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Cool software projects have cool logos. We recently The specified item was not found. an alpha release of Arquillian, a project that's going to revolutionize Java EE integration testing. Now we need to make Arquillian cool
We are in the process of establishing Arquillian's visual identity, its logo. We've already been through a couple rounds of grayscale design comps with cheyenneweaver from the JBoss Community design team, who is designing the Arquillian logo. Throughout the process, we've asked community members to provide feedback on the comps to help steer the design process. You can follow some of the progress in Arquillian logo or the #arquillian Twitter hashtag. We're casting a wider net this time by asking readers of this blog to chime in.
The themes we are pursuing are:
Here are the round 3 logo candidates:
Follow the link to the poll below to let us know which ones you like best and why.
Once we collect enough feedback, we'll send it over to Cheyenne and let you know which ones made the cut. Thanks for participating!
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I'm happy to announce the first alpha release of Arquillian, an open source (ASL v2) framework for running tests in the container. If you want to read more about Arquillian's mission, and how it fits into our vision for testing at JBoss, read Testing Java EE the JBoss way.
It's one thing to unit test your code outside of the container, but what happens when you run it inside? Does it still behave the same? How about testing against container managed resources? This is where Arquillian comes into its own.
With Arquillian it's just as easy to write integration tests as unit tests. In fact, to minimize the burden on you, Arquillian integrates with familiar testing frameworks, allowing reuse of tools such as the JUnit/TestNG support in your favorite IDE, Maven Surefire, Ant - in fact any tool which supports TestNG or JUnit!
To show you just how simple this is, here's an example test case setup using JUnit: (we'll get to the actual test next)
@RunWith(org.jboss.arquillian.junit.Arquillian.class) public class TemperatureConverterTestCase { @Deployment public static JavaArchive createTestArchive() { return Archives.create("test.jar", JavaArchive.class) .addClasses(TemperatureConverter.class, TemperatureConverterBean.class); } }
By using JUnit's @RunWith annotation, you tell JUnit to use Arquillian as the test controller. Arquillian will then look for a static method marked with the @Deployment annotation, which creates your micro deployment. In the example above we simply deploy a session bean interface and implementation.
Arquillian hooks into your testing frameworks lifecycle and reacts to events. On the before suite and after suite events the container is started/stopped, while on the before class and after class events your micro deployment is deployed to/undeployed from the container.
The test case is started in the local JVM, and then Arquillian overrides the normal test execution and migrates the test so that it's executed inside the container. By the time the test framework calls your @Test annotated method, the test is running inside the container, giving us the possibility to work with container managed resources. Here's the complete test class with JUnit @Test methods.
@RunWith(org.jboss.arquillian.junit.Arquillian.class) public class TemperatureConverterTestCase { @Deployment public static JavaArchive createTestArchive() { return Archives.create("test.jar", JavaArchive.class) .addClasses(TemperatureConverter.class, TemperatureConverterBean.class); } @EJB private TemperatureConverter converter; @Test public void shouldConvertToCelsius() { Assert.assertEquals(converter.convertToCelsius(32d), 0d); Assert.assertEquals(converter.convertToCelsius(212d), 100d); } @Test public void shouldConvertToFarenheit() { Assert.assertEquals(converter.convertToFarenheit(0d), 32d); Assert.assertEquals(converter.convertToFarenheit(100d), 212d); } }
Note how we can use @EJB to inject the session bean from our deployment into the test case for use in our test method - neat!
The Arquillian TestEnricher SPI supports all the injection annotations from Java EE 6 - @EJB, @Resource and @Inject.
This example test case could run in GlassFish, JBoss AS or OpenEJB as there are no container specific code/configuration at all. The choice is yours. You could even test on multiple platforms!
You can follow up with some in depth usage scenarios and tests described in these articles:
We also have reference documentation which walks you through the examples from Arquillian, and shows you how to create your own Arquillian test suite. You might also find the Javadoc useful (API, SPI), especially if you plan on adding support for another container. You can also check out the forums and more articles can be found on our community site. If your interested in chatting to us, please drop by #jbosstesting on irc.freenode.net
Some of the things you can expect from Arquillian are:
@Test public void shouldWithdrawFromAccount(@EJB AccountManager manager) throws Exception { ... }
@Test @TransactionAttribute(TransactionAttributeType.REQUIRES_NEW) public void shouldWithdrawFromAccount(@EJB AccountManager manager) throws Exception { ... }
// auto creation of InitialContext based on running container, remote or local. @ArquillianResource private InitialContext context; // auto creation of URL to a deployed Servlet, including http port/ip etc. @ArquillianResource(MyServlet.class) private URL myServletURL; // the bundle context of a deployed osgi bundle @ArquillianResource private BundleContext context;
Arquillian is a new framework, but it's going to be put right to work as the workhorse to test all the Seam 3 modules. It will also be our recommended solution for testing your Seam application. (We'd love to see the community try it out for testing Seam 2 applications). We'll also replace the current core of the JSR-299 CDI TCK with Arquillian, likely for the 1.1 version of the TCK. (To provide a little history, Arquillian originated from the JBoss Test Harness that was developed by Pete Muir as the foundation of the CDI TCK).
