Hans Dockter wrote:
On Sep 21, 2009, at 11:41 PM, Adam Murdoch wrote:
Tomek Kaczanowski wrote:
Hi Tom,
- only execute a single test:
gradle test(test.XXTest)
- execute all tests extending a base class:
gradle test(test.AbtractXXXTest+) -- don't know if a plus
sign is best
perhaps a minus sign is more appropriate
or
gradle test(test.AbstractXXXTest-)
- execute all tests in a package:
gradle test(org.gradle.*)
gradle test(org.gradle.**) -- including contained packages
or a combination of them separated by comma's:
gradle test(test.XXTest,test.YYTest,org.gradle.**)
I'm a TestNG user, and I'd be interested in telling Gradle to run
specific groups of tests (defined using TestNG annotations). Will it
also be possible with Gradle ?
Or more generally, I'd like to treat Gradle as a proxy, that would
pass some parameters to the testing framework below (in my case
TestNG).
This is a good way of thinking about the problem, I think. To run a
specific set of tests, you effectively want to use a set include and
exclude patterns which are different to those coded in the build
script. If we had some general way of configuring tasks from the
command-line, you could use that for running selected tests, but you
could also use it for a bunch of other things (eg switching on
showing test output on the console, or running in debug mode, max
number of forks, etc).
I also think this generic approach is the way to go.
Perhaps:
gradle test test.includes='some/pattern/**'
test.excludes='some/other/pattern/**'
That is, we add the following:
gradle <task>.<property>=<value>
Where <task> follows the same format as gradle <task> or gradle -x
<task>
We could possibly merge this with the -P option, so we would allow:
gradle -Pprop=value // sets prop on all projects
gradle prop=value // as above
gradle -Ptest.prop=value // sets the prop on all test tasks
gradle test.prop=value // as above
gradle -Pgradle-core:test.prop=value // sets the prop on
:gradle-core:test task
gradle -Pgradle-core.prop=value // sets the prop on :gradle-core
projects
I like this very much. I guess the last two example should also work
without -P.
Just to be sure. You mean we can get rid of the -P notation, right? I
think this is a good idea.
Yes.
Adam
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