jrnl/tests/bdd/features/multiple_journals.feature
Jonathan Wren f5e052937c
Update copyright year (#1502)
Update copyright year in comment headers and --version output
2022-06-18 11:30:56 -07:00

99 lines
4.1 KiB
Gherkin

# Copyright (C) 2012-2022 jrnl contributors
# License: https://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl-3.0.html
Feature: Multiple journals
Scenario: Loading a config with two journals
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2013-06-09 15:39 My first entry.
2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good.
When we run "jrnl work -99 --short"
Then the output should be empty
Scenario: Write to default config by default
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
When we run "jrnl this goes to default"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should contain
2013-06-09 15:39 My first entry.
2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good.
Then the output should contain
this goes to default
When we run "jrnl work -99 --short"
Then the output should be empty
Scenario: Write to specified journal
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
When we run "jrnl work a long day in the office"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2013-06-09 15:39 My first entry.
2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good.
When we run "jrnl work -99 --short"
Then the output should contain "a long day in the office"
Scenario: Tell user which journal was used
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
When we run "jrnl work a long day in the office"
Then the output should contain "Entry added to work journal"
Scenario: Write to specified journal with a timestamp
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
When we run "jrnl work 23 july 2012: a long day in the office"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2013-06-09 15:39 My first entry.
2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good.
When we run "jrnl work -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2012-07-23 09:00 a long day in the office
Scenario: Write to specified journal without a timestamp but with colon
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
When we run "jrnl work : a long day in the office"
Then the output should be
2013-06-09 15:39 My first entry.
2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good.
When we run "jrnl work -99 --short"
Then the output should be contain
a long day in the office
Scenario: Write to specified journal without a timestamp but with colon
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
When we run "jrnl work: a long day in the office"
When we run "jrnl -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2013-06-09 15:39 My first entry.
2013-06-10 15:40 Life is good.
When we run "jrnl work -99 --short"
Then the output should contain
a long day in the office
Scenario: Create new journals as required
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
Then journal "ideas" should not exist
When we run "jrnl ideas 23 july 2012: sell my junk on ebay and make lots of money"
When we run "jrnl ideas -99 --short"
Then the output should be
2012-07-23 09:00 sell my junk on ebay and make lots of money
Scenario: Don't crash if no default journal is specified
Given we use the config "bug343.yaml"
When we run "jrnl a long day in the office"
Then the output should contain "No default journal configured"
Scenario: Don't crash if no file exists for a configured encrypted journal
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
When we run "jrnl new_encrypted Adding first entry" and enter
these three eyes
these three eyes
n
Then the output should contain "Journal 'new_encrypted' created at"
Scenario: Read and write to journal with emoji name
Given we use the config "multiple.yaml"
When we run "jrnl Adding entry to sparkly journal"
When we run "jrnl -1"
Then the output should contain "Adding entry to sparkly journal"