Hi,
I am using the Ant tasks to create code coverage for Groovy and Java files. For Groovy files I do not see any per-test coverage in my HTML report. For Java classes this works fine. In my Ant clover-setup task I define the patterns **/*Test.java as well as **/*Test.groovy as filesets for testsources. I do the same when using the task clover-report. The manual states that you need to use fully qualified class names in your test sources for annotations and classes. I tried that but it still doesn't do it (also I think that this is not usable). Is this still true with Clover 3.1? How does the Grails plugin do the trick. It looks like I am missing something. Any help would be highly appreciated.
Thanks,
Ben
Hi Benjamin,
Please have a look at the Test+Optimization+Quick+Start+Guide+for+Ant chapter "Running Java and Groovy test cases".
According to Ant documentation, the <junit>/<batchtest> collects the included resources from any number of nested resource collections and then generates a test class name for each resource that ends in .java or .class. It means that if you put *.groovy extension, such files will be ignored.
However, you can pass compiled classes to junit Ant task, for instance:
<fileset dir="${build.dir}"> <include name="**/*Test.class"/> </fileset>
Then Ant will find both Java and Groovy tests.
Please bear in mind that currently Clover cannot optimize Groovy test cases. An improvement CLOV-1152 will solve this problem.
References:
Online forums and learning are now in one easy-to-use experience.
By continuing, you accept the updated Community Terms of Use and acknowledge the Privacy Policy. Your public name, photo, and achievements may be publicly visible and available in search engines.
You must be a registered user to add a comment. If you've already registered, sign in. Otherwise, register and sign in.