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     36 <h2 align="center">TestNG</h2>
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     62 
     63 <!-------------------------------------
     64   TOC
     65   ------------------------------------>
     66 
     67 <h3>Table of Contents</h3>
     68 
     69 <div id="table-of-contents">
     70 </div>
     71 
     72 
     73 <!-------------------------------------
     74   INTRODUCTION
     75   ------------------------------------>
     76 <h3><a class="section" name="introduction">Introduction</a></h3>
     77 
     78 TestNG is a testing framework designed to simplify a broad range of testing needs, from unit testing (testing a class in isolation of the others) to integration testing (testing entire systems made of several classes, several packages and even several external frameworks, such as application servers).
     79 
     80 <p>
     81 
     82 Writing a test is typically a three-step process:
     83 
     84 <ul>
     85 <li>Write the business logic of your test and insert <a href="#annotations">TestNG annotations</a> in your code.
     86 </li>
     87 <li>Add the information about your test (e.g. the class name, the groups you wish to run, etc...) in a <tt><a href="#testng-xml">testng.xml</a></tt> file or in build.xml.
     88 </li>
     89 <li><a href="ant.html">Run TestNG</a>.
     90 </li>
     91 </ul>
     92 You can find a quick example on the <a href="index.html">Welcome page</a>.
     93 <p>
     94 The concepts used in this documentation are as follows:
     95 
     96 <ul>
     97 <li>
     98 A suite is represented by one XML file.  It can contain one or more tests and is defined by the <tt>&lt;suite&gt;</tt> tag.
     99 </li>
    100 <li>
    101 A test is represented by <tt>&lt;test&gt;</tt> and can contain one or more TestNG classes.
    102 </li>
    103 <li>
    104 A TestNG class is a Java class that contains at least one TestNG annotation.  It is represented by the <tt>&lt;class&gt;</tt> tag and can contain one or more test methods.
    105 </li>
    106 <li>
    107 A test method is a Java method annotated by <tt>@Test</tt> in your source.
    108 </li></ul>A TestNG test can be configured by <tt>@BeforeXXX and @AfterXXX </tt>annotations which allows to perform some Java logic before and after a certain point, these points being either of the items listed above.<p>
    109 The rest of this manual will explain the following:
    110 <p>
    111 <ul>
    112 <li>A list of all the annotations with a brief explanation.  This will give you an idea of the various functionalities offered by TestNG but you will probably want to consult the section dedicated to each of these annotations to learn the details.
    113 </li>
    114 <li>A description of the testng.xml file, its syntax and what you can specify in it.
    115 </li>
    116 <li>A detailed list of the various features and how to use them with a combination of annotations and testng.xml.
    117 </li>
    118 </ul>
    119 
    120 
    121 <!-------------------------------------
    122   ANNOTATIONS
    123   ------------------------------------>
    124 
    125 <h3><a class="section" name="annotations">Annotations</a></h3>
    126 
    127 Here is a quick overview of the annotations available in TestNG along with their attributes.
    128 
    129 <p>
    130 
    131 <table>
    132 
    133 <tr>
    134 <td colspan="2"><b><tt>@BeforeSuite<br>@AfterSuite<br>@BeforeTest<br>@AfterTest<br>@BeforeGroups<br>@AfterGroups<br>@BeforeClass<br>@AfterClass<br>@BeforeMethod<br>@AfterMethod</tt></b></td><td><b>Configuration information for a TestNG class:</b>
    135 
    136 <br>
    137 
    138 <br><b>@BeforeSuite: </b>The annotated method will be run before all tests in this suite have run.
    139 
    140 <br><b>@AfterSuite: </b> The annotated method will be run after all tests in this suite have run. 
    141 
    142 <br><b>@BeforeTest</b>: The annotated method will be run before any test method belonging to the classes inside the &lt;test&gt; tag is run.
    143 
    144 <br><b>@AfterTest</b>: The annotated method will be run after all the test methods belonging to the classes inside the &lt;test&gt; tag have run.
    145 
    146 <br><b>@BeforeGroups</b>:   The list of groups that this configuration method will run before. This method is guaranteed to run shortly before the first test method that belongs to any of these groups is invoked.
    147 
    148 <br><b>@AfterGroups</b>:   The list of groups that this configuration method will run after.  This method is guaranteed to run shortly after the last test method that belongs to any of these groups is invoked.
    149 
    150 <br><b>@BeforeClass</b>: The annotated method will be run before the first test method in the current class is invoked.
    151 
    152 <br><b>@AfterClass</b>: The annotated method will be run after all the test methods in the current class have been run. 
