[ 
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/COLLECTIONS-804?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel
 ]

Vivek Gupta updated COLLECTIONS-804:
------------------------------------
    Affects Version/s: 4.4

> testCollectionToArray2() is non deterministic
> ---------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: COLLECTIONS-804
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/COLLECTIONS-804
>             Project: Commons Collections
>          Issue Type: Bug
>          Components: Collection
>    Affects Versions: 4.4
>            Reporter: Vivek Gupta
>            Priority: Minor
>
> The test 
> {{org.apache.commons.collections4.collection.AbstractCollectionTest.testCollectionToArray2()}}
>  can fail if two {{toArray()}} calls return elements in a different order. 
> One can check for that using the NonDex tool 
> ([https://github.com/TestingResearchIllinois/NonDex]).
> Bug repoduction:
>  # Clone the repo and cd into it.
>  # {{mvn test 
> -Dtest=org.apache.commons.collections4.bidimap.DualHashBidiMapTest#testCollectionToArray2
>  -Drat.skip}} This test will pass.
>  # {{mvn edu.illinois:nondex-maven-plugin:1.1.2:nondex 
> -Dtest=org.apache.commons.collections4.bidimap.DualHashBidiMapTest#testCollectionToArray2
>  -Drat.skip}} This command runs the NonDex tool on the the test. Near the end 
> of the output, you will see a summary of test failures, where you will find 
> {{testCollectionToArray2()}} function listed.
> The source of the bug:
> The test gets an array representation of the collections and then compares 
> them, taking the order into account. However, Java Collections need not be 
> necessarily ordered. Its member function {{toArray()}} also does not 
> guarantee a deterministic order of the elements in its returned list. As 
> such, we should ignore the order of the elements in the assertion.
> Proposed fix:
> We ignore the order of array lists by putting its elements into separate 
> multisets and then comparing those multisets for equality. Multiset is not a 
> part of the standard Java library. However, conveniently enough, this 
> repository already had an implementation of multiset called HashBags, which I 
> used.



--
This message was sent by Atlassian Jira
(v8.20.1#820001)

Reply via email to