It is indeed related with Windows! C:\Users\jarmo\Desktop\minu\projects\Ruby\myproject>rspec spec/subdir .
Finished in 0.0045 seconds 1 example, 0 failures C:\Users\jarmo\Desktop\minu\projects\Ruby\myproject>rspec spec\subdir No examples found. Finished in 0 seconds 0 examples, 0 failures C:\Users\jarmo\Desktop\minu\projects\Ruby\myproject>spec spec\subdir . Finished in 0.040505 seconds 1 example, 0 failures C:\Users\jarmo\Desktop\minu\projects\Ruby\myproject>spec spec/subdir . Finished in 0.040505 seconds 1 example, 0 failures It needs path to be specified with unix-slashes... Jarmo On Jun 1, 5:24 pm, David Chelimsky <dchelim...@gmail.com> wrote: > On Jun 1, 2011, at 9:14 AM, Jarmo Pertman wrote: > > > Hi! > > > When having a file structure like this: > > project > > -spec > > -subdir > > -my_spec.rb > > > and then being in directory "project" and running command `rspec spec` > > everything works as expected. If running `rspec spec/subdir` to run > > only specs under spec/subdir then it doesn't work - it finds 0 > > examples. It works as expected in RSpec 1. What do we do wrong? > > I run subdirectories quite often and haven't seen this issue. What's in your > .rspec and spec/spec_helper.rb files? Also, which version of rspec-2 are you > using? > _______________________________________________ > rspec-users mailing list > rspec-us...@rubyforge.orghttp://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users _______________________________________________ rspec-users mailing list rspec-users@rubyforge.org http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/rspec-users