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I want to control the concurrency of some of my specs using SBT tags.

For example, I don't want more than 1 test that uses the database to run at the same time.

With ScalaTest, I would do

@TagAnnotation("database")
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Target({ElementType.TYPE})
public @interface DatabaseTest { }

@DatabaseTest
class MyDatabaseTest1 ...

@DatabaseTest
class MyDatabaseTest2 ...

and then in build.sbt,

concurrentRestrictions in Global += exclusiveGroups(Tag("database"))

Most tests to be executed in parallel, but MyDatabaseTest1 and MyDatabaseTest2 would not run at the same time as the other.

Can I do this with specs2?

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  • Did you try to annotate your specification with the same tags? I actually was not aware that you could reduce the level of concurrence of specifications using this. Note that each specification stays concurrent unless you use the sequential argument.
    – Eric
    Apr 13, 2016 at 9:30
  • @Eric, er, TagAnnotation is a ScalaTest annotation that is (I assume) consumed by the ScalaTest runner and exposed to SBT. I should have made that clear. Apr 13, 2016 at 15:10
  • And yeah, the execution of examples within a spec is controlled by specs2, not SBT. I find that easy enough to control as all examples can be seen in one file. Apr 13, 2016 at 15:13
  • Ok, I got it. This is not supported yet. One way to do this in specs2 would be to create a parent spec with links to the database specs and execute that one sequentially. The drawback is that you have to maintain this parent spec and add new specs when you have some. So the better way is for you to wait for me to implement it :-)
    – Eric
    Apr 13, 2016 at 16:10
  • I have added the missing support for tags in 3.7.3-20160413201225-0d1765e but in the form of tags that specs2 already knows about: etorreborre.github.io/specs2/guide/SPECS2-3.7.3/…. I have tried to observe the "no concurrency" behaviour of sbt but couldn't see anything though (but I see that the tags are found).
    – Eric
    Apr 13, 2016 at 20:29

1 Answer 1

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I added the functionality myself. (Issue for built-in support: https://github.com/etorreborre/specs2/issues/470)

src/test/java/test/Tag.scala

First define an annotation to be used. (I believe this can only be done in Java.)

package test;

import java.lang.annotation.*;

@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Target({ElementType.TYPE})
public @interface Tag {
    String name();
}

src/test/scala/test/TaggingFramework.scala

Then define an implementation of sbt.testing.Framework that wraps a Framework and adds tags for the annotations. (Note: This depends on org.scala-sbt:test-interface. If you are already pulling in specs2, it should be there already.)

package test

import java.lang.annotation.Annotation
import sbt.testing._
import scala.util.Try

class TaggingFramework(framework: Framework) extends Framework {
  def fingerprints(): Array[Fingerprint] = framework.fingerprints()

  def name = s"TaggingFramework(${framework.name})"

  def runner(args: Array[String], remoteArgs: Array[String], testClassLoader: ClassLoader) = {
    val runner = framework.runner(args, remoteArgs, testClassLoader)
    println(runner)
    new Runner {
      def args() = runner.args()

      def done() = runner.done()

      def remoteArgs = runner.remoteArgs()

      def tasks(taskDefs: Array[TaskDef]) = runner.tasks(taskDefs).map { task =>
        new Task {
          def execute(eventHandler: EventHandler, loggers: Array[Logger]) = task.execute(eventHandler, loggers)
          def taskDef = task.taskDef
          def tags = task.tags ++ {
            val fingerprint = taskDef.fingerprint
            Try {
              val isModule = fingerprint.getClass.getMethod("isModule").invoke(fingerprint).asInstanceOf[Boolean]
              val className = taskDef.fullyQualifiedName + (if (isModule) "$" else "")
              println(testClassLoader.loadClass(className).getAnnotationsByType(classOf[Tag]).map(_.name).toSeq)
              testClassLoader.loadClass(className).getAnnotationsByType(classOf[Tag]).map(_.name)
            }.getOrElse(Array.empty)
          }
        }
      }
    }
  }
}

project/TaggingTestFramework.scala

Then in the build definition, define a TaggingTestFramework subclass of sbt.TestFramework. This will load the TaggingFramework if it is present. Otherwise, it just uses the original framework.

import sbt.TestFramework
import sbt.testing._
import scala.language.existentials
import scala.util.Try

class TaggingTestFramework(testFramework: TestFramework) extends TestFramework() {
  override def create(loader: ClassLoader, log: sbt.Logger) = testFramework.create(loader, log).map { framework =>
    Try(
      Class.forName("test.TaggingFramework", true, loader).asInstanceOf[Class[Framework]]
        .getConstructor(classOf[Framework]).newInstance(framework)
    ).getOrElse(framework)
  }

  override def toString = s"TaggingTestFramework($testFramework)"
}

build.sbt

And wrap the testFrameworks.

testFrameworks := testFrameworks.value.map(new TaggingTestFramework(_))

This should mostly work any Scala or Java framework, including specs2.


src/test/scala/example/MySpec.scala

Finally, to use add a tag to a testing task, simply add the annotation to the class.

import org.specs2.mutable.Specification
import test.Tag

@Tag(name = "database")
class MySpec extends Specification ...

Note 1: This currently does not work with inheritance.

Note 2: SBT forked tests work very differently. This and many other testing features are not available for forked tests.

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