Ah ha!
OK, at least for making sure to study the state of the screen. You want to do the following:
In your emulator, go to the Settings \ Applications \ Developement area and uncheck "Stay Awake"
At this point, lock your emulator. You should see the lock screen.
Now, run your test for the wake lock.
For me I have done the following (which uses roboguice 1.1.2)
@MediumTest
public void test_And_Screen_Is_In_Sleep_It_Should_Not_Make_Screen_Bright() throws Exception
{
//currently test hates this even after I have assigned it the proper rights
//to quote Ted Striker: What a pisser! :)
//_power.get().goToSleep(0);
boolean screenOn = _power.get().isScreenOn();
assertFalse(screenOn);
if (!screenOn)
{
_wake.get();
boolean screenOn1 = _power.get().isScreenOn();
assertFalse(screenOn1);
}
if (_wake != null)
{
_wake.release();
}
}
I have an interface called IWake like so:
public interface IWake
{
void get();
void release();
}
In the implementation for IWake I simply setup the class to do all the heavy lifting for acquiring (get()) and release( which is also release())
For force the testing device to lock, I came up with a great idea since you (typically) can't use that sleep method in the PowerManager.
Do this!
In my test method I did this for the setup:
@Override
public void setUp() throws Exception
{
super.setUp();
_pwr = (PowerManager) getInstrumentation().getContext().getSystemService(Context.POWER_SERVICE);
//setup timeout which is part of: android.provider.Settings.System
System.putInt(getInstrumentation().getContext().getContentResolver(), System.SCREEN_OFF_TIMEOUT, 0);
}
Basically I decided to change the timeout to 0 in the settings. Since this happens it locks it instantly. How freakin' cool is this? :) Anyways, I hope this helps others
Cheers,
Kelly