Hi,

if you write your tests in Groovy, what about using "normal" Java tools
to select and run your tests as JUnit tests?

Cheers,
Marc.
-- 
Web: http://www.efficient-webtesting.com
Blog: http://mguillem.wordpress.com

Hernan Castagnola wrote:
> Sorry for the easy question. But I have been investigating and I cound
> solve this:
> 
> I have just this test case in the alltests.xml
> 
> <project default="test">
>     <target name="test" description="runs all the tests">
>         <ant antfile="Blah.xml" />
>     </target>
> </project>
> 
> however when I go to the project folder and I run the webtest.sh script,
> 3 groovy scripts runs after the blah.xml test case is completed. I still
> can't find out in which file I set up which groovy test should be run. I
> tried to do this:
> 
> <project default="test">
>     <target name="test" description="runs all the tests">
>         <ant antfile="Blah.xml" />
>        <ant antfile="Blah2.groovy" />
> </target>
> </project>
> 
> 
> To run that groovy test. But it failed.
> 
> 
> Does anyone know where do I set up which groovy tests should be run?
> 
> Thanks!
> 
> Hernan

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