Cuke4Duke is an addon to Cucumber, making it possible to write step definitions in several different JVM languages.
First of all, you need Maven installed.
Then you’ll need git
You’ll also need JRuby installed to build Cuke4Duke. If you’re on OS X or Linux it’s recommended you install JRuby
with RVM
With JRuby installed – bootstrap your environment by installing some gems:
Using RVM:
mkdir -p /.m2/repository/.jruby
GEM_HOME=/.m2/repository/.jruby GEM_PATH=~/.m2/repository/.jruby gem install bundler
GEM_HOME=~/.m2/repository/.jruby GEM_PATH=~/.m2/repository/.jruby bundle install
GEM_HOME=~/.m2/repository/.jruby GEM_PATH=~/.m2/repository/.jruby rake install
Not using RVM:
mkdir -p /.m2/repository/.jruby
GEM_HOME=/.m2/repository/.jruby GEM_PATH=~/.m2/repository/.jruby jruby -S gem install bundler
GEM_HOME=~/.m2/repository/.jruby GEM_PATH=~/.m2/repository/.jruby jruby -S bundle install
GEM_HOME=~/.m2/repository/.jruby GEM_PATH=~/.m2/repository/.jruby jruby -S rake install
With the gems installed, build the whole shebang (including the examples):
Using RVM:
rake build_all
Not using RVM:
jruby -S rake build_all
First, bump the release number:
rake remove_snapshots
Build again:
rake build_all
If all is OK, commit:
git commit -m "Release"
And release:
rake release
Finally, bump version:
rake add_snapshots
And commit again:
git commit -m "Starting new development cycle"