This commit prepends "[{index}] " to all custom display names
configured via @ParameterizedTest.
This provides better diagnostics between the "technical names" reported
on the CI server vs. the "display names" reported within a developer's
IDE.
See gh-23451
This commit introduces a test that verifies that
PathMatchingResourcePatternResolver can find files in the filesystem
that contain hashtags (#) in their names.
See gh-23532
Instead of relying on the CI server to apply and configure this plugin,
this commit does it directly in the Spring Framework build.
This allows us to take full control over which projects are published
and how.
See gh-23282
Prior to this commit, the build would use a custom task to create a BOM
and manually include/exclude/customize dependencies. It would also use
the "maven" plugin to customize the POM before publication.
This commit now uses a Gradle Java Platform for publishing the Spring
Framework BOM. We're also now using the "maven-publish" plugin to
prepare and customize publications.
This commit also tells the artifactory plugin (which is currently
applied only on the CI) not to publish internal modules.
See gh-23282
Prior to this commit, the Spring Framework build would mix proper
framework modules (spring-* modules published to maven central) and
internal modules such as:
* "spring-framework-bom" (which publishes the Framework BOM with all
modules)
* "spring-core-coroutines" which is an internal modules for Kotlin
compilation only
This commit renames these modules so that they don't start with
"spring-*"; we're also moving the "kotlin-coroutines" module under
"spring-core", since it's merged in the resulting JAR.
See gh-23282
This commit reorganizes tasks and scripts in the build to only apply
them where they're needed. We're considering here 3 "types" of projects
in our build:
* the root project, handling documentation, publishing, etc
* framework modules (a project that's published as a spring artifact)
* internal modules, such as the BOM, our coroutines support and our
integration-tests
With this change, we're strealining the project configuration for all
spring modules and only applying plugins when needed (typically our
kotlin support).
See gh-23282
Due to a bug (or "unintentional feature") in JUnit 4, overridden test
methods not annotated with @Test are still executed as test methods;
however, JUnit Jupiter does not support that. Thus, prior to this
commit, some overridden test methods in spring-core were no longer
executed after the migration from JUnit 4 to JUnit Jupiter.
This commit addresses this issue for such known use cases, but there
are likely other such use cases within Spring's test suite.
See gh-23451
This commit removes the JUnit 4 dependency from all modules except
spring-test which provides explicit JUnit 4 support.
This commit also includes the following.
- migration from JUnit 4 assertions to JUnit Jupiter assertions in all
Kotlin tests
- migration from JUnit 4 assumptions in Spring's TestGroup support to
JUnit Jupiter assumptions, based on org.opentest4j.TestAbortedException
- introduction of a new TestGroups utility class than can be used from
existing JUnit 4 tests in the spring-test module in order to perform
assumptions using JUnit 4's Assume class
See gh-23451
This commit migrates parameterized tests in spring-core using the
"composed @ParameterizedTest" approach. This approach is reused in
follow-up commits for the migration of the remaining modules.
For a concrete example, see AbstractDataBufferAllocatingTests and its
subclasses (e.g., DataBufferTests).
Specifically, AbstractDataBufferAllocatingTests declares a custom
@ParameterizedDataBufferAllocatingTest annotation that is
meta-annotated with @ParameterizedTest and
@MethodSource("org.springframework.core.io.buffer.AbstractDataBufferAllocatingTests#dataBufferFactories()").
Individual methods in concrete subclasses are then annotated with
@ParameterizedDataBufferAllocatingTest instead of @ParameterizedTest or
@Test.
The approach makes the migration from JUnit 4 to JUnit Jupiter rather
straightforward; however, there is one major downside. The arguments
for a @ParameterizedTest test method can only be accessed by the test
method itself. It is not possible to access them in an @BeforeEach
method (see https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/issues/944).
Consequently, we are forced to declare the parameters in each such
method and delegate to a custom "setup" method. Although this is a bit
cumbersome, I feel it is currently the best way to achieve fine grained
parameterized tests within our test suite without implementing a custom
TestTemplateInvocationContextProvider for each specific use case.
Once https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/issues/878 is resolved, we
should consider migrating to parameterized test classes.
See gh-23451
This first commit for this issue:
- allows JUnit Jupiter to be used for all tests
- adds a dependency on mockito-junit-jupiter
- migrates tests in spring-core to JUnit Jupiter, except parameterized
tests
The following script was developed in order to semi-automate the
migration process.
https://github.com/sbrannen/junit-converters/blob/master/junit4ToJUnitJupiter.zsh
See gh-23451
ClassLoaderAwareUndeclaredThrowableStrategy fails with a VerifyError on recent JDKs after the CGLIB 3.3 upgrade. The alternative is to replace it with a plain ClassLoaderAwareGeneratorStrategy (extracted from CglibSubclassingInstantiationStrategy) and custom UndeclaredThrowableException handling in CglibMethodInvocation.
See gh-23453
Prior to this commit, StopWatch used System.currentTimeMillis() to
track and report running time in milliseconds.
This commit updates the internals of StopWatch to use System.nanoTime()
instead of System.currentTimeMillis(). Consequently, running time is
now tracked and reported in nanoseconds; however, users still have the
option to retrieve running time in milliseconds or seconds.
Closes gh-23235
Since arbitrary levels of proxies do not occur, this commit replaces
the `while` loop in SerializableTypeWrapper.unwrap() with a simple
`if` statement.
Closes gh-23415
Since Java 8, putIfAbsent() is a standard method in java.util.Map. We
therefore no longer need the custom implementation that overrides the
standard implementation in HashMap.
Prior to this commit, AnnotationAttributes#assertNotException checked if
the attribute value was an instance of Exception. Although this was
typically sufficient, the scope was not always broad enough -- for
example, if AnnotationReadingVisitorUtils#convertClassValues stored a
Throwable in the map (such as a LinkageError).
This commit fixes this by checking for an instance of Throwable in
AnnotationAttributes#assertNotException.
Closes gh-23424
Deprecate all mutation methods in `MethodParameter` in favor of factory
methods that return a new instance. Existing code that previously relied
on mutation has been updated to use the replacement methods.
Closes gh-23385
Prior to this commit, the new `TYPE_HIERARCHY_AND_ENCLOSING_CLASSES`
annotation search strategy failed to find annotations on enclosing
classes if the source class was a nested class that itself had no
annotations present.
This commit fixes this by adding special logic to AnnotationsScanner's
isWithoutHierarchy() method to properly support nested classes.
Closes gh-23378
Add a `TYPE_HIERARCHY_AND_ENCLOSING_CLASSES` annotation search strategy
that can be used to search the full type hierarchy as well as any
enclosing classes.
Closes gh-23378