RSpec.configure do |config| # These two settings work together to allow 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. config.filter_run :focus config.run_all_when_everything_filtered = 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 config.disable_monkey_patching! # 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 # 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| # Enable only the newer, non-monkey-patching expect syntax. # For more details, see: # - http://myronmars.to/n/dev-blog/2012/06/rspecs-new-expectation-syntax expectations.syntax = :expect end config.mock_with :rspec do |mocks| mocks.syntax = :expect # Prevents you from mocking or stubbing a method that does not exist on # a real object. This is generally recommended. mocks.verify_partial_doubles = true end end