I have a Java codebase that is developed exclusively in Eclipse. There are a set of JUnit4 tests that can be divided into two mutually exclusive subsets based on when they are expected to run:
- "Standard" tests should run when a developer right-clicks the test class (or containing project) and selects Run As > JUnit Test. Nothing unusual here—this is exactly how JUnit works in Eclipse.
- "Runtime" tests should only run when called programmatically from within the application when it is started up in a specific state.
The two types of tests might sit adjacent to each other in the same Java package. (Ideally we could intermix them in the same class, though that's not a hard requirement.)
My first solution was to annotate the "Runtime" test classes with a new
@TestOnLaunch
annotation. The application is able to find these classes,
and was running the tests contained in them (annotated with @Test
) using
JUnitCore.run(Class<?>...)
. However, these tests leak into the
"Standard" scenario above, because the Eclipse test runner will run any
method annotated with @Test
, regardless of the intent of my custom class
annotation.
Next I tried moving the @TestOnLaunch
annotation to the method level.
This prevents the "leakage" of the "Runtime" tests into the "Standard"
scenario, but now I can't seem to get JUnitCore
to run those test
methods. run.(Request)
with a Request
targeted at the correct class and
method, for example, fails with "No runnable methods", presumably
because it can't find the @Test
annotation (because it's not there).
I'm very interested to know if there's a "JUnit way" of solving this
kind of problem. Presumably I could write my own Runner
(to run methods
annotated with @TestOnLaunch
)—is this the right approach? If so, how do
I then kick off the testing programmatically with a bunch of classes,
analogous to calling JUnitCore.run(Class<?>...)
?