[ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/KAFKA-1782?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=14630163#comment-14630163 ]
Alexander Pakulov commented on KAFKA-1782: ------------------------------------------ Updated reviewboard https://reviews.apache.org/r/35615/diff/ against branch trunk > Junit3 Misusage > --------------- > > Key: KAFKA-1782 > URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/KAFKA-1782 > Project: Kafka > Issue Type: Bug > Reporter: Guozhang Wang > Assignee: Alexander Pakulov > Labels: newbie > Fix For: 0.8.3 > > Attachments: KAFKA-1782.patch, KAFKA-1782.patch, > KAFKA-1782_2015-06-18_11:52:49.patch, KAFKA-1782_2015-07-15_16:57:44.patch, > KAFKA-1782_2015-07-16_11:50:05.patch > > > This is found while I was working on KAFKA-1580: in many of our cases where > we explicitly extend from junit3suite (e.g. ProducerFailureHandlingTest), we > are actually misusing a bunch of features that only exist in Junit4, such as > (expected=classOf). For example, the following code > {code} > import org.scalatest.junit.JUnit3Suite > import org.junit.Test > import java.io.IOException > class MiscTest extends JUnit3Suite { > @Test (expected = classOf[IOException]) > def testSendOffset() { > } > } > {code} > will actually pass even though IOException was not thrown since this > annotation is not supported in Junit3. Whereas > {code} > import org.junit._ > import java.io.IOException > class MiscTest extends JUnit3Suite { > @Test (expected = classOf[IOException]) > def testSendOffset() { > } > } > {code} > or > {code} > import org.scalatest.junit.JUnitSuite > import org.junit._ > import java.io.IOException > class MiscTest extends JUnit3Suite { > @Test (expected = classOf[IOException]) > def testSendOffset() { > } > } > {code} > or > {code} > import org.junit._ > import java.io.IOException > class MiscTest { > @Test (expected = classOf[IOException]) > def testSendOffset() { > } > } > {code} > will fail. > I would propose to not rely on Junit annotations other than @Test itself but > use scala unit test annotations instead, for example: > {code} > import org.junit._ > import java.io.IOException > class MiscTest { > @Test > def testSendOffset() { > intercept[IOException] { > //nothing > } > } > } > {code} > will fail with a clearer stacktrace. -- This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA (v6.3.4#6332)