Spinach is a high-level BDD framework that leverages the expressive Gherkin language (used by Cucumber) to help you define executable specifications of your application or library's acceptance criteria.
Conceived as an alternative to Cucumber, here are some of its design goals:
Step maintainability: since features map to their own classes, their steps are just methods of that class. This encourages step encapsulation.
Step reusability: In case you want to reuse steps across features, you can always wrap those in plain ol' Ruby modules.
Spinach is tested against Ruby MRI 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7, 3.0, 3.1, 3.2 as well as JRuby .
Start by adding spinach to your Gemfile:
group :test do
gem 'spinach'
# gem 'rspec'
end
Spinach works out-of-the-box with your favorite test suite, but you can also
use it with RSpec as well if you put the following in features/support/env.rb
:
require 'rspec'
Now create a features
folder in your app or library and write your first
feature:
Feature: Test how spinach works
In order to know what the heck is spinach
As a developer
I want it to behave in an expected way
Scenario: Formal greeting
Given I have an empty array
And I append my first name and my last name to it
When I pass it to my super-duper method
Then the output should contain a formal greeting
Scenario: Informal greeting
Given I have an empty array
And I append only my first name to it
When I pass it to my super-duper method
Then the output should contain a casual greeting
Now for the steps file. Remember that in Spinach steps are just Ruby classes, following a camelcase naming convention. Spinach generator will do some scaffolding for you:
$ spinach --generate
Spinach will detect your features and generate the following class:
class Spinach::Features::TestHowSpinachWorks < Spinach::FeatureSteps
step 'I have an empty array' do
end
step 'I append my first name and my last name to it' do
end
step 'I pass it to my super-duper method' do
end
step 'the output should contain a formal greeting' do
end
step 'I append only my first name to it' do
end
step 'the output should contain a casual greeting' do
end
end
Then, you can fill it in with your logic - remember, it's just a class, you can use private methods, mix in modules or whatever!
class Spinach::Features::TestHowSpinachWorks < Spinach::FeatureSteps
step 'I have an empty array' do
@array = Array.new
end
step 'I append my first name and my last name to it' do
@array += ["John", "Doe"]
end
step 'I pass it to my super-duper method' do
@output = capture_output do
Greeter.greet(@array)
end
end
step 'the output should contain a formal greeting' do
@output.must_include "Hello, mr. John Doe"
end
step 'I append only my first name to it' do
@array += ["John"]
end
step 'the output should contain a casual greeting' do
@output.must_include "Yo, John! Whassup?"
end
private
def capture_output
out = StringIO.new
$stdout = out
$stderr = out
yield
$stdout = STDOUT
$stderr = STDERR
out.string
end
end
module Greeter
def self.greet(name)
if name.length > 1
puts "Hello, mr. #{name.join(' ')}"
else
puts "Yo, #{name.first}! Whassup?"
end
end
end
Then run your feature again running spinach
and watch it all turn green! :)
You'll often find that some steps need to be used in many features. In this case, it makes sense to put these steps in reusable modules. For example, let's say you need a step that logs the user into the site.
This is one way to make that reusable:
# ... features/steps/common_steps/login.rb
module CommonSteps
module Login
include Spinach::DSL
step 'I am logged in' do
# log in stuff...
end
end
end
Using the module (in any feature):
# ... features/steps/buying_a_widget.rb
class Spinach::Features::BuyAWidget < Spinach::FeatureSteps
# simply include this module and you are good to go
include CommonSteps::Login
end
Over time, the definitions of your features will change. When you add, remove or change steps in the feature files, you can easily audit your existing step files with:
$ spinach --audit
This will find any new steps and print out boilerplate for them, and alert you to the filename and line number of any unused steps in your step files.
This does not modify the step files, so you will need to paste the boilerplate
into the appropriate places. If a new feature file is detected, you will be
asked to run spinach --generate
beforehand.
Important: If auditing individual files, common steps (as above) may be reported as unused when they are actually used in a feature file that is not currently being audited. To avoid this, run the audit with no arguments to audit all step files simultaneously.
Feature and Scenarios can be marked with tags in the form: @tag
. Tags can be
used for different purposes:
@javascript
, @transaction
, @vcr
)# When using Capybara, you can switch the driver to use another one with
# javascript capabilities (Selenium, Poltergeist, capybara-webkit, ...)
#
# Spinach already integrates with Capybara if you add
# `require spinach/capybara` in `features/support/env.rb`.
#
# This example is extracted from this integration.
Spinach.hooks.on_tag("javascript") do
::Capybara.current_driver = ::Capybara.javascript_driver
end
@module-a
, @customer
, @admin
, @bug-12
, @feat-1
)# Given a feature file with this content
@feat-1
Feature: So something great
Scenario: Make it possible
@bug-12
Scenario: Ensure no regression on this
Then you can run all Scenarios in your suite tagged @feat-1
using:
$ spinach --tags @feat-1
Or only Scenarios tagged either @feat-1
or @bug-12
using:
$ spinach --tags @feat-1,@bug-12
Or only Scenarios tagged @feat-1
that aren't tagged @bug-12
using:
$ spinach --tags @feat-1,~@bug-12
By default Spinach will ignore Scenarios marked with the tag @wip
or whose
Feature is marked with the tag @wip
. Those are meant to be work in progress,
scenarios that are pending while you work on them. To explicitly run those, use
the --tags
option:
$ spinach --tags @wip
Spinach provides several hooks to allow you performing certain steps before or after any feature, scenario or step execution.
So, for example, you could:
Spinach.hooks.before_scenario do |scenario|
clear_database
end
Spinach.hooks.on_successful_step do |step, location|
count_steps(step.scenario.steps)
end
Spinach.hooks.after_run do |status|
send_mail if status == 0
end
Full hook documentation is here:
Sometimes it feels awkward to add steps into feature file just because you need to do some test setup and cleanup. And it is equally awkward to add a global hooks for this purpose. For example, if you want to add a session timeout feature, to do so, you want to set the session timeout time to 1 second just for this feature, and put the normal timeout back after this feature. It doesn't make sense to add two steps in the feature file just to change the session timeout value. In this scenario, a before
and after
blocks are perfect for this kind of tasks. Below is an example implementation:
class Spinach::Features::SessionTimeout < Spinach::FeatureSteps
attr_accessor :original_timeout_value
before do
self.original_timeout_value = session_timeout_value
change_session_timeout_to 1.second
end
after do
change_session_timeout_to original_timeout_value
end
# remaining steps
end
If you need access to the rspec-mocks methods in your steps, add this line to your env.rb
:
require 'spinach/rspec/mocks'
Spinach supports two kinds of reporters by default: stdout
and progress
.
You can specify them when calling the spinach
binary:
spinach --reporter progress
When no reporter is specified, stdout
will be used by default.
Other reporters:
Use spinach-rails
Check out our spinach-sinatra demo
You can easily contribute to Spinach. Its codebase is simple and extensively documented.
MIT (Expat) License. Copyright 2011-2023 Codegram Technologies