This also resulted in a refactoring of the Providers and parsing
Exceptions. NumberFormatException and ParseException can now be thrown
directly, the wrapping in a SmackParsingException is down at a higher
layer, i.e. in AbstractProvider.
This also removes the powermock dependency. Although powermock is a
fine library, it currently prevents dropping Junit4. And since we only
use the Whitebox API of powermock, this simply replaced powermock's
Whitebox with our own.
- Reduce the amount of types that are subtypes of NamedElement. See
javadoc of NamedElement for rationale.
- Work more with XmlEnvironment in XmlStringBuilder.
- Some minor changes to XmlStringBuilder API.
This is needed for javadocAll since otherwhise there will be
smack-core/src/main/java/org/jivesoftware/smack/package-info.java:21:
warning: a package-info.java file has already been seen for
package org.jivesoftware.smack
warnings.
Introducing Smack's own XmlPullParser interface which tries to stay as
compatible as possible to XPP3. The interface is used to either wrap
StAX's XMLStreamReader if Smack is used on Java SE, and XPP3's
XmlPullParser if Smack is used on on Android.
Fixes SMACK-591.
Also introduce JUnit 5 and non-strict javadoc projects.
The previously used approach of
project(':smack-core').sourceSets.test.runtimeClasspath
caused the 'eclipse' target to produce duplicate classpath entries in
.classpath when run with Gradle >= 2.6. It also relied on Gradle
internals.
Instead we now use
project(path: ":smack-core", configuration: "testRuntime")
project(path: ":smack-core", configuration: "archives")
to be able to use test classes from other subprojects (usually
smack-core) in e.g. smack-extensions. The 'archives' configuration
includes the test jar.
See also https://discuss.gradle.org/t/11784
Thanks to Lari Hotari for helping with this issue.