"How do you test the type-safetiness of your genericized API?" IMHO, the short answer to your question should be:
- Don't use any
@SuppressWarnings
- Make sure you compile without warnings (or errors)
The longer answer is that "type safety" is not a property of an API, it is a property of the programming language and its type system. Java 5 generics is type safe in the sense that it gives you the guarantee that you will not have a type error (ClassCastException) at runtime unless it originates from a user-level cast operation (and if you program with generics, you rarely need such casts anymore). The only backdoor is the use of raw types for interoperability with pre-Java 5 code, but for these cases the compiler will issue warnings such as the infamous "unchecked cast" warning to indicate that type-safety may be compromised. However, short of such warnings, Java will guarantee your type safety.
So unless you are a compiler writer (or you do not trust the compiler), it seems strange to want to test "type safety". In the code example that you give, if you are the implementor of ArrayList<T>, you should only care to give addAll the most flexible type signature that allows you to write a functionally correct implementation. For example, you could type the argument as Collection<T>, but also as Collection<? extends T>, where the latter is preferred because it is more flexible. While you can over-constrain your types, the programming language and the compiler will make sure that you cannot write something that is not type-safe: for example, you simply cannot write a correct implementation for addAll where the argument has type Collection<?> or Collection<? super T>.
The only exception I can think of, is where you are writing a facade for some unsafe part of the system, and want to use generics to enforce some kind of guarantees on the use of this part through the facade. For example, although Java's reflection is not controlled as such by the type system, Java uses generics in things such as Class<T>, to allow that some reflective operations, such as clazz.newInstance(), to integrate with the type system.