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path: root/spec/unit/puppet/parser/functions/flatten_spec.rb
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2014-05-08Move unit tests to spec/functionsHunter Haugen
rspec-puppet matchers are defined for tests which exist in spec/functions, but the function unit tests lived in spec/unit/puppet/parser/functions. This moves them to the correct place for using rspec-puppet
2013-03-18Fix number of arguments check in flatten()Uwe Stuehler
The function only uses the first argument, so raise an error with too few arguments *and* with too many arguments.
2012-07-23(Maint) Rename PuppetlabsSpec::Puppet{Seams,Internals}Jeff McCune
The module PuppetlabsSpec::PuppetSeams has been renamed in the puppetlabs_spec_helper gem to PuppetlabsSpec::PuppetInternals. The method to obtain a scope object has also changed slightly. Without this patch the spec tests will fail because the stdlib module is not aligned with the spec helper gem. This patch fixes the problem by matching up messages with their receivers in the spec helper library. Paired-with: Andrew Parker <andy@puppetlabs.com>
2012-07-19(Maint) use PuppetlabsSpec::PuppetSeams.parser_scopeJeff McCune
Without this patch all of the spec tests for parser functions in stdlib would instantiate their own scope instances. This is a problem because the standard library is tightly coupled with the internal behavior of Puppet. Tight coupling like this creates failures when we change the internal behavior of Puppet. This is exactly what happened recently when we changed the method signature for the initializer of Puppet::Parser::Scope instances. This patch fixes the problem by creating scope instances using the puppet labs spec helper. The specific method that provides scope instances in Puppet-version-independent way is something like this: let(:scope) { PuppetlabsSpec::PuppetSeams.parser_scope } This patch simply implements this across the board.
2012-07-19(Maint) Fix interpreter linesJeff McCune
This time around I actually know why I'm doing this thanks to the reminder from Nick Lewis. Ruby will replace itself in memory with the executable listed in the interpreter line if the string "ruby" is not in there. Since /usr/bin/env rspec doesn't contain the substring "ruby", you can't actually run ruby -W1 or whatever on the file. This patch fixes the problem by making sure "ruby" is present, preventing ruby from replacing itself in memory.
2011-08-05* Moved kwalify to puppetlabs-kwalify projectKen Barber
* Re-arranged tests in line with puppetlabs-stdlib