cypress-rails 0.0.1 → 0.0.2
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- checksums.yaml +4 -4
- data/.circleci/config.yml +52 -0
- data/.standard.yml +4 -0
- data/Gemfile.lock +2 -1
- data/README.md +52 -34
- data/cypress-rails.gemspec +1 -0
- data/lib/cypress-rails/version.rb +1 -1
- data/script/test_example_app +10 -0
- metadata +19 -2
checksums.yaml
CHANGED
@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
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---
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SHA256:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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metadata.gz: 9a242d8e71274069fa20fd82ab8aa4ff31eea151ca621b6a36c53e862b3a90a2
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data.tar.gz: 659cbc0bb3466e15b63ecfe4e951eb867d982325db45e17e7c8df175ffc3c1f9
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SHA512:
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metadata.gz:
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data.tar.gz:
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metadata.gz: ffd03573f5a5d04ed75d760bf76caeaade986c7c0e58b3888212be4df8c17330089bdd251b4366d18aefad8f1a106952f759c27e17b2e54b12f3cd40bcf7dd03
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data.tar.gz: 3d89d6bb37274c9cab66e72012828d9195125ae80f6e7726493a6d72e94d6d0db5780098988e9c58f91bb476e9d84e056a63d4d374b302efa42e8f46494c12bc
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@@ -0,0 +1,52 @@
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version: 2
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jobs:
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build:
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docker:
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- image: circleci/ruby:2.6-node-browsers
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steps:
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- checkout
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# Bundle install dependencies
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- type: cache-restore
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key: v1-main-{{ checksum "Gemfile.lock" }}
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- run: bundle install --path vendor/bundle
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- type: cache-save
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key: v1-main-{{ checksum "Gemfile.lock" }}
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paths:
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- vendor/bundle
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# Bundle install dependencies for example app
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- type: cache-restore
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key: v1-example-{{ checksum "example/an_app/Gemfile.lock" }}
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- run: |
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cd example/an_app
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bundle install --path vendor/bundle
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- type: cache-save
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key: v1-example-{{ checksum "example/an_app/Gemfile.lock" }}
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paths:
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- example/an_app/vendor/bundle
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# Yarn dependencies
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- restore_cache:
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keys:
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- v1-yarn-{{ checksum "example/an_app/package.json" }}
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# fallback to using the latest cache if no exact match is found
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- v1-yarn-
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- run: |
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cd example/an_app
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yarn install
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- save_cache:
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paths:
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- example/an_app/node_modules
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- ~/.cache
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key: v1-yarn-{{ checksum "example/an_app/package.json" }}
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- run: bundle exec rake
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- run: ./script/test_example_app
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data/.standard.yml
ADDED
data/Gemfile.lock
CHANGED
data/README.md
CHANGED
@@ -1,11 +1,13 @@
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# cypress-rails
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[![CircleCI](https://circleci.com/gh/testdouble/cypress-rails/tree/master.svg?style=svg)](https://circleci.com/gh/testdouble/cypress-rails/tree/master)
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This is a simple gem to make it easier to start writing browser tests with
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[Cypress](http://cypress.io) for your Rails apps,
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is server-side rendered HTML, completely
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between.
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[Cypress](http://cypress.io) for your [Rails](https://rubyonrails.org) apps,
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regardless of whether your app is server-side rendered HTML, completely
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client-side JavaScript, or something in-between.
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## Why?
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## Why do this?
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Rails ships with a perfectly competent browser-testing facility called [system
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tests](https://guides.rubyonrails.org/testing.html#system-testing) which depend
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with? Really, it comes down to the potential for an improved development
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experience. In particular:
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* Cypress's IDE-like
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* Cypress's [IDE-like `open`
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command](https://docs.cypress.io/guides/getting-started/writing-your-first-test.html#Add-a-test-file)
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provides a highly visual, interactive, inspectable test runner. Not only can
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you watch each test run and read the commands as they're executed, Cypress
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takes a DOM snapshot before and after each command, which makes rewinding and
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inspecting the state of the DOM trivially easy, something that I regularly
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find myself losing 20 minutes attempting to do with Capybara
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* `cypress open` enables an almost REPL-like feedback loop that is much faster
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and more information dense than using Capybara and Selenium. Rather than
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running a test from the command line, seeing it fail, then adding a debug
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breakpoint to a test to try to manipulate the browser or tweaking a call to a
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Capybara API method, failures to be rather obvious when using Cypress and
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fixing it is usually as easy as tweaking a command, hitting save, and watching
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it re-run
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*
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* With very few exceptions, a Cypress test that works in a browser window will
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also pass when run headlessly in CI
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* Cypress selectors are [just jQuery
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selectors](https://api.jquery.com/category/selectors/), which makes them both
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more familiar and more powerful than the CSS and XPath selectors offered by
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Capybara. Additionally, Cypress makes it very easy to drop into a plain
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synchronous JavaScript function for making more complex
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synchronous JavaScript function for [making more complex
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assertions](https://docs.cypress.io/guides/references/assertions.html#Should-callback)
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or composing repetitive tasks into [custom
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commands](https://docs.cypress.io/api/cypress-api/custom-commands.html#Syntax#article)
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* Cypress commands are, generally, much faster than analogous tasks in Selenium.
