On Jan 29, 2012, at 8:43 AM, Kristian Rosenvold wrote: > Given N parallel forks, it attempts to schedule tests so all forks > will complete at the same time. It's runOrder=balanced in the docs. > Great feature for users with long-running tests. We saved 20% run-time > on our selenium tests. 2.11 supported balanced for regular parallel > runs, 2.12 adds support for parallel forks and balanced works with > this too. >
Does this accurate represent what you've done: https://gist.github.com/1699568 > Will blog about these features once 2.12 is out. It's all in the docs too > > Kristian > > Den 29. jan. 2012 kl. 14:15 skrev Jason van Zyl <[email protected]>: > >> >> On Jan 29, 2012, at 6:03 AM, Kristian Rosenvold wrote: >> >>> Hi, >>> >>> This is the first java 1.5 version of the surefire plugin. For Junit3 >>> it is still capable of forking down to java 1.3. Parallel forks are >>> the new thing in this release, >>> and it should now be possible to run balanced parallel forks; a pretty >>> cool feature for people with long-running tests. >>> >> >> What is a balanced parallel fork? >> >> Jason >> >> ---------------------------------------------------------- >> Jason van Zyl >> Founder, Apache Maven >> http://twitter.com/jvanzyl >> --------------------------------------------------------- >> >> the course of true love never did run smooth ... >> >> -- Shakespeare >> >> >> >> > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected] > For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected] > Thanks, Jason ---------------------------------------------------------- Jason van Zyl Founder, Apache Maven http://twitter.com/jvanzyl --------------------------------------------------------- First, the taking in of scattered particulars under one Idea, so that everyone understands what is being talked about ... Second, the separation of the Idea into parts, by dividing it at the joints, as nature directs, not breaking any limb in half as a bad carver might. -- Plato, Phaedrus (Notes on the Synthesis of Form by C. Alexander)
