When refactoring the original implementation, this annotation was expected to be present on methods. It later was changed to be a type-based annotation. This particular usage of the annotation was not properly modified to account for that change.
This adds human-readable text to nearly all assertions in SINT. It is intended that these, together with an XMPP dump of the traffic that was exchanged during the test, allows an observer to have a chance to determine why a particular test failed, without analyzing the test code itself.
A new annotation is introduced (`SpecificationReference`) that can be used to annotate a SINT test class
The properties are available in the annotation:
- `document`: Identifier for a specification document, such as 'RFC 6120' or 'XEP-0485'
The pre-existing `SmackIntegrationTest` annotation has now received two new properties:
- `section`: Identifier for a section (or paragraph), such as '6.2.1'
- `quote`: A quotation of relevant text from the section
These are expected to be used in context of the `SpecificationReference` annotation.
The SINT execution framework is modified so that two new configuration options are available:
- `enabledSpecifications`
- `disabledSpecifications`
These operate on the value of the `document` property of the annotation. Their usage is comparable
to that of the pre-existing `enabledTests` and `disabledTest` configuration options.
Execution output now includes the document, section and quote that's on the annotated test, when
the test fails. This allows an end-user to easily correspond a test failure with a particular
specification.
Using 60 seconds makes it sometimes easy to miss that the some action
was 1 minute after the timeout, because only a single digit in the
timestamp changes. Using a prime number as timeout makes this more
obvious.
When performing IBR-based account registration, we do not need to
login nor are the admin credentials typically available.
Suggested-by: Guus der Kinderen <guus@goodbytes.nl>
Subclasses of AbstractSmackSpecificLowLevelIntegrationTest have test
methods with no parameters. This was, after the refactoring in
c5bb15c631 ("[sinttest] Add UnconnectedConnectionSource for
low-level tests") not handled properly.
Fixes: c5bb15c631 ("[sinttest] Add UnconnectedConnectionSource for low-level tests")
Previously low-level tests where run, potentially multiple times, with
the default connection descriptor.
Reported-by: Guus der Kinderen <guus@goodbytes.nl>
While markdown is easier to write, Smack's markdown documentation was
never tightly coupled with the source. For example, the markdown
documentation never provided links to the actual Java classes and
methods. This poses the risk that the documentation and the code
diverge over time. Furthermore, javadoc is constantly improving (for
example @snippet annotations) and I expect that one will be able to
write javadoc in markdown.
Fixes SMACK-928.
The UserTuneIntegrationTest, in rapid succession:
- add a listener for PEP-published usertune data
- publishes a usertune
- waits for a notification to arrive
Implicit to adding the listener is the publication of a change in
Pubsub notification filtering. This can involve a stanza handshake,
as CAPS is involved.
A race condition exists where the usertune data can be published
before the notification filter has been properly applied.
The changes in this commit add a synchronzation point that ensures
that the notification filter is in place, before the usertune data
is published.
Co-authored-by: Paul Schaub <vanitasvitae@fsfe.org>
Some roster-based tests depend on there not being any prior subscription state beteween entities. The utility method that
tries to guarantee that, acts on the state of the roster that's cached in memory, but acts on the one that's stored on the
server. This occasionally causes issues, as both representations might be different.
Stability is added in this commit by:
- refreshing the roster from the server prior to evaluating it
- ignoring an 'item-not-found' as returned by the server, when the code tries to remove that item.