If you have any thoughts on these ideas, or would like to suggest some new avenues we should explore, please contact us on the Arquillian Development.
A big thanks to the Arquillian and ShrinkWrap community for helping out on this release by being early adopters, joining in on community meetings, general discussions and writing blogs, articles and patches. In alphabetical order: Dan Allen, Steven Boscarine, German Escobar, Jordan Ganoff, Ken Gullaksen, Pete Muir, Jason Porter, Andrew Lee Rubinger. You guys rock!
[ JIRA | SPI Javadoc, API Javadoc | Reference Guide | Release Notes | Maven Artifacts ]
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Recently, we've been working hard on a solution to improve the testability of Java EE, and particularly JBoss AS. I'm pleased to say that a critical piece of puzzle, Arquillian, is now available. Congratulations to aslak and the Arquillian for releasing the first alpha of Arquillian! You can read more about Arquillian's mission, and our plans for Java EE testing below; alternatively, there are some quick links at the bottom if you want to dive right in.
The mission of the Arquillian project is to provide a simple test harness that developers can use to produce a broad range of integration tests for their Java applications (most likely enterprise applications). A test case may be executed within the container, deployed alongside the code under test, or by coordinating with the container, acting as a client to the deployed code.
Arquillian defines two styles of container, remote and embedded. A remote container resides in a separate JVM from the test runner. Its lifecycle may be managed by Arquillian, or Arquillian may bind to a container that is already started. An embedded container resides in the same JVM and is mostly likely managed by Arquillian. Containers can be further classified by their capabilities. Examples include a fully compliant Java EE application server (e.g., GlassFish, JBoss AS, Embedded GlassFish), a Servlet container (e.g., Tomcat, Jetty) and a bean container (e.g., Weld SE). Arquillian ensures that the container used for testing is pluggable, so the developer is not locked into a proprietary testing environment.
Arquillian seeks to minimize the burden on the developer to carry out integration testing by handling all aspects of test execution, including:
- managing the lifecycle of the container (start/stop),
- bundling the test class with dependent classes and resources into a deployable archive,
- enhancing the test class (e.g., resolving @Inject, @EJB and @Resource injections),
- deploying the archive to test (deploy/undeploy) and
- capturing results and failures.
To avoid introducing unnecessary complexity into the developer's build environment, Arquillian integrates transparently with familiar testing frameworks (e.g., JUnit 4, TestNG 5), allowing tests to be launched using existing IDE, Ant and Maven test plugins without any add-ons.
The Arquillian Mission Statement
The first alpha release of Arquillian gives us support for JBoss AS (remote deployments), GlassFish (embedded deployments), Weld SE (embedded deployments) and OpenEJB (embedded deployments). You can also inject beans and component (using @Resource or @Inject) into test cases.
We'll be adding supported containers in future releases - if you want to see your favorite container on the list, join our community and we can show you how to add support for it. We also plan to add more convention over configuration, meaning you'll only need to specify a single deployment and reuse it in all your test cases. Aslak has written more about future ideas in a Arquillian 1.0.0 Alpha 1 Released! announcing the 1.0.0 Alpha 1 release. In that entry he also provides some examples of how to use Arquillian.
We're strong believers in writing tests, and writing tests which actually test your business logic in the environment it will finally run in, rather than introducing mocked out objects (which may behave differently). While unit testing is important to ensure the correctness of your logic, it does not ensure the correctness of two objects which interact with each other.
With the help of the ShrinkWrap project, Arquillian gives you the ability to create micro deployments
around your tests. Micro-deployments are contained sub-sections of your application logic. This gives you the ability to do lower level integration testing on a lower level then normal integration. It is up to you at what level you want to test!
We also know you need a convenient way to run your test quickly, and that is why we are getting JBoss Embedded AS in shape. Embedded AS offers the potential to bootstrap JBoss AS inside the same JVM when you run your test, making it super easy to debug the test. Unfortunately, Embedded AS support didn't make this release (we made a decision to release what we have now, rather than delay), but we will push this out to you as soon as it's ready.
Testing your components and services gets you a long way, but you'll nearly always want to test your presentation tier as well. And that's where frameworks like JSFUnit and Selenium come in - they allow you to exercise the work flows your user will use. Support for both these frameworks is planned, as well as for Mock JSF Objects
.
If you like what you've heard so far, but are worried that Arquillian requires build script wizardry to use, let us surprise you again! Being able to run any of these tests from within the IDE is a key goal of Arquillian -- and the key to a rapid development cycle. Arquillian requires no build wizardry! So check out the documentation and give it a try today!
[ JIRA | SPI Javadoc, API Javadoc | Reference Guide | Release Notes ]
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