As I faced some issue I decided to check in what order before
and after
hooks are executed. This is what I did:
require "spec_helper"
describe "The order:" do
before(:all) {
puts "before_all"
}
after(:all) {
puts "after_all"
}
before(:each) {
puts "before_each"
}
after(:each) {
puts "after_each"
}
describe "DESC A" do
before {
puts "A_before"
}
it "A_it_1" do
expect(1).to eq(1)
end
it "A_it_2" do
expect(1).to eq(1)
end
end
describe "DESC B" do
before {
puts "B_before"
}
it "B_it_1" do
expect(1).to eq(1)
end
it "B_it_2" do
expect(1).to eq(1)
end
end
end
and what I got:
The order:
before_all
DESC A
before_each
A_before
after_each
A_it_1
before_each
A_before
after_each
A_it_2
DESC B
before_each
B_before
after_each
B_it_1
before_each
B_before
after_each
B_it_2
after_all
What is going on here ?? Why is after_each
run before A_it_1
?
UPDATE:
adding around(:each)
is even more fun:
around(:each) do |example|
puts "around_in"
example.run
puts "around_out"
end
and results:
The order:
before_all
DESC A
around_in
before_each
A_before
after_each
around_out
A_it_1
around_in
before_each
A_before
after_each
around_out
A_it_2
DESC B
around_in
before_each
B_before
after_each
around_out
B_it_1
around_in
before_each
B_before
after_each
around_out
B_it_2
after_all
after(:each)
hook will be executed before the test ?after(:each)
block AFTER thedescribe
blocks in your spec file and see what happens?puts
is not a reliable method to determine the order. When I stuck a debugger statement inafter(:each)
and before and after the test inA_it_1
it did actually behave as expected. Looks like a gotcha with using puts?