Hi, I got it working. It's great. At some point we'll try to find some way to automate it further as part of the build process, but for now it's fine.
Rob On Mar 25, 2013, at 5:27 PM, Bertrand Delacretaz wrote: > Hi Rob, > > On Mon, Mar 25, 2013 at 2:42 PM, Robert A. Decker <[email protected]> > wrote: >> I'm setting up some sling junit tests. >> http://sling.apache.org/site/sling-testing-tools.html >> >> But does anyone have advice on how to organize these tests? I know that they >> have to be installed with >> a bundle, but this means changing the scope of some testing dependencies >> from test to compile.... > > I assume you mean JUnit tests that run server-side in a Sling instance. > > The way I use them is to create a normal bundle just for these tests > (so having them under src/main in my source code), along with any > scriptable tests included as initial content. > > Then, to run the tests, load any required additional bundles to > provide dependencies that the tests require, and the test bundles > themselves, before running the tests via the Sling JUnit servlet. You > could also use an install folder with a specific run mode > (install.testing) for that. This can be automated with simple utility > classes that run before your tests, see The > testing/samples/integration-tests. > > The problem with this setup is that you cannot run the tests directly > from your IDE, but I don't think that's possible without IDE > extensions anyway, as the tests have to be shipped to the Sling > instance in a bundle after compiling them anyway. My setup for testing > is to start the Sling instance in debug mode, connect my IDE as the > test debugger, build and install the bundle with Maven and run the > tests by refreshing the JUnit servlet page in my browser. > >> ...And related to that then, if I declare a scope in a child pom that is >> different than the parent pom, the child declaration >> overrides the parent? ... > > I think so. > > -Bertrand >
