I just used MyEclipse to automatically generate some JUnit test cases. One of the generated methods looks like this:
@Ignore("Ignored") @Test
public void testCreateRevision()
{
fail("Not yet implemented"); // TODO
}
I added the @Ignore annotation manually. However, when I run the test, JUnit lists that method, and others like it, under "failures," rather than ignoring them (related: What's the difference between failure and error in JUnit?). And it displays the "Not yet implemented" message instead of the "Ignored" message. Clearly, fail() must be getting called, and therefore, the @Ignore assertion is not working.
What's going on here? Is there a setting I need to enable for this to work?
EDIT :
Things I have considered/tried so far:
- I am using JUnit 4, so it's not a version problem.
- I am importing
org.junit.Ignore, so it's not a case of the wrongIgnorebeing used. - I have tried using
@Ignorealone,@Ignore @Testand@Ignore("message") @Test; all fail.
EDIT 2 :
I created the tests with MyEclipse, via New > Other; Java > JUnit > JUnit Test Case; New JUnit 4 test, and the library in my build path is JUnit 4. I'm building with ant and actually running the case with MyEclipse.
org.junit.Ignoreor whatever it's supposed to be, and not some other annotation from a totally different package which just happens to have the same name. – MatrixFrog Jun 2 '11 at 17:30testand remove the @Ignore annotation and try again. If the test is not executed means that you are running Junit 3 – Op De Cirkel Jun 2 '11 at 17:40