# Developing for Jasmine Core We welcome your contributions - Thanks for helping make Jasmine a better project for everyone. Please review the backlog and discussion lists (the main group - [http://groups.google.com/group/jasmine-js](http://groups.google.com/group/jasmine-js) and the developer's list - [http://groups.google.com/group/jasmine-js-dev](http://groups.google.com/group/jasmine-js-dev)) before starting work - what you're looking for may already have been done. If it hasn't, the community can help make your contribution better. ## General Workflow Please submit pull requests via feature branches using the semi-standard workflow of: 1. Fork it 1. Clone your fork: (`git clone git@github.com:yourUserName/jasmine.git`) 1. Change directory: (`cd jasmine`) 1. Assign original repository to a remote named 'upstream': (`git remote add upstream https://github.com/jasmine/jasmine.git`) 1. Pull in changes not present in your local repository: (`git fetch upstream`) 1. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`) 1. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Add some feature'`) 1. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`) 1. Create new Pull Request We favor pull requests with very small, single commits with a single purpose. ## Background ### Directory Structure * `/src` contains all of the source files * `/src/console` - Node.js-specific files * `/src/core` - generic source files * `/src/html` - browser-specific files * `/spec` contains all of the tests * mirrors the source directory * there are some additional files * `/dist` contains the standalone distributions as zip files * `/lib` contains the generated files for distribution as the Jasmine Rubygem and the Python package ### Self-testing Note that Jasmine tests itself. The files in `lib` are loaded first, defining the reference `jasmine`. Then the files in `src` are loaded, defining the reference `j$`. So there are two copies of the code loaded under test. The tests should always use `j$` to refer to the objects and functions that are being tested. But the tests can use functions on `jasmine` as needed. _Be careful how you structure any new test code_. Copy the patterns you see in the existing code - this ensures that the code you're testing is not leaking into the `jasmine` reference and vice-versa. ### `boot.js` __This is new for Jasmine 2.0.__ This file does all of the setup necessary for Jasmine to work. It loads all of the code, creates an `Env`, attaches the global functions, and builds the reporter. It also sets up the execution of the `Env` - for browsers this is in `window.onload`. While the default in `lib` is appropriate for browsers, projects may wish to customize this file. For example, for Jasmine development there is a different `dev_boot.js` for Jasmine development that does more work. ### Compatibility * Browser Minimum * IE8 * Firefox 3.x * Chrome ?? * Safari 5 ## Development All source code belongs in `src/`. The `core/` directory contains the bulk of Jasmine's functionality. This code should remain browser- and environment-agnostic. If your feature or fix cannot be, as mentioned above, please degrade gracefully. Any code that should only be in a non-browser environment should live in `src/console/`. Any code that depends on a browser (specifically, it expects `window` to be the global or `document` is present) should live in `src/html/`. ### Install Dependencies Jasmine Core relies on Ruby and Node.js. To install the Ruby dependencies, you will need Ruby, Rubygems, and Bundler available. Then: $ bundle ...will install all of the Ruby dependencies. If the ffi gem fails to build its native extensions, you may need to manually install some system dependencies. On Ubuntu: $ apt-get install gcc ruby ruby-dev libxml2 libxml2-dev libxslt1-dev ...should get you to the point that `bundle` can install everything. To install the Node dependencies, you will need Node.js, Npm, and [Grunt](http://gruntjs.com/), the [grunt-cli](https://github.com/gruntjs/grunt-cli) and ensure that `grunt` is on your path. $ npm install --local ...will install all of the node modules locally. If when you run $ grunt ...you see that JSHint runs your system is ready. ### How to write new Jasmine code Or, How to make a successful pull request * _Do not change the public interface_. Lots of projects depend on Jasmine and if you aren't careful you'll break them * _Be environment agnostic_ - server-side developers are just as important as browser developers * _Be browser agnostic_ - if you must rely on browser-specific functionality, please write it in a way that degrades gracefully * _Write specs_ - Jasmine's a testing framework; don't add functionality without test-driving it * _Write code in the style of the rest of the repo_ - Jasmine should look like a cohesive whole * _Ensure the *entire* test suite is green_ in all the big browsers, Node, and JSHint - your contribution shouldn't break Jasmine for other users Follow these tips and your pull request, patch, or suggestion is much more likely to be integrated. ### Running Specs Jasmine uses the [Jasmine Ruby gem](http://github.com/jasmine/jasmine-gem) to test itself in browser. $ rake jasmine ...and then visit `http://localhost:8888` to run specs. Jasmine uses the [Jasmine NPM package](http://github.com/jasmine/jasmine-npm) to test itself in a Node.js/npm environment. $ grunt execSpecsInNode ...and then the results will print to the console. All specs run except those that expect a browser (the specs in `spec/html` are ignored). ## Before Committing or Submitting a Pull Request 1. Ensure all specs are green in browser *and* node 1. Ensure JSHint is green with `grunt jshint` 1. Build `jasmine.js` with `grunt buildDistribution` and run all specs again - this ensures that your changes self-test well ## Submitting a Pull Request 1. Revert your changes to `jasmine.js` and `jasmine-html.js` * We do this because `jasmine.js` and `jasmine-html.js` are auto-generated (as you've seen in the previous steps) and accepting multiple pull requests when this auto-generated file changes causes lots of headaches. 1. When we accept your pull request, we will generate these files as a separate commit and merge the entire branch into master. Note that we use Travis for Continuous Integration. We only accept green pull requests.