Hunt Jon wrote:
Thanks Scott.
I don't get what happens if I add --drb
to spec/spec.opts
files.
If you add --drb to your spec.opts (or you run script/spec --drb
spec/my_spec.rb) - you will run your specs through the spec server.
Without --drb, rails will load up in a fresh process.
The *whole point* of the drb server is to speed up load time when
running specs.
Just to give you an idea, here's the difference for me (with spork
instead of the spec server):
http://screencast.com/t/qhRvqiXc
Scott
Can anybody explain to me, please?
On Thu, Jun 4, 2009 at 3:24 PM, Scott Taylor <sc...@railsnewbie.com> wrote:
Hunt Jon wrote:
What's the difference between spec:server and autospec?
I wouldn't recommend using spec server - use spork instead:
http://github.com/timcharper/spork/tree/master
Both load the rails environment, so that each time you run your tests (with
script/spec -X or script/spec --drb) you won't have to wait for it to load
up (which can take 4-5 seconds).
autospec/autotest, on the other hand, polls the filesystem every 3 seconds
or so for changes. When it sees one, it reruns just the test or spec file
which has changed.
Scott
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