-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 116
/
spec_helper.rb
130 lines (108 loc) · 4.93 KB
/
spec_helper.rb
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
# This file was generated by the `rspec --init` command. Conventionally, all
# specs live under a `spec` directory, which RSpec adds to the `$LOAD_PATH`.
# The generated `.rspec` file contains `--require spec_helper` which will cause this
# file to always be loaded, without a need to explicitly require it in any files.
#
# Given that it is always loaded, you are encouraged to keep this file as
# light-weight as possible. Requiring heavyweight dependencies from this file
# (such as loading up an entire rails app) will add to the boot time of your
# test suite on EVERY test run, even for an individual file that may not need
# all of that loaded.
#
# The `.rspec` file also contains a few flags that are not defaults but that
# users commonly want.
#
# See http://rubydoc.info/gems/rspec-core/RSpec/Core/Configuration
require "rspec"
require "weixin_authorize"
require "redis"
require "redis-namespace"
require 'coveralls'
require 'simplecov'
require "codeclimate-test-reporter"
require "pry-rails"
Coveralls.wear!
SimpleCov.formatter = SimpleCov::Formatter::MultiFormatter[
SimpleCov::Formatter::HTMLFormatter,
Coveralls::SimpleCov::Formatter
]
SimpleCov.start
ENV['CODECLIMATE_REPO_TOKEN'] = "c91fecbbd9e414e7cc3ad7a7d99207145de0ac65a3368de09e8c19295343d399"
CodeClimate::TestReporter.start
# If you want test, change your weixin test profile
ENV["APPID"]="wx986f04063d341d04"
ENV["APPSECRET"]="1a941cd88cb4579ba98ec06b6813af03"
ENV["OPENID"]="o9k6BuB0kydAcPTc7sPxppB1GQqA"
ENV["TEMPLATE_ID"]="-8ooXrOK3VD3HuSS8--nH154PO9Lw2E7T-RV1uTaGLc"
# Comment to test for ClientStorage
redis = Redis.new(host: "127.0.0.1", port: "6379", db: 15)
namespace = "weixin_test:weixin_authorize"
# cleanup keys in the current namespace when restart server everytime.
exist_keys = redis.keys("#{namespace}:*")
exist_keys.each{|key|redis.del(key)}
redis_with_ns = Redis::Namespace.new("#{namespace}", :redis => redis)
WeixinAuthorize.configure do |config|
config.redis = redis_with_ns
# config.key_expired = 200
config.rest_client_options = {timeout: 10, open_timeout: 10, verify_ssl: true}
end
$client = WeixinAuthorize::Client.new(ENV["APPID"], ENV["APPSECRET"])
RSpec.configure do |config|
# The settings below are suggested to provide a good initial experience
# with RSpec, but feel free to customize to your heart's content.
=begin
# 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?
# RSpec filters the backtrace by default so as not to be so noisy.
# This causes the full backtrace to be printed when running a single
# spec file (e.g. to troubleshoot a particular spec failure).
config.full_backtrace = true
# Use the documentation formatter for detailed output,
# unless a formatter has already been configured
# (e.g. via a command-line flag).
config.formatter = 'doc' if config.formatters.none?
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
# 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
# rspec-mocks config goes here. You can use an alternate test double
# library (such as bogus or mocha) by changing the `mock_with` option here.
config.mock_with :rspec do |mocks|
# Enable only the newer, non-monkey-patching expect syntax.
# For more details, see:
# - http://teaisaweso.me/blog/2013/05/27/rspecs-new-message-expectation-syntax/
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
end