As pointed out by Anthony in his comment, you can use RSpec::Core::Runner to basically invoke the command line behavior from code or an interactive console. However, if you use something like Rails, consider that your environment is likely going to be set to development (or even production, if this is where you'll execute the code). So make sure that whatever you do doesn't have any unwanted side-effects.
Another thing to consider is that RSpec globally stores its configuration including all example groups that were registerd with it before. That's why you'll need to reset RSpec between subsequent runs. This can be done via RSpec.reset.
So putting it all together, you'll get:
require 'rspec/core'
RSpec::Core::Runner.run(['spec/path/to_spec_1.rb', 'spec/path/to_spec_2.rb'])
RSpec.reset
The call to RSpec::Core::Runner.run will output to standard out and return the exit code as a result (0 meaning no errors, a non-zero exit code means a test failed).
..
Finished in 0.01791 seconds (files took 17.25 seconds to load)
2 example, 0 failures
=> 0
You can pass other IO objects to RSpec::Core::Runner.run to specify where it should output to. And you can also pass other command line parameters to the first array of RSpec::Core::Runner.run, e.g. '--format=json' to output the results in JSON format.
So if you, for example, want to capture the output in JSON format to then further do something with it, you could do the following:
require 'rspec/core'
error_stream = StringIO.new
output_stream = StringIO.new
RSpec::Core::Runner.run(
[
'spec/path/to_spec_1.rb',
'spec/path/to_spec_2.rb',
'--format=json'
],
error_stream,
output_stream
)
RSpec.reset
errors =
if error_stream.string
JSON.parse(error_stream.string)
end
results =
if output_stream.string
JSON.parse(output_stream.string)
end
exec("rspec spec/user_spec.rb"). If you want more robust you'll need github.com/rspec/rspec-core/blob/master/lib/rspec/core/…