Sorry about the logging imports. I must have done that at some point. The failed unit tests are because of some of the recent work involving the render cycle. Ideally I wanted to not check these things in until they were somewhat more stable, but because I tend to be nomadic somewhat with computer locations I went ahead and committed them.
Should I be doing this in a branch, or just leave things local until I really have basic tests not failing anymore ? On 4/8/06, Howard Lewis Ship <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > Been looking at 4.0.1 (really, SVN head). > > I'm finding a couple of places where the code uses direct references > to Log4J API, rather than commons-logging. I'm changing those back to > commons-logging. > > I'm also seeing some build failures: > > Testcase: testRewinding(org.apache.tapestry.html.TestShell): FAILED > > Unexpected method call getResponseBuilder(): > getResponseBuilder(): expected: 0, actual: 1 > junit.framework.AssertionFailedError: > Unexpected method call getResponseBuilder(): > getResponseBuilder(): expected: 0, actual: 1 > at org.easymock.internal.ObjectMethodsFilter.invoke( > ObjectMethodsFilter.java:44) > at $Proxy0.getResponseBuilder(Unknown Source) > at org.apache.tapestry.AbstractComponent.renderBody( > AbstractComponent.java:434) > at org.apache.tapestry.html.Shell.renderComponent(Shell.java:119) > at org.apache.tapestry.AbstractComponent.render(AbstractComponent.java > :617) > at org.apache.tapestry.html.TestShell.testRewinding(TestShell.java:75) > > > -- > Howard M. Lewis Ship > Independent J2EE / Open-Source Java Consultant > Creator, Jakarta Tapestry > Creator, Jakarta HiveMind > > Professional Tapestry training, mentoring, support > and project work. http://howardlewisship.com > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > -- Jesse Kuhnert Tacos/Tapestry, team member/developer Open source based consulting work centered around dojo/tapestry/tacos/hivemind. http://opennotion.com
