grunt-contrib-jasmine v0.6.5
Run jasmine specs headlessly through PhantomJS.
Getting Started
This plugin requires Grunt ~0.4.0
If you haven't used Grunt before, be sure to check out the Getting Started guide, as it explains how to create a Gruntfile as well as install and use Grunt plugins. Once you're familiar with that process, you may install this plugin with this command:
npm install grunt-contrib-jasmine --save-dev
Once the plugin has been installed, it may be enabled inside your Gruntfile with this line of JavaScript:
grunt.loadNpmTasks('grunt-contrib-jasmine');
Jasmine task
Run this task with the grunt jasmine
command.
Automatically builds and maintains your spec runner and runs your tests headlessly through PhantomJS.
Run specs locally or on a remote server
Run your tests on your local filesystem or via a server task like grunt-contrib-connect.
Customize your SpecRunner with templates
Use your own SpecRunner templates to customize how grunt-contrib-jasmine
builds the SpecRunner. See the
wiki for details and third party templates for examples.
AMD Support
Supports AMD tests via the grunt-template-jasmine-requirejs module
Third party templates
Options
src
Type: String|Array
Your source files. These are the files that you are testing. If you are using RequireJS your source files will be loaded as dependencies into your spec modules and will not need to be placed here.
options.specs
Type: String|Array
Your Jasmine specs.
options.vendor
Type: String|Array
Third party libraries like jQuery & generally anything loaded before source, specs, and helpers.
options.helpers
Type: String|Array
Non-source, non-spec helper files. In the default runner these are loaded after vendor
files
options.styles
Type: String|Array
CSS files that get loaded after the jasmine.css
options.version
Type: String
Default: '2.0.0'
This is the jasmine-version which will be used. currently available versions are:
Due to changes in Jasmine, pre-2.0 versions have been dropped and tracking will resume at 2.0.0
options.outfile
Type: String
Default: _SpecRunner.html
The auto-generated specfile that phantomjs will use to run your tests.
Automatically deleted upon normal runs. Use the :build
flag to generate a SpecRunner manually e.g.
grunt jasmine:myTask:build
options.keepRunner
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Prevents the auto-generated specfile used to run your tests from being automatically deleted.
options.junit.path
Type: String
Default: undefined
Path to output JUnit xml
options.junit.consolidate
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Consolidate the JUnit XML so that there is one file per top level suite.
options.junit.template
Type: String
Default: undefined
Specify a custom JUnit template instead of using the default junitTemplate
.
options.host
Type: String
Default: ''
The host you want PhantomJS to connect against to run your tests.
e.g. if using an ad hoc server from within grunt
host : 'http://127.0.0.1:8000/'
Without a host
, your specs will be run from the local filesystem.
options.template
Type: String
Object
Default: undefined
Custom template used to generate your Spec Runner. Parsed as underscore templates and provided
the expanded list of files needed to build a specrunner.
You can specify an object with a process
method that will be called as a template function.
See the Template API Documentation for more details.
options.templateOptions
Type: Object
Default: {}
Options that will be passed to your template. Used to pass settings to the template.
options.display
Type: String
Default: full
full
displays the full specs treeshort
only displays a success or failure character for each test (useful with large suites)
options.summary
Type: Boolean
Default: false
Display a list of all failed tests and their failure messages
Flags
Name: build
Turn on this flag in order to build a SpecRunner html file. This is useful when troubleshooting templates,
running in a browser, or as part of a watch chain e.g.
watch: {
pivotal : {
files: ['src/**/*.js', 'specs/**/*.js'],
tasks: 'jasmine:pivotal:build'
}
}
Filtering specs
filename
grunt jasmine --filter=foo
will run spec files that have foo
in their file name.
folder
grunt jasmine --filter=/foo
will run spec files within folders that have foo*
in their name.
wildcard
grunt jasmine --filter=/*-bar
will run anything that is located in a folder *-bar
comma separated filters
grunt jasmine --filter=foo,bar
will run spec files that have foo
or bar
in their file name.
flags with space
grunt jasmine --filter="foo bar"
will run spec files that have foo bar
in their file name.
grunt jasmine --filter="/foo bar"
will run spec files within folders that have foo bar*
in their name.
