescue ActiveRecord::PendingMigrationError => e puts e.to_s.strip exit 1 end RSpec.configure do |config| # Remove this line if you're not using ActiveRecord or ActiveRecord fixtures config.fixture_path = "#{::Rails.root}/spec/fixtures" # If you're not using ActiveRecord, or you'd prefer not to run each of your # examples within a transaction, remove the following line or assign false # instead of true. config.use_transactional_fixtures = true # You can uncomment this line to turn off ActiveRecord support entirely. # config.use_active_record = false # RSpec Rails can automatically mix in different behaviours to your tests # based on their file location, for example enabling you to call `get` and # `post` in specs under `spec/controllers`. # # You can disable this behaviour by removing the line below, and instead # explicitly tag your specs with their type, e.g.: # # RSpec.describe UsersController, type: :controller do # # ... # end # # The different available types are documented in the features, such as in # https://relishapp.com/rspec/rspec-rails/docs config.infer_spec_type_from_file_location! # Filter lines from Rails gems in backtraces. config.filter_rails_from_backtrace! # arbitrary gems may also be filtered via: # config.filter_gems_from_backtrace("gem name") # Silence capybara logging puma start up messages to stdout on first js: true # spec Capybara.server = :puma, { Silent: true } config.include Devise::Test::ControllerHelpers, type: :controller config.include Devise::Test::ControllerHelpers, type: :view config.include Devise::Test::IntegrationHelpers, type: :request config.include ViewComponent::TestHelpers, type: :component config.include Capybara::RSpecMatchers, type: :component config.include ActiveJob::TestHelper end