on 4/29/02 8:23 PM, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Jon,
>
> I haven't tested this myself, but what happens if you remove the
> unitTestSourceDirectory tag altogether? Currently the documentation isn't
> so great on what's optional or not.
>
> I'll fix it later today hopefully.
Yup, things don't work either if you remove them. Try it with JCS.
[161][ ~/checkout/jakarta-turbine-jcs ]% cvs diff project.xml
Index: project.xml
===================================================================
RCS file: /home/cvs/jakarta-turbine-jcs/project.xml,v
retrieving revision 1.5
diff -u -r1.5 project.xml
--- project.xml 19 Apr 2002 08:26:27 -0000 1.5
+++ project.xml 30 Apr 2002 03:49:33 -0000
@@ -139,14 +139,6 @@
<sourceDirectories>
<sourceDirectory>src/java</sourceDirectory>
</sourceDirectories>
- <unitTestSourceDirectory>src/test</unitTestSourceDirectory>
- <aspectSourceDirectories></aspectSourceDirectories>
- <unitTestPatterns>
- <unitTestPattern>include = **/TestJCS.java</unitTestPattern>
- <unitTestPattern>include = **/TestSimpleLoad.java</unitTestPattern>
- <unitTestPattern>include = **/TestDiskCache.java</unitTestPattern>
- <unitTestPattern>include =
**/TestDiskCacheConcurrent.java</unitTestPattern>
- </unitTestPatterns>
<jarResources></jarResources>
<jars></jars>
</build>
Sorry about the line wrapping, but you get the point. Try building with that
project.xml. It generates an empty .jar file. Seems like it should fail or
something.
-jon
--
Nixon: "At least with liquor, I don't lose motivation."