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Guard::Minitest

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Guard::Minitest allows to automatically & intelligently launch tests with the minitest framework when files are modified.

IMPORTANT NOTE: guard-minitest does not depend on guard due to obscure issues - you must either install guard first or add it explicitly in your Gemfile (see: #131 for details)

Install

Please be sure to have Guard installed before you continue.

The simplest way to install Guard::Minitest is to use Bundler.

Add Guard::Minitest to your Gemfile:

group :development do
  gem 'guard' # NOTE: this is necessary in newer versions
  gem 'guard-minitest'
end

and install it by running Bundler:

$ bundle

Add guard definition to your Guardfile by running the following command:

guard init minitest

Ruby on Rails

Spring

Due to complexities in how arguments are handled and running tests for selected files, it's best to use the following spring command:

guard "minitest", spring: "bin/rails test" do
  # ...
end

(For details see issue #130).

Rails gem dependencies

Ruby on Rails lazy loads gems as needed in its test suite. As a result Guard::Minitest may not be able to run all tests until the gem dependencies are resolved.

To solve the issue either add the missing dependencies or remove the tests.

Example:

Specify ruby-prof as application's dependency in Gemfile to run benchmarks.

Rails automatically generates a performance test stub in the test/performance directory which can trigger this error. Either add ruby-prof to your Gemfile (inside the test group):

group :test do
   gem 'ruby-prof'
end

Or remove the test (or even the test/performance directory if it isn't necessary).

Usage

Please read Guard usage doc

Guardfile

Guard::Minitest can be adapated to all kind of projects. Please read guard doc for more info about the Guardfile DSL.

Standard Guardfile when using Minitest::Unit

guard :minitest do
  watch(%r{^test/(.*)\/?test_(.*)\.rb$})
  watch(%r{^lib/(.*/)?([^/]+)\.rb$})     { |m| "test/#{m[1]}test_#{m[2]}.rb" }
  watch(%r{^test/test_helper\.rb$})      { 'test' }
end

Standard Guardfile when using Minitest::Spec

guard :minitest do
  watch(%r{^spec/(.*)_spec\.rb$})
  watch(%r{^lib/(.+)\.rb$})         { |m| "spec/#{m[1]}_spec.rb" }
  watch(%r{^spec/spec_helper\.rb$}) { 'spec' }
end

Options

List of available options

all_on_start: false               # run all tests in group on startup, default: true
all_after_pass: true              # run all tests in group after changed specs pass, default: false
cli: '--test'                     # pass arbitrary Minitest CLI arguments, default: ''
test_folders: ['tests']           # specify an array of paths that contain test files, default: %w[test spec]
include: ['lib']                  # specify an array of include paths to the command that runs the tests
test_file_patterns: %w[test_*.rb] # specify an array of patterns that test files must match in order to be run, default: %w[*_test.rb test_*.rb *_spec.rb]
spring: true                      # enable spring support, default: false
zeus: true                        # enable zeus support; default: false
drb: true                         # enable DRb support, default: false
bundler: false                    # don't use "bundle exec" to run the minitest command, default: true
rubygems: true                    # require rubygems when running the minitest command (only if bundler is disabled), default: false
env: {}                           # specify some environment variables to be set when the test command is invoked, default: {}
all_env: {}                       # specify additional environment variables to be set when all tests are being run, default: false
autorun: false                    # require 'minitest/autorun' automatically, default: true

Options usage examples

:test_folders and :test_file_patterns

You can change the default location of test files using the :test_folders option and change the pattern of test files using the :test_file_patterns option:

guard :minitest, test_folders: 'test/unit', test_file_patterns: '*_test.rb' do
  # ...
end

:cli

You can pass any of the standard MiniTest CLI options using the :cli option:

guard :minitest, cli: '--seed 123456 --verbose' do
  # ...
end

:spring

Spring is supported (Ruby 1.9.X / Rails 3.2+ only), but you must enable it:

guard :minitest, spring: true do
  # ...
end

Since version 2.3.0, the default Spring command works is bin/rake test making the integration with your Rails >= 4.1 app effortless.

If you're using an older version of Rails (or no Rails at all), you might want to customize the Spring command, e.g.:

guard :minitest, spring: 'spring rake test' do
  # ...
end

:zeus

Zeus is supported, but you must enable it. Please note that notifications support is very basic when using Zeus. The zeus client exit status is evaluated, and a Guard :success or :failed notification is triggered. It does not include the test results though.

If you're interested in improving it, please open a new issue.

If your test helper matches the test_file_patterns, it can lead to problems as guard-minitest will submit the test helper itself to the zeus test command when running all tests. For example, if the test helper is called test/test_helper.rb it will match test_*.rb. In this case you can either change the test_file_patterns or rename the test helper.

guard :minitest, zeus: true do
  # ...
end

:drb

Spork / spork-testunit is supported, but you must enable it:

guard :minitest, drb: true do
  # ...
end

The drb test runner honors the :include option, but does not (unlike the default runner) automatically include :test_folders. If you want to include the test paths, you must explicitly add them to :include.

Development

Pull requests are very welcome! Please try to follow these simple rules if applicable:

For questions please join us in our Google group or on #guard (irc.freenode.net).

Maintainer

Eric Steele

Author

Yann Lugrin

Contributors

https://github.com/guard/guard-minitest/graphs/contributors