AFAIK nose is still canonical, since it's what's in the Makefile. I'm fine with this provided: -if no git is installed, tests are still skipped rather than failed -you rewrite the 'check' make target such that it doesn't run the non-compat tests twice.
A nice-to-have would be a 'check-nocompat' or similar make target. I for one do things like run the tests on a bunch of sequential patches, and it's nice when those take 1s each rather than 10s. On Sun, Dec 19, 2010 at 13:36, Augie Fackler <[email protected]> wrote: > > https://github.com/jelmer/dulwich/commit/b5490da68052e33b904e32c04f2aef140c8bcb45 > > This means that nose will no longer skip these tests by default, which we > had historically (as I understood things, anyway) wanted. Is nose no longer > the canonical way of running tests? I thought we didn't want to support test > runners without discovery support? (I thought unittest2 supported > discovery...) > > Thanks, > Augie > > > _______________________________________________ > Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~dulwich-users > Post to : [email protected] > Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~dulwich-users > More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp >
_______________________________________________ Mailing list: https://launchpad.net/~dulwich-users Post to : [email protected] Unsubscribe : https://launchpad.net/~dulwich-users More help : https://help.launchpad.net/ListHelp

