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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-3762?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13203970#comment-13203970
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Dawid Weiss commented on LUCENE-3762:
-------------------------------------

Yes, it would be possible. Either at the runner level (worse) or by using a 
custom rule and not a TestWatcher subclass. What TestWatcher does is this:
{code}
                        public void evaluate() throws Throwable {
                                starting(description);
                                try {
                                        base.evaluate();
                                        succeeded(description);
                                } catch (AssumptionViolatedException e) {
                                        throw e;
                                } catch (Throwable t) {
                                        failed(t, description);
                                        throw t;
                                } finally {
                                        finished(description);
                                }
                        }
{code}
so it effectively skips assumption-failed tests and they're not passed to 
LuceneTestCase. Doable, but I think worth a separate issue?
                
> Upgrade JUnit to 4.10, refactor state-machine of detecting setUp/tearDown 
> call chaining.
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: LUCENE-3762
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-3762
>             Project: Lucene - Java
>          Issue Type: Improvement
>            Reporter: Dawid Weiss
>            Assignee: Dawid Weiss
>            Priority: Trivial
>             Fix For: 3.6, 4.0
>
>         Attachments: LUCENE-3762.patch
>
>
> Both Lucene and Solr use JUnit 4.7. I suggest we move forward and upgrade to 
> JUnit 4.10 which provides several infrastructural changes (serializable 
> Description objects, class-level rules, various tweaks). JUnit 4.10 also 
> changes (or fixes, depends how you look at it) the order in which 
> @Before/@After hooks and @Rules are applied. This makes the old state-machine 
> in LuceneTestCase fail (because the order is changed).
> I rewrote the state machine and used a different, I think simpler, although 
> Uwe may disagree :), mechanism in which the hook methods setUp/ tearDown are 
> still there, but they are empty at the top level and serve only to detect 
> whether subclasses chain super.setUp/tearDown properly (if they override 
> anything).
> In the long term, I would love to just get rid of public setup/teardown 
> methods and make them private (so that they cannot be overriden or even seen 
> by subclasses) but this will require changes to the runner itself.

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