    153 
    154 <br><b>@BeforeMethod</b>: The annotated method will be run before each test method.
    155 
    156 <br><b>@AfterMethod</b>: The annotated method will be run after each test method.
    157 
    158 </td>
    159 </tr>
    160 
    161 <tr>
    162 <td>
    163 </td>
    164 <td>
    165 <tt>alwaysRun</tt>
    166 </td>
    167 <td>
    168    For before methods (beforeSuite, beforeTest, beforeTestClass and
    169    beforeTestMethod, but not beforeGroups):
    170    If set to true, this configuration method will be run
    171    regardless of what groups it belongs to. 
    172    <br>
    173    For after methods (afterSuite, afterClass, ...): 
    174    If set to true, this configuration method will be run
    175    even if one or more methods invoked previously failed or
    176    was skipped.
    177 </td>
    178 </tr>
    179 
    180 <tr>
    181 <td>
    182 </td>
    183 <td>
    184 <tt>dependsOnGroups</tt>
    185 </td>
    186 <td>
    187           The list of groups this method depends on.
    188 </td>
    189 </tr>
    190 
    191 <tr>
    192 <td>
    193 </td>
    194 <td>
    195 <tt>dependsOnMethods</tt>
    196 </td>
    197 <td>
    198           The list of methods this method depends on.
    199 </td>
    200 </tr>
    201 
    202 <tr>
    203 <td>
    204 </td>
    205 <td>
    206 <tt>enabled</tt>
    207 </td>
    208 <td>
    209           Whether methods on this class/method are enabled.
    210 </td>
    211 </tr>
    212 
    213 <tr>
    214 <td>
    215 </td>
    216 <td>
    217 <tt>groups</tt>
    218 </td>
    219 <td>
    220           The list of groups this class/method belongs to.
    221 </td>
    222 </tr>
    223 
    224 <tr>
    225 <td>
    226 </td>
    227 <td>
    228 <tt>inheritGroups</tt>
    229 </td>
    230 <td>
    231           If true, this method will belong to groups specified in the @Test annotation at the class level.
    232 </td>
    233 </tr>
    234 
    235 <tr class="separator">
    236 <td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
    237 </tr>
    238 
    239 <tr>
    240 <td colspan="2"><tt><b>@DataProvider</b></tt></td><td><b>Marks a method as supplying data for a test method. The annotated method must return an Object[][] where each Object[] can be assigned the parameter list of the test method. The @Test method that wants to receive data from this DataProvider needs to use a dataProvider name equals to the name of this annotation.</b></td></tr><tr>
    241 <td>
    242 </td>
    243 <td>
    244 <tt>name</tt>
    245 </td>
    246 <td>
    247 The name of this data provider. If it's not supplied, the name of this data provider will automatically be set to the name of the method.
    248 </td>
    249 </tr>
    250 <tr>
    251 <td>
    252 </td>
    253 <td>
    254 <tt>parallel</tt>
    255 </td>
    256 <td>
    257 If set to true, tests generated using this data provider are run in parallel. Default value is false.
    258 </td>
    259 </tr>
    260 <tr>
    261 <td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
    262 </tr>
    263 
    264 <tr>
    265 <td colspan="2"><b><tt>@Factory</tt></b></td><td><b> Marks a method as a factory that returns objects that will be used by TestNG as Test classes.  The method must return Object[].</b></td></tr><tr>
    266 <td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
    267 </tr>
    268 
    269 <tr>
    270 <td colspan="2"><b><tt>@Listeners</tt></b></td><td><b>Defines listeners on a test class.</b></td></tr>
    271 <tr>
    272   <td></td>
    273   <td>
    274     <tt>value</tt>
    275   </td>
    276   <td>
    277     An array of classes that extend <tt>org.testng.ITestNGListener</tt>.
    278   </td>
    279 </tr>
    280 
    281 <tr>
    282 <td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
    283 </tr>
    284 
    285 <td colspan="2"><b><tt>@Parameters</tt></b></td><td><b>Describes how to pass parameters to a @Test method.</b></td></tr><tr>
    286 <td>
    287 </td>
    288 <td>
    289 <tt>value</tt>
    290 </td>
    291 <td>
    292 The list of variables used to fill the parameters of this method.
    293 </td>
    294 </tr>
    295 
    296 <tr>
    297 <td colspan="3">&nbsp;</td>
    298 </tr>
    299 
    300 <tr>
    301 <td colspan="2"><b>@Test</b></td><td><b>Marks a class or a method as part of the test.</b></td></tr><tr>
    302 <td>
    303 </td>
    304 <td>
    305 <tt>alwaysRun</tt>
    306 </td>
    307 <td>
    308           If set to true, this test method will always be run even if it depends on a method that failed.
    309 </td>
    310 </tr>
    311 
    312 <tr>
    313 <td>
    314 </td>
    315 <td>
    316 <tt>dataProvider</tt>
    317 </td>
    318 <td>
    319 The name of the data provider for this test method.
    320 </td>
    321 </tr>
    322 
    323 
    324 <tr>
    325 <td>
    326 </td>
    327 <td>
    328 <tt>dataProviderClass</tt>
    329 </td>
    330 <td>
    331 The class where to look for the data provider.  If not specified, the data provider will be looked on the class of the current test method or one of its base classes. If this attribute is specified, the data provider method needs to be static on the specified class.  
