Seam's TestNG support is quite nice, but there is one major design flaw that 
really affects test case design. 

The test classes are designed to be used as a black box. The init and cleanup 
methods are made to be used at the class instance level. Ramping up Seam is 
very slow. My project, which is still small takes a long time to initialize 
mainly because of: seam deployment, hibernate configuration, drools rule 
parsing.

Having each test class ramp up all of the full stack is not feasible for time 
reasons. This means that it is best to put all unit tests in one class with 
hundreds of methods.  I really don't like that design. I would prefer to build 
a test class for each entity bean and for each managed bean.

What would be great is to re-architect the test classes so that the init and 
cleanup are annotated with @BeforeSuite and @AfterSuite respectively. The 
variables that these classes should be either static or made in such a way that 
there is only one instance per test suite. 

If they could be made in such a way that they could also be run in parallel in 
one JVM instance (forkMode of once) that would be great as well, as then the 
tests could simulate a server with many requests at once.

I can probably hack this behavior into my test cases, but it would most likely 
break with changes to the source as I may have to use reflection to set the 
private variables.

Any chance at getting this type of functionality in the provided test classes?

Thanks,
Andrew

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