I know this is bad practice, but it needs to be done, or I'll need to switch to testng. Is there a way, similar to JUnit 3's testSuite, to specify the order of the tests to be run in a class?
Thanks for the help!
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I know this is bad practice, but it needs to be done, or I'll need to switch to testng. Is there a way, similar to JUnit 3's testSuite, to specify the order of the tests to be run in a class? Thanks for the help! |
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If you're sure you really want to do this: There may be a better way, but this is all I could come up with... JUnit4 has an annotation: @RunWith which lets you override the default Runner for your tests. In your case you would want to create a special subclass of BlockJunit4ClassRunner, and override computeTestMethods() to return tests in the order you want them executed. For example, let's say I want to execute my tests in reverse alphabetical order:
Running this test produces: C B A For your specific case, you would want a comparator that would sort the tests by name in the order you want them executed. (I would suggest defining the comparator using something like Google Guava's class Ordering.explicit("methodName1","methodName2").onResultOf(...); where onResultOf is provided a function that converts FrameworkMethod to its name... though obviously you are free to implement that any way you want. |
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I can see several reasons for doing this, especially when using JUnit to run functional tests or test persistent objects. For example, consider an object
However, to be able to test the update functionality, I would first need to insert the article. To test the delete functionality, I would also need to insert an article. So, in practice, the insert functionality is already tested both in The same goes for running functional tests against for example a restful API. JUnit is great also for these cases if it wasn't for the undeterministic ordering of tests. That said, I extended Michael D's This is how it is used. It avoids the need for naming tests like
No matter how these tests are placed in the file, they will always be run as Implementation follows. First, the annotation
Then, the modified
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From JUnit version 4.11 onwards, it is possible to influence the order of test execution by annotating your class with |
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If you want to run junit tests in order "just as they present in your source code", and don't want to modify your tests code, see my note about this here: How to run junit tests in order as they present in your source code But it is really not a good idea, tests must be independent. |
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