    332 </td>
    333 </tr>
    334 
    335 
    336 
    337 
    338 
    339 
    340 <tr>
    341 <td>
    342 </td>
    343 <td>
    344 <tt>dependsOnGroups</tt>
    345 </td>
    346 <td>
    347           The list of groups this method depends on.
    348 </td>
    349 </tr>
    350 
    351 <tr>
    352 <td>
    353 </td>
    354 <td>
    355 <tt>dependsOnMethods</tt>
    356 </td>
    357 <td>
    358           The list of methods this method depends on.
    359 </td>
    360 </tr>
    361 
    362 <tr>
    363 <td>
    364 </td>
    365 <td>
    366 <tt>description</tt>
    367 </td>
    368 <td>
    369           The description for this method.
    370 </td>
    371 </tr>
    372 
    373 <tr>
    374 <td>
    375 </td>
    376 <td>
    377 <tt>enabled</tt>
    378 </td>
    379 <td>
    380           Whether methods on this class/method are enabled.
    381 </td>
    382 </tr>
    383 
    384 <tr>
    385 <td>
    386 </td>
    387 <td>
    388 <tt>expectedExceptions</tt>
    389 </td>
    390 <td>
    391            The list of exceptions that a test method is expected to throw.  If no exception or a different than one on this list is thrown, this test will be marked a failure.
    392 </td>
    393 </tr>
    394 
    395 <tr>
    396 <td>
    397 </td>
    398 <td>
    399 <tt>groups</tt>
    400 </td>
    401 <td>
    402           The list of groups this class/method belongs to.
    403 </td>
    404 </tr>
    405 
    406 <tr>
    407 <td>
    408 </td>
    409 <td>
    410 <tt>invocationCount</tt>
    411 </td>
    412 <td>
    413           The number of times this method should be invoked.
    414 </td>
    415 </tr>
    416 
    417 <tr>
    418 <td>
    419 </td>
    420 <td>
    421 <tt>invocationTimeOut</tt>
    422 </td>
    423 <td>
    424           The maximum number of milliseconds this test should take for the cumulated time of all the invocationcounts.  This attribute will be ignored if invocationCount is not specified.
    425 </td>
    426 </tr>
    427 
    428 <tr>
    429 <td>
    430 </td>
    431 <td>
    432 <tt>priority</tt>
    433 </td>
    434 <td>
    435           The priority for this test method. Lower priorities will be scheduled first.
    436 </td>
    437 </tr>
    438 
    439 <tr>
    440 <td>
    441 </td>
    442 <td>
    443 
    444 <tt>successPercentage</tt>
    445 </td>
    446 <td>
    447           The percentage of success expected from this method
    448 </td>
    449 </tr>
    450 
    451 <tr>
    452 <td>
    453 </td>
    454 <td>
    455 <tt>singleThreaded</tt>
    456 </td>
    457 <td>
    458              If set to true, all the methods on this test class are guaranteed to run in the same thread, even if the tests are currently being run with parallel="methods". This attribute can only be used at the class level and it will be ignored if used at the method level. Note: this attribute used to be called <tt>sequential</tt> (now deprecated).
