Yes, no, maybe. :) Simple answer. I'm using Watir tests, and running them
through Cruise Control, so that they're continuous integration tests,
reports generated through http://test-report.rubyforge.org/. xml reports,
cruise picks them up since they're xunit style and publishes them out.
Cruise emails the reports out.
Where to locate it in svn is a good question. We currently have our FAT in
it's own location. We also have a ruby install in svn, for better or worse,
which is able to be run in ci and on any workstation, and able to easily
update for shared libraries.
-Charley
On 12/19/06, [EMAIL PROTECTED] <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hi,
I just started using WATIR and fell in love at first sight. I'm sure
what I'm trying to do has been done before, so I thought I'd throw a net
out here and see what I catch...
Our dev team is building a half-dozen different apps (WARs) that, as a
whole, will eventually replace a legacy application. We've started
writing WATIR tests to check some of the individual WARs, but what I'm
hoping to do is get some advise on:
1) How do people schedule automatic execution of a bunch of
different WATIR tests, similar to Continuum might do. Is everyone out
there writing their own cron + scripts?
2) Is there are pre-built "watir-harness" that will email
someone when a test doesn't run as expected?
3) Do people typically source control their WATIR tests along
side the code that's under test? Or do they typically group all their
WATIR tests together in a separate project for
ease-of-reuse/ease-of-discovery purposes?
Thanks in advance!
Tom Vaughan
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