I’ve taken a look at the failing JSF test cases and have
narrowed it down to all tests that use a specific JSF testing utility method
(ProjectTestEnvironment.createFromZip(…)). This method creates an org.eclipse.ui.wizards.datatransfer.ImportOperation
with an empty “containerPath”. Running the current JSF code under
an older platform/WTP build (Galileo, or at least close to it) does not
complain about this empty path. When I can find time, I will set up a newer
build environment to see if the change is, as I suspect, to ImportOperation. I
don’t think ImportOperation is necessarily flawed; I think it’s
just no longer somehow dealing with being passed an empty path.
The short version is, JSF tests are currently failing due to how
the tests are written, and not due to non-test code breakage. It’s highly
doubtful that this could affect anyone else (but you’d be well-advised to
check any of your code that uses ImportOperation).
Happy Thanksgiving, US folks,
-
Ian
From: David M Williams
[mailto:david_williams@xxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Friday, November 27, 2009 6:40 AM
To: wtp-dev@xxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: [wtp-dev] Informally Promoted Build for wtp-R3.2.0-I:
I-3.2.0-20091127073002
At our status meeting last week, we decided
we would not have a declared build this week, since so many were out on
holiday.
But a few days after the meeting, some
committers (not in the US :) said they would like a build promoted to
'downloads' to enable some early adopter testing and development, since M4 is
not that far off.
So, I'll promote this latest build, but call
it "informally promoted" instead of "declared" since it has
not been tested as we normally do.
I will leave it "invisible" if you
look at the plain downloads page, http://download.eclipse.org/webtools/downloads/, but if you know this whole URL you can get right to
it.
Download Page:
http://download.eclipse.org/webtools/downloads/drops/R3.2.0/I-3.2.0-20091127073002/
Hopefully this will prevent people from
casually downloading it, thinking it was just like every other I-build.
Hopefully it is a good build, but since we have not smoke tested it, we can not
confidently say much about it.
There are a few JUnit failures that appear
significant. They occur in the JSF tests, but suspect they are due to changes
made elsewhere?