It is preinstalled, but you need to add it to your class path or run
configuration.
On Jul 11, 2006, at 11:54 AM, Peter Decrem wrote:
Thanks for the help. It seems to compile. Tests also ran. So
that's great. But when i go to src\test for example
TestAnalyzers.java to debug, I get errors in the line import
junit.framework.*.
I thought junit came preinstalled and why did the tests run?
But I definitely seem to be heading in the right direction thanks
to your help.
Cheers
-----Original Message-----
From: Chuck Williams <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Date: Mon, 10 Jul 2006 23:00:17
To:java-dev@lucene.apache.org
Subject: Re: Lucene/Netbean Newbie looking for help
Hi Peter,
I'm also a Netbeans user, ableit a very happy one who would never
consider eclipse!
The following sequence of steps has worked for me in netbeans 4.0 and
5.0 (haven't upgraded to 5.5 quite yet). The reason for the unusual
directory structure is that Lucene's interleaving of the core and the
various contribs within a single directory tree is incompatible with
netbeans standard assumptions. This is worked around by having all
the
project files external to the Lucene directory tree; each can point at
its build script, source package, etc., in the same directory tree.
1. Create a parent directory for all of your projects, say
Projects.
2. Check lucene out of svn into Projects/LuceneTrunk.
3. Create new netbeans for core and whatever contribs you use, all
parallel to Projects/LuceneTrunk. E.g., Projects/Lucene (the
core), Projects/Highlighter, Projects/Snowball, etc.. For each
project (e.g., Lucene), do:
1. File - New Project - General - Java Project with Existing
Ant Script
2. Set the project location: Projects/LuceneTrunk
3. Set the build script (defaults correctly):
../LuceneTrunk/build.xml
4. Set the project name: Lucene
5. Set the project location: Projects/Lucene
6. Update the ant targets (build ==> jar, not compile;
rest are
correct; add custom targets for jar-demo, javacc, javadocs
and docs)
7. Set the source package folders: ../LuceneTrunk/src/java
8. Set the test package folders: ../LuceneTrunk/src/test and
../LuceneTrunk/src/demo
9. Finish (no classpath settings)
10. Build the source (Lucene project context menu - Build)
11. Set the class path for src/demo (Lucene context menu -
Properties - Java Sources Classpath - select src/demo -
Add
Jar/Folder LuceneTrunk/build/lucene-core-<version>-dev.jar
12. Build the demos (Lucene context menu - jar-demo)
13. Set the classpath for src/test (as above, add both the
core
jar and the demo jar)
14. Now run the tests (Lucene context menu - Test Project)
All works great. From here on, all netbeans features are available
(debugging, refactoring, code database, completion, ...)
You can also of course run ant from the command line, should you ever
want to.
Good luck,
Chuck
peter decrem wrote on 07/10/2006 07:05 PM:
I am trying to contribute to the dot lucene port, but
I am having no luck in getting the tests to compile
and debug for the java version. I tried eclipse and
failed and now I am stuck in Netbean.
More specifically I am using Netbean 5.5 (same
problems with 5.0). My understanding is that it comes
with junit standard (3.8). I did create a
build.properties file for javacc. It compiles but I
get the following error when I run the tests:
compile-core:
compile-demo:
common.compile-test:
compile-test:
test:
C:\lucene-1.9.1\common-build.xml:169:
C:\lucene-1.9.1\lib not found.
BUILD FAILED (total time: 0 seconds)
The relevant code in common-build.xml is:
<target name="test" depends="compile-test"
description="Runs unit tests">
<fail unless="junit.present">
##################################################################
JUnit not found.
Please make sure junit.jar is in ANT_HOME/lib,
or made available
to Ant using other mechanisms like -lib or
CLASSPATH.
##################################################################
</fail>
<mkdir dir="${junit.output.dir}"/>
<junit printsummary="off" haltonfailure="no"
line 169 XX-> errorProperty="tests.failed"
failureProperty="tests.failed">
<classpath refid="junit.classpath"/>
<!-- TODO: create propertyset for test
properties, so each project can have its own set -->
<sysproperty key="dataDir" file="src/test"/>
<sysproperty key="tempDir"
file="${build.dir}/test"/>
Any suggestions? Or any pointers to getting the tests
to work in netbeans are appreciated.
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