I like the maven convention a lot: There is a separate source tree for main and test in the same project, main code gets deployed, test code doesn't. Package structures can be (but don't have to be) identical.
project
src
main
java // source files
resources // xml, properties etc
test
java // source files
resources // xml, properties etc
And in eclipse, when you choose new -> JUnit test case
, you just change the source folder to src/test/java and leave the suggested package as is.
(One of the benefits of remaining in the same package is having access to protected and package scoped members, although this is not 'proper' unit test behavior)
Update: Here's some code to illustrate my last point:
Main class (in src/main/java):
package com.test;
public class Foo{
static class Phleem{
public Phleem(final String stupidParameter){
}
}
String bar;
protected String baz;
protected Object thingy;
}
Test class (in src/test/java):
package com.test;
import org.junit.Test;
public class FooTest{
@Test
public void testFoo(){
final Foo foo = new Foo();
foo.bar = "I can access default-scoped members";
foo.baz = "And protected members, too";
foo.thingy = new Foo.Phleem("And I can access default-scoped classes");
}
}