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.
sequential
argument.TagAnnotation
is a ScalaTest annotation that is (I assume) consumed by the ScalaTest runner and exposed to SBT. I should have made that clear.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).