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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IGNITE-10629?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16749671#comment-16749671
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Ignite TC Bot commented on IGNITE-10629:
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{panel:title=--> Run :: All (Nightly): No blockers
found!|borderStyle=dashed|borderColor=#ccc|titleBGColor=#D6F7C1}{panel}
[TeamCity *--> Run :: All (Nightly)*
Results|https://ci.ignite.apache.org/viewLog.html?buildId=2873844&buildTypeId=IgniteTests24Java8_RunAllNightly]
> Migration follow up: check for old style tests that could be slipped through
> in transition period
> -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Key: IGNITE-10629
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IGNITE-10629
> Project: Ignite
> Issue Type: Sub-task
> Affects Versions: 2.8
> Reporter: Oleg Ignatenko
> Assignee: Oleg Ignatenko
> Priority: Major
> Labels: MakeTeamcityGreenAgain
> Attachments: junit_inspections.xml
>
> Time Spent: 10m
> Remaining Estimate: 0h
>
> We need to account for risk that while tests are migrating some commits may
> by mistake slip in old style test cases - that will be ignored by JUnit 4.
> In order to address possible issues of that kind, do the following a week or
> two after IGNITE-10177 is merged to master: run the IntelliJ inspection
> called "old style Junit test method in JUnit 4 class", review report and fix
> discovered problems if there are any.
> For the reference, my version of IDE explains this inspection as follows:
> {quote}Reports JUnit 3 style test methods which are located inside a class
> which does not extend the abstract JUnit 3 class TestCase and contains JUnit
> 4/JUnit 5 @Test annotated methods.{quote}
> (note concerns mentioned in this ticket were originally raised at dev list:
> [here|http://apache-ignite-developers.2346864.n4.nabble.com/Is-it-time-to-move-forward-to-JUnit4-5-tp29608p39300.html])
> -----
> Another part of this task is to find (and rework if there are still any)
> classes that still extend {{junit.framework.TestCase}}. These classes are
> technically legal but after vast majority have been migrated they became
> harmful from maintenance perspective, by forcing readers of their code learn
> details of obsolete framework version that lacks many important features. One
> particularly bad thing about such tests is that they deprive maintainers
> standard ways to suppress test execution using modern JUnit API of Ignore and
> Assume.
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