    459 
    460 </td>
    461 </tr>
    462 
    463 <tr>
    464 <td>
    465 </td>
    466 <td>
    467 <tt>timeOut</tt>
    468 </td>
    469 <td>
    470           The maximum number of milliseconds this test should take.
    471 </td>
    472 </tr>
    473 
    474 <tr>
    475 <td>
    476 </td>
    477 <td>
    478 <tt>threadPoolSize</tt>
    479 </td>
    480 <td>
    481              The size of the thread pool for this method.  
    482 The method will be invoked from multiple threads as specified by 
    483 invocationCount. <br>Note:  this attribute is ignored if invocationCount is not specified
    484 
    485 </td>
    486 </tr>
    487 
    488 </table>
    489 
    490 
    491 
    492 
    493 </pre>
    494 <!-------------------------------------
    495   TESTNG.XML
    496   ------------------------------------>
    497 <h3><a class="section" name="testng-xml">testng.xml</a></h3>
    498 
    499 <p>You can invoke TestNG in several different ways:</p><ul>
    500 	<li>With a <tt>testng.xml</tt> file</li><li><a href="http://testng.org/doc/ant.html">With ant</a></li><li>From the command line</li></ul><p>This section describes the format of <tt>testng.xml</tt> (you will find documentation 
    501 on ant and the command line below).</p><p>The current DTD for <tt>testng.xml</tt> can be found on the main Web site:&nbsp;
    502 <a href="http://testng.org/testng-1.0.dtd">http://testng.org/testng-1.0.dtd</a> 
    503 (for your convenience, you might prefer to browse the
    504 <a href="http://testng.org/dtd">HTML version</a>).</p>
    505 
    506 Here is an example <tt>testng.xml</tt> file:
    507 
    508 <p>
    509 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
    510 <pre class="brush: xml">
    511 &lt;!DOCTYPE suite SYSTEM "http://testng.org/testng-1.0.dtd" &gt;
    512  
    513 &lt;suite name="Suite1" verbose="1" &gt;
    514   &lt;test name="Nopackage" &gt;
    515     &lt;classes&gt;
    516        &lt;class name="NoPackageTest" /&gt;
    517     &lt;/classes&gt;
    518   &lt;/test&gt;
    519 
    520   &lt;test name="Regression1"&gt;
    521     &lt;classes&gt;
    522       &lt;class name="test.sample.ParameterSample"/&gt;
    523       &lt;class name="test.sample.ParameterTest"/&gt;
    524     &lt;/classes&gt;
    525   &lt;/test&gt;
    526 &lt;/suite&gt;
    527 </pre>
    528 
    529 You can specify package names instead of class names:
    530 
    531 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
    532 <pre class="brush: xml; highlight: [5,6,7]">
    533 &lt;!DOCTYPE suite SYSTEM "http://testng.org/testng-1.0.dtd" &gt;
    534 
    535 &lt;suite name="Suite1" verbose="1" &gt;
    536   &lt;test name="Regression1"   &gt;
    537     &lt;packages&gt;
    538       &lt;package name="test.sample" /&gt;
    539    &lt;/packages&gt;
    540  &lt;/test&gt;
    541 &lt;/suite&gt;
    542 </pre>
    543 
    544 
    545 <p>In this example, TestNG will look at all the classes in the package 
    546 	<tt>test.sample</tt> and will retain only classes that have TestNG annotations.</p>
    547 
    548 You can also specify groups and methods to be included and excluded:
    549 
    550 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
    551 <pre class="brush: xml">
    552 &lt;test name="Regression1"&gt;
    553   &lt;groups&gt;
    554     &lt;run&gt;
    555       &lt;exclude name="brokenTests"  /&gt;
    556       &lt;include name="checkinTests"  /&gt;
    557     &lt;/run&gt;
    558   &lt;/groups&gt;
    559  
    560   &lt;classes&gt;
    561     &lt;class name="test.IndividualMethodsTest"&gt;
    562       &lt;methods&gt;
    563         &lt;include name="testMethod" /&gt;
    564       &lt;/methods&gt;
    565     &lt;/class&gt;
    566   &lt;/classes&gt;
    567 &lt;/test&gt;
    568 </pre>
    569 
    570 <p>You can also define new groups inside <tt>testng.xml</tt> and specify additional details in attributes, such as whether to run the tests in parallel, how many threads to use, whether you are running JUnit tests, etc...&nbsp;
    571 <p>
    572 
    573 By default, TestNG will run your tests in the order they are found in the XML
    574 file. If you want the classes and methods listed in this file to be
    575 run in an unpredictible order, set the <tt>preserve-order</tt>
    576 attribute to <tt>false</tt>
    577 
    578 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
    579 <pre class="brush: xml">
    580 &lt;test name="Regression1" preserve-order="false"&gt;
    581   &lt;classes&gt;
    582 
    583     &lt;class name="test.Test1"&gt;
    584       &lt;methods&gt;
    585         &lt;include name="m1" /&gt;
    586         &lt;include name="m2" /&gt;
    587       &lt;/methods&gt;
    588     &lt;/class&gt;
    589 
    590     &lt;class name="test.Test2" /&gt;
    591 
    592   &lt;/classes&gt;
    593 &lt;/test&gt;
    594 </pre>
    595 
    596 <p>
    597 
    598 Please see the DTD for a complete list of the features, or read on.</p>
    599 
    600 <!-------------------------------------
    601   RUNNING TESTNG
    602   ------------------------------------>
    603 
    604 <h3><a class="section" name="running-testng">Running TestNG</a></h3>
    605 
    606 TestNG can be invoked in different ways:
    607 
    608 <ul>
    609 <li>Command line
    610 </li>
    611 <li><a href="ant.html">ant</a>
    612 </li>
    613 <li><a href="eclipse.html">Eclipse</a>
    614 </li>
    615 <li><a href="idea.html">IntelliJ's IDEA</a>
    616 </li>
    617 </ul>
    618 
    619 This section only explains how to invoke TestNG from the command line.  Please click on one of the links above if you are interested in one of the other ways.
