On Tue, Feb 16, 2010 at 10:48 AM, Ben Fyvie <ben.fy...@champsoftware.com> wrote: > I have some code that adds to the callbacks that rspec-rails adds by default > to <a > href="http://github.com/dchelimsky/rspec-rails/blob/master/lib/spec/rails/interop/testcase.rb">setup > and teardown fixtures</a>. > > > > My code looks something like: > > > > module Test > > module Unit > > > > class TestCase > > append_before(:each) do > > Test::Unit::AfterFixturesLoaded.custom_stuff1 > > end > > > > append_after(:each) do > > Test::Unit::AfterFixturesLoaded.custom_stuff2 > > end > > end > > > > class AfterFixturesLoaded > > > > def self.custom_stuff1 > > #do some stuff here > > end > > > > def self.custom_stuff2 > > #do some other stuff here > > end > > end > > > > end > > end > > > > This code works fine if I put it in the config\initializers directory in the > rails app, but then running the app fails because it doesn't load test unit. > So my question is where can I put this code so that it will always be > included when running rspec?
The convention is to put support files in spec/support/, and require .rb files in that directory from spec/spec_helper.rb. The spec/spec_helper.rb file generated by rspec-rails when you execute "script/generate rspec" ("script/rails g rspec:install" in rails 3) includes a line that handles the require for you. HTH, David _______________________________________________ rspec-users mailing list rspec-users@rubyforge.org http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users