# The Ruby Spec Suite [![Build Status](https://travis-ci.org/ruby/spec.svg)](https://travis-ci.org/ruby/spec) [![Build Status](https://ci.appveyor.com/api/projects/status/1gs6f399320o44b1?svg=true)](https://ci.appveyor.com/project/eregon/spec-x948i) [![Gitter](https://badges.gitter.im/ruby/spec.svg)](https://gitter.im/ruby/spec) The Ruby Spec Suite is a test suite for the behavior of the Ruby programming language. It is not a standardized specification like the ISO one, and does not aim to become one. Instead, it is a practical tool to describe and test the behavior of Ruby with code. Every example code has a textual description, which presents several advantages: * It is easier to understand the intent of the author * It documents how recent versions of Ruby should behave * It helps Ruby implementations to agree on a common behavior The specs are written with syntax similar to RSpec 2. They are run with MSpec, the purpose-built framework for running the Ruby Spec Suite. For more information, see the [MSpec](http://github.com/ruby/mspec) project. The specs describe the [language syntax](language/), the [core library](core/), the [standard library](library/), the [C API for extensions](optional/capi) and the [command line flags](command_line/). The language specs are grouped by keyword while the core and standard library specs are grouped by class and method. ruby/spec is known to be tested in these implementations for every commit: * [MRI](http://rubyci.org/) on 30 platforms and 4 versions * [JRuby](https://github.com/jruby/jruby/tree/master/spec/ruby) for both 1.7 and 9.x * [TruffleRuby](https://github.com/oracle/truffleruby/tree/master/spec/ruby) * [Opal](https://github.com/opal/opal/tree/master/spec) The specs are synchronized both ways around once a month by @eregon between ruby/spec, MRI, JRuby and TruffleRuby. Each of these repositories has a full copy of the files to ease editing specs. ruby/spec describes the behavior of Ruby 2.3 and more recent Ruby versions. More precisely, every latest stable MRI release [passes](https://rubyci.org/) all specs of ruby/spec (2.3.x, 2.4.x, 2.5.x, etc). For older specs try these commits: * Ruby 2.0.0-p647 - [Suite](https://github.com/ruby/spec/commit/245862558761d5abc676843ef74f86c9bcc8ea8d) using [MSpec](https://github.com/ruby/mspec/commit/f90efa068791064f955de7a843e96e2d7d3041c2) (may encounter 2 failures) * Ruby 2.1.9 - [Suite](https://github.com/ruby/spec/commit/f029e65241374386077ac500add557ae65069b55) using [MSpec](https://github.com/ruby/mspec/commit/55568ea3918c6380e64db8c567d732fa5781efed) * Ruby 2.2.10 - [Suite](https://github.com/ruby/spec/commit/cbaa0e412270c944df0c2532fc500c920dba0e92) using [MSpec](https://github.com/ruby/mspec/commit/d84d7668449e96856c5f6bac8cb1526b6d357ce3) ### Running the specs First, clone this repository: $ git clone https://github.com/ruby/spec.git Then move to it: $ cd spec Clone [MSpec](http://github.com/ruby/mspec): $ git clone https://github.com/ruby/mspec.git ../mspec And run the spec suite: $ ../mspec/bin/mspec This will execute all the specs using the executable named `ruby` on your current PATH. ### Running Specs with a Specific Ruby Implementation Use the `-t` option to specify the Ruby implementation with which to run the specs. The argument may be a full path to the Ruby binary. $ ../mspec/bin/mspec -t /path/to/some/bin/ruby ### Running Selected Specs To run a single spec file, pass the filename to `mspec`: $ ../mspec/bin/mspec core/kernel/kind_of_spec.rb You can also pass a directory, in which case all specs in that directories will be run: $ ../mspec/bin/mspec core/kernel Finally, you can also run them per group as defined in `default.mspec`. The following command will run all language specs: $ ../mspec/bin/mspec :language In similar fashion, the following commands run the respective specs: $ ../mspec/bin/mspec :core $ ../mspec/bin/mspec :library $ ../mspec/bin/mspec :capi ### Contributing See [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/ruby/spec/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md). ### History and RubySpec This project was originally born from [Rubinius](https://github.com/rubinius/rubinius) tests being converted to the spec style. These specs were later extracted to their own project, RubySpec, with a specific vision and principles. At the end of 2014, Brian Shirai, the creator of RubySpec, decided to [end RubySpec](http://rubinius.com/2014/12/31/matz-s-ruby-developers-don-t-use-rubyspec/). A couple months later, the different repositories were merged and [the project was revived](http://eregon.github.io/rubyspec/2015/07/29/rubyspec-is-reborn.html). On 12 January 2016, the name was changed to "The Ruby Spec Suite" for clarity and to let the RubySpec ideology rest in peace.