Hi,

Thanks for the replies!

I have setup my tests so that both .xml files are called from seperate
directories.

However I have a problem creating the Web Test Result Report. I get the
following
error when executing myTest2.xml:

java.util.concurrent.RejectedExecutionException

It looks as if the tests ran ok (i.e. myTest1.xml and myTest2.xml) but there
seems to be an issue with the report generation.

When viewing the WebTest report in my web browser I just get the following:

WebTest
WebTest Test Report

Any ideas as to what might be wrong?

thanks!

Running tests: 


Thomas Klein-10 wrote:
> 
> Hi there, 
> 
> I found it very helpful to use the "dir" attribute along with the
> "antfile". I'll explain below.
> 
> E.g., we have one parent folder that has a build.xml and a webtest xml
> file that holds references to all tests to be executed.
> These tests (separate files) are located in subdirectories of a sibling
> folder of the "parent" folder, like:
> 
> - parent_dir (we run "webtest.sh" from here)
>   -- build.xml
>   -- alltests.xml
> - testcases_dir
>   -- testtopic_1
>      --- test1.xml
>      --- test2.xml
>   -- testtopic_2
>      --- test3.xml
>      --- test4.xml
> 
> What we wanted to have is a SINGLE big report in ONE directory to hold all
> results.
> The easiest way for us to do this was to use (in the "alltests.xml") the
> following notation:
> 
>     <ant antfile="test4.xml" dir="../testcases_dir/testtopic_2" />
> 
> Okay, you might say, "this is the same like"...:
> 
>     <ant antfile="../testcases_dir/testtopic_2/test4.xml" />
> 
> ...is it? NOPE! I consider this an IMPORTANT fact which is yet little
> mentioned.
> ( Not everyone who is testing software knows the nuts and bolts of ANT by
> heart! ANT is a developer tool. Keep this in mind. )
> 
> The way we organized our test directories enables us to re-use the same
> test4.xml file from inside its containing folder and run it there,
> creating a dedicated "results" folder for the test only in the same
> directory. If we want / need that.
> 
> Hope this helps (especially the "noobs" like me... Or like I was some
> weeks ago)
> 
> Thomas Klein
> 
> Senior Associate, QA | Sapient
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
> On Behalf Of wing-tung Leung
> Sent: Thursday, February 04, 2010 5:41 PM
> To: [email protected]; Iain_10
> Subject: Re: [Webtest] Organising Tests for WebTest
> 
> On Thu, Feb 4, 2010 at 4:40 PM, Iain_10 <[email protected]> wrote:
>> I am looking at the best way to organise my Web Tests.
> 
> I guess there is no "BEST" way to organize your tests. It depends on
> your amount of tests scripts, and your test scenario's.
> 
> We have rather a limited set of test files (roughly 20), and we store
> them all inside a single "tests" directory. Names of the file either
> refer to the tested functionality, or to the issue ID from the bug
> tracking system.
> 
>> But it doesn't seem to execute the tests in myTest2.xml.
> 
> I guess you miss a reference to "myTest2.xml".
> 
> In our case, the global "build.xml" contains the property
> "wt.testInWork" referring to "tests/allests.xml". The latter file
> contains a list of all test files, each one listed with separate <ant>
> tag. Not really advanced, I suggest that you get it working first, and
> grow into a more formal structure when you feel the need.
> 
> Example content "allTests.xml":
> 
> <project default="test">
>     <target name="test" description="runs all the tests">
>         <ant antfile="test1.xml"/>
>         <ant antfile="test2.xml"/>
>         <ant antfile="test3.xml"/>
>    </target>
> </project>
> 
> 
> BTW, please quote mails inline, and enter your remarks inline is as
> well. Makes following threads much easier.
> 
> Regards,
> 
> Tung
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> 
> 

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