Example application usage
Basic Use
Sample configuration to run Pivotal Labs' example Jasmine application.
grunt.initConfig({
jasmine: {
pivotal: {
src: 'src/**/*.js',
options: {
specs: 'spec/*Spec.js',
helpers: 'spec/*Helper.js'
}
}
}
});
Supplying a custom template
Supplying a custom template to the above example
grunt.initConfig({
jasmine: {
customTemplate: {
src: 'src/**/*.js',
options: {
specs: 'spec/*Spec.js',
helpers: 'spec/*Helper.js',
template: 'custom.tmpl'
}
}
}
});
Supplying template modules and vendors
A complex version for the above example
grunt.initConfig({
jasmine: {
customTemplate: {
src: 'src/**/*.js',
options: {
specs: 'spec/*Spec.js',
helpers: 'spec/*Helper.js',
template: require('exports-process.js')
vendor: [
"vendor/*.js",
"http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.0/jquery.min.js"
]
}
}
}
});
Sample RequireJS/NPM Template usage
grunt.initConfig({
jasmine: {
yourTask: {
src: 'src/**/*.js',
options: {
specs: 'spec/*Spec.js',
template: require('grunt-template-jasmine-requirejs')
}
}
}
});
NPM Templates are just node modules, so you can write and treat them as such.
Please see the grunt-template-jasmine-requirejs documentation
for more information on the RequireJS template.
Release History
- 2014-05-31 v0.6.5 Option to allow specifying a junitTemplate.
- 2014-04-28 v0.6.4 Indent level fix. Moved scripts inside the body tag.
- 2014-01-29 v0.6.0 Jasmine 2.0.0 support Improved logging support Various merges/bugfixes
- 2013-08-02 v0.5.2 Fixed breakage with iframes /44 Added filter flag / 70 Fixed junit failure output /77
- 2013-06-18 v0.5.1 Merged /69 grunt async not called when tests fail OR keepRunner is true
- 2013-06-15 v0.5.0 updated rimraf made teardown async, added Function.prototype.bind polyfill breaking (templates) changed input options for getRelativeFileList breaking (usage) failing task on phantom error (SyntaxError, TypeError, et al)
- 2013-04-03 v0.4.2 bumped grunt-lib-phantomjs to 0.3.0/1.9 (closes merged addressed
- 2013-03-08 v0.4.0 bumped grunt-lib-phantomjs to 0.2.0/1.8 allowed spec/vendor/helper list to return non-matching files (e.g. for remote, http) merged merged
- 2013-02-24 v0.3.3 Added better console output (via Gabor Kiss @Neverl)
- 2013-02-17 v0.3.2 Ensure Gruntfile.js is included on npm.
- 2013-02-15 v0.3.1 First official release for Grunt 0.4.0.
- 2013-01-22 v0.3.1rc7 Exposed phantom and sendMessage to templates
- 2013-01-22 v0.3.0rc7 Updated dependencies for grunt v0.4.0rc6/rc7
- 2013-01-08 v0.3.0rc5 Updating to work with grunt v0.4.0rc5. Switching to this.filesSrc api. Added JUnit xml output (via Kelvin Luck @vitch) Passing console.log from browser to verbose grunt logging Support for templates as separate node modules Removed internal requirejs template (see grunt-template-jasmine-requirejs)
- 2012-12-03 v0.2.0 Generalized requirejs template config Added loader plugin Tests for templates Updated jasmine to 1.3.0
- 2012-11-24 v0.1.2 Updated for new grunt/grunt-contrib apis
- 2012-11-07 v0.1.1 Fixed race condition in requirejs template
- 2012-11-07 v0.1.0 Ported grunt-jasmine-runner and grunt-jasmine-task to grunt-contrib
Task submitted by Jarrod Overson
This file was generated on Sat May 31 2014 21:18:20.