# Note: The cmd option is now required due to the increasing number of ways # rspec may be run, below are examples of the most common uses. # * bundler: 'bundle exec rspec' # * bundler binstubs: 'bin/rspec' # * spring: 'bin/rspec' (This will use spring if running and you have # installed the spring binstubs per the docs) # * zeus: 'zeus rspec' (requires the server to be started separately) # * 'just' rspec: 'rspec' guard :rspec, cmd: "bundle exec rspec" do require "guard/rspec/dsl" dsl = Guard::RSpec::Dsl.new(self) # Feel free to open issues for suggestions and improvements # RSpec files rspec = dsl.rspec watch(rspec.spec_helper) { rspec.spec_dir } watch(rspec.spec_support) { rspec.spec_dir } watch(rspec.spec_files) # Ruby files ruby = dsl.ruby dsl.watch_spec_files_for(ruby.lib_files) # Rails files rails = dsl.rails(view_extensions: %w(erb haml slim)) dsl.watch_spec_files_for(rails.app_files) dsl.watch_spec_files_for(rails.views) watch(rails.controllers) do |m| [ rspec.spec.("routing/#{m[1]}_routing"), rspec.spec.("controllers/#{m[1]}_controller"), rspec.spec.("acceptance/#{m[1]}") ] end # Rails config changes watch(rails.spec_helper) { rspec.spec_dir } watch(rails.routes) { "#{rspec.spec_dir}/routing" } watch(rails.app_controller) { "#{rspec.spec_dir}/controllers" } # Capybara features specs watch(rails.view_dirs) { |m| rspec.spec.("features/#{m[1]}") } # Turnip features and steps watch(%r{^spec/acceptance/(.+)\.feature$}) watch(%r{^spec/acceptance/steps/(.+)_steps\.rb$}) do |m| Dir[File.join("**/#{m[1]}.feature")][0] || "spec/acceptance" end end