Hi again,

this mailing list has way too much traffic for me to stay on it. Can I create a 
ticket in Bugzilla or JIRA to continue the discussion instead?

Thanks,
Marc

On 18. May 2017, 13:22 +0200, Geertjan Wielenga 
<[email protected]>, wrote:
> Great discussion! Maybe this is one of the most promising threads on this
> mailing list -- i.e., a representative from a technology pops up on the
> Apache NetBeans mailing list to interact on a new integration of that
> technology with NetBeans.
>
> Maybe we need to have a place on the Wiki where specs can be put together?
> I.e., a long list of specs for higher-level features (as opposed to bug
> fixes and so on)? There'd be an enhancement request in the bug tracker,
> with a reference to a location on the Apache NetBeans Wiki where the
> related spec for that enhancement would be found, e.g., a "support JUnit 5"
> enhancement request, pointing to a Apache NetBeans Wiki page where the
> JUnit team briefly lists the key features that they'd suggest the JUnit 5
> support in NetBeans should consist of, as a starting point for others in
> Apache NetBeans to work out together further, prior to anyone implementing
> anything?
>
> There'll be more of these kinds of mail threads starting up, increasingly,
> especially by representatives of other Apache projects, and it would be
> great to have a standard process, beyond simply saying 'file an enhancement
> request please'. I.e., some kind of form on the Wiki would be filled in so
> that right from the start we'd have formalized input for the requested
> feature from the group requesting that feature.
>
> Gj
>
> On Wed, May 17, 2017 at 8:42 PM, Marc Philipp <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Regarding the Gradle plugin: What we currently have works for basic use
> > cases but we’d rather get official support into Gradle core. Please see
> > https://github.com/gradle/gradle/issues/1037 for details.
> >
> > Thanks,
> > Marc
> >
> > On 17. May 2017, 19:51 +0200, Attila Kelemen <[email protected]>,
> > wrote:
> > > Hi,
> > >
> > > I'm the developer of the Gradle integration of NB, so I can speak for
> > that
> > > part.
> > >
> > > For running tests, I just execute the appropriate Gradle task. If
> > Gradle's
> > > test task (`org.gradle.api.tasks.testing.Test`) were to support it
> > (though
> > > as far as I know it does not), it would work without change. If the
> > task's
> > > type is different, then I need some adjustments to configure it properly
> > > when only running a particular test class (or method). The only possible
> > > issue (which I don't know if it is an issue) is if NB recognizes the
> > @Test
> > > annotation or not (that is not within the scope of the build tool
> > > integration).
> > >
> > > Anyway, if JUnit 5 uses a different task type, I would need the following
> > > for proper support:
> > >
> > > - A property to configure the test class to be executed.
> > > - A property to configure the method to be executed.
> > >
> > > It would be a nice bonus if it would work the same way (using the --tests
> > > argument) as it does now but I could make it work even if the
> > configuration
> > > was different (it would be considerably more work for me but I would do
> > it).
> > >
> > > bye,
> > > Attila Kelemen
> > >
> > >
> > > 2017-05-17 16:19 GMT+02:00 Marc Philipp <[email protected]>:
> > >
> > > > Hi all,
> > > >
> > > > I’m a member of the JUnit team. We’re currently working on a major new
> > > > version: JUnit 5. It will require work by IDEs to support test
> > execution
> > > > and reporting within the IDE. IntelliJ IDEA and Eclipse (on a branch)
> > > > already support the new JUnit Platform and the new Jupiter API to write
> > > > tests.
> > > >
> > > > Are there any plans to add JUnit 5 support to Netbeans? If so, how can
> > we
> > > > help?
> > > >
> > > > Thanks,
> > > > Marc
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> >

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