Sorry I managed now I write my command like this:
buildr clean build package project:copy_files test:Suite junit:report and it works I will soon upload my example to GIT On Thu, Aug 23, 2012 at 11:03 AM, Odelya Holiday <ode...@alicanto.com> wrote: > Sorry - my mistake - the task is not being invoked. > > I defined it like this: > > task :copy_files => [task(:integration)] do > // copy the files > end > > And my call to buildr is: > > buildr clean build package integration test:Suite junit:report > test=all --verbose --trace > > Thanks > > On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 10:14 PM, Odelya Holiday <ode...@alicanto.com> wrote: >> Thanks >> >> Now it works perfectly. >> >> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 10:03 PM, Alex Boisvert <alex.boisv...@gmail.com> >> wrote: >>> Oh forgot you were using integration. >>> >>> In that case, you can create a new task that depends on the integration >>> task, >>> >>> define :main_project do >>> # sub projects >>> >>> task :copy_files => [task(:integration)] do >>> # do stuff >>> end >>> end >>> >>> and then add this task on the command line: >>> >>> buildr [other targets] main_project:copy_files >>> >>> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 11:52 AM, Odelya Holiday <ode...@alicanto.com>wrote: >>> >>>> This is not working for me. >>>> >>>> since I see that the build task is extending BEFORE the integration >>>> tests. In my integration tests I create the test war that will be >>>> copied to the real environment in case of success test. >>>> >>>> If I extend build, it is being invoked before the integration.setup >>>> method that I declared. >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 6:50 PM, Alex Boisvert <alex.boisv...@gmail.com> >>>> wrote: >>>> > On Wed, Aug 22, 2012 at 6:54 AM, Odelya Holiday <ode...@alicanto.com> >>>> wrote: >>>> > >>>> >> I have 3 projects which are defined in my buildfile. >>>> >> >>>> >> I would like to define, that if all the tests passed successfully, it >>>> >> should do specific tasks. (copying files). >>>> >> >>>> >> So I declared in the main project definition: >>>> >> >>>> >> test.using :fail_on_failure=>true >>>> >> >>>> > >>>> > By the way, :fail_on_failre is true by default, so you don't need to >>>> > specify this unless you want to set it to false. >>>> > >>>> > Hooking into the main project definition is the right approach since it >>>> > implicitly depends on sub-projects. >>>> > >>>> > >>>> >> and extended the test task like this: >>>> >> >>>> >> test do |test_task| >>>> >> end >>>> >> >>>> >> however, I see that if 2 of the 3 tests succeeded, the extended task >>>> >> is being created. >>>> >> >>>> >> I would like it to be create only if all 3 succeeded. >>>> >> >>>> > >>>> > Instead of enhancing the test task, use the build task. >>>> > >>>> > build do >>>> > # whatever you want >>>> > end >>>> > >>>> > The build task depends on the test (see default dependencies >>>> > here< >>>> https://cwiki.apache.org/confluence/display/BUILDR/12+Things+to+Know+About+Buildr >>>> >) >>>> > so it will only be run if all the tests pass. >>>> > >>>> > alex >>>> >>>> >>>> >>>> -- >>>> Odelya >>>> >> >> >> >> -- >> Odelya > > > > -- > Odelya -- Odelya