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Where certain clicks and form inputs will hang for 300-500ms for seemingly no
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reason when running against Selenium WebDriver, Cypress commands tend to run
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as fast as jQuery can select and fill an element (which is, of course, pretty
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fast)
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* By default, Cypress takes a
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* By default, Cypress [takes a
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video](https://docs.cypress.io/guides/guides/screenshots-and-videos.html#Screenshots#article)
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of every headless test run, taking a lot of the mystery (and subsequent
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analysis & debugging) out of test failures in CI
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Nevertheless, there are trade-offs to attempting this (most notably around
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Cypress's [limited browser
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support](https://docs.cypress.io/guides/guides/launching-browsers.html#Browsers)
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and the complications to test data management), and I wouldn't recommend
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adopting Cypress and writing a bunch of browser tests for every application.
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But, if the above points sound like solutions to problems you experience, you
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might consider trying it out.
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## Installation
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### Installing Cypress itself
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The first step is making sure Cypress is installed (that's up to you, this
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library doesn't install Cypress, it just provides a little Rails
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library doesn't install Cypress, it just provides a little Rails-specific glue).
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If you're on newer versions of Rails and using
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[webpacker](https://www.github.com/rails/webpacker) for your front-end assets,
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If you're not using yarn in conjunction with your Rails app, check out the
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Cypress docs on getting it installed. At the end of the day, this gem just needs
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the `cypress` binary to exist
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the `cypress` binary to exist either in `./node_modules/.bin/cypress` or on your
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`PATH`.
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### Installing the cypress-rails gem
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Once installed, you'll want to run:
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```
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$
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$ rake cypress:init
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```
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This will override a few configurations in your `cypress.json` configuration
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So, by running either:
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```
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$
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$ cypress-rails open
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```
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Or, if you don't mind the extra cost of loading rake just so it can call
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`system`:
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```
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$
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$ rake cypress:open
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```
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Add tests to `cypress/integration`. Simply click a test file in the Cypress
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@@ -132,13 +146,13 @@ To run your tests headlessly (e.g. when you're in CI), you'll want the `run`
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command
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```
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$
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$ cypress-rails run
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```
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Or, with rake:
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```
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$
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$ rake cypress:run
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```
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### Write Ruby tests that wrap and invoke your cypress tests
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Each Cypress file matched by the `test_locator` is translated to a single test
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case, which—while slightly inefficient, as it spools Cypress up and down
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multiple times—also makes it easy to
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other Ruby test
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multiple times—also makes it easy to handle each Cypress file as you would any
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other Ruby test. It also allows for CLI usage like this (where the test name is
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an expansion of the file location with the path separators replaced with `_`):
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```
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$
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$ rails test test/system --name test_cypress_integration_send_invoice_js
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```
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-
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**WARNING**: keep in mind that any custom Ruby code you add before or after each
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Cypress test is run in the context of a `CypressRails::TestCase` will _not_ be
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run when developing with `cypress open`! That means this is probably not the
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most rock-solid strategy for consistent test behavior when it comes to things
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like test data management.
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### Setting up continuous integration
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data/cypress-rails.gemspec
CHANGED
metadata
CHANGED
@@ -1,14 +1,14 @@
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--- !ruby/object:Gem::Specification
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name: cypress-rails
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version: !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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version: 0.0.
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version: 0.0.2
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platform: ruby
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authors:
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- Justin Searls
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autorequire:
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bindir: exe
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cert_chain: []
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date: 2019-09-
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date: 2019-09-17 00:00:00.000000000 Z
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dependencies:
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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name: railties
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@@ -24,6 +24,20 @@ dependencies:
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- - ">="
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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version: 5.2.0
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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name: capybara
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requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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requirements:
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- - ">="
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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version: '0'
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type: :runtime
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prerelease: false
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version_requirements: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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requirements:
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- - ">="
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Version
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version: '0'
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- !ruby/object:Gem::Dependency
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name: selenium-webdriver
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requirement: !ruby/object:Gem::Requirement
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@@ -130,7 +144,9 @@ executables:
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extensions: []
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extra_rdoc_files: []
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files:
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- ".circleci/config.yml"
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- ".gitignore"
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- ".standard.yml"
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- ".travis.yml"
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- Gemfile
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- Gemfile.lock
|
@@ -152,6 +168,7 @@ files:
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- lib/cypress-rails/starts_rails_server.rb
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- lib/cypress-rails/test_case.rb
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- lib/cypress-rails/version.rb
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- script/test_example_app
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homepage: https://github.com/testdouble/cypress-rails
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licenses:
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- MIT
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