Writing the new ant I stumbled across the problem of test cases leaving threads behind,
after returning control to the runner. My trusted colleague and JUnit Runner expert Mark
Burnett and I, knocked up a quick and dirty junit runner that actually allows you to
spot such a condition.
Consider the following testcode:
@Test public void losingThreads() throws InterruptedException { Thread newThread = new Thread() { public void run() { for(;;); } }; newThread.start(); }
This thing happily spawns a thread and then returns. You get a green test case, but
your IDE might behave somewhat funny as there are still threads open.
To help diagnose these problems we came up with this threadpolicerunner.
If you now annotate your test case like this, to use it:
@RunWith(ThreadPoliceRunner.class) public class ThreadTest { @Test public void losingThreads() throws InterruptedException { Thread newThread = new Thread() { public void run() { for(;;); } }; newThread.start(); } @Test public void notLosingThreads() throws InterruptedException { Thread newThread = new Thread() { public void run() { } }; newThread.start(); newThread.join(); } }
Your runner will give you the following feedback:
Nice, isn’t?
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