    620 <p>
    621 Assuming that you have TestNG in your class path, the simplest way to invoke TestNG is as follows:
    622 
    623 <pre class="brush: text">
    624 java org.testng.TestNG testng1.xml [testng2.xml testng3.xml ...]
    625 </pre>
    626 
    627 You need to specify at least one XML file describing the TestNG suite you are trying to run.  Additionally, the following command-line switches are available:
    628 
    629 </p>
    630 
    631 <table id="command-line">
    632     <caption>Command Line Parameters</caption><colgroup class="option"/>
    633     <colgroup class="argument"/>
    634     <colgroup class="documentation"/>
    635     <thead>
    636 
    637         <tr>
    638             <th>Option</th>
    639     	<th>Argument</th>
    640     	<th>Documentation</th>
    641         </tr>
    642     </thead>
    643 
    644     <tbody>
    645         <tr>
    646             <td>-configfailurepolicy</td>
    647 	    <td><tt>skip</tt>|<tt>continue</tt></td>
    648 	    <td>Whether TestNG should <tt>continue</tt> to execute the remaining tests in the suite or <tt>skip</tt> them if
    649             an @Before* method fails.  Default behavior is <tt>skip</tt>.</td>
    650         </tr>
    651 
    652         <tr>
    653             <td>-d</td>
    654 	    <td>A directory</td>
    655 	    <td>The directory where the reports will be generated (defaults to <tt>test-output</tt>).</td>
    656         </tr>
    657 
    658         <tr>
    659             <td>-dataproviderthreadcount</td>
    660 	    <td>The default number of threads to use for data
    661             providers when running tests in parallel.</td>
    662 	    <td>This sets the default maximum number of threads to use
    663             for data providers when running tests in parallel. It will only take effect if the parallel mode has been selected (for example, with the -parallel option). This can be overridden in the suite definition.</td>
    664         </tr>
    665 
    666 	<tr>
    667             <td>-excludegroups</td>
    668 	    <td>A comma-separated list of groups.</td><td>The list of groups you want to be excluded from this run.</td>
    669         </tr>
    670 	  
    671         <tr>
    672             <td>-groups</td>
    673 	    <td>A comma-separated list of groups.</td>
    674 	    <td>The list of groups you want to run (e.g. <tt>"windows,linux,regression"</tt>).</td>
    675 	</tr>
    676 
    677         <tr>
    678             <td>-listener</td>
    679 	    <td>A comma-separated list of Java classes that can be found on your classpath.</td>
    680 	    <td>Lets you specify your own test listeners.  The classes need to implement <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/ITestListener.html"> <tt>org.testng.ITestListener</tt></a></td>
    681         </tr>
    682 
    683 	<tr>
    684             <td>-methods</td>
    685 	    <td>A comma separated list of fully qualified class name and method. For example <tt>com.example.Foo.f1,com.example.Bar.f2</tt>.</td>
    686 	    <td>Lets you specify individual methods to run.</tt></a></td>
    687         </tr>
    688 
    689         <tr>
    690             <td>-methodselectors</td>
    691 	    <td>A comma-separated list of Java classes and method
    692             priorities that define method selectors.</td>
    693 	    <td>Lets you specify method selectors on the command
    694             line. For example: <tt>com.example.Selector1:3,com.example.Selector2:2</tt></td>
    695         </tr>
    696 
    697 	<tr>
    698             <td>-parallel</td>
    699 	    <td>methods|tests|classes</td>
    700 	    <td>If specified, sets the default mechanism used to determine how to use parallel threads when running tests. If not set, default mechanism is not to use parallel threads at all. This can be overridden in the suite definition.</td>
    701         </tr>
    702 
    703         <tr>
    704             <td>-reporter</td>
    705 	    <td>The extended configuration for a custom report listener.</td>
    706 	    <td>Similar to the <tt>-listener</tt> option, except that it allows the configuration of JavaBeans-style properties on the reporter instance.
    707 	      <br>
    708             Example: <tt>-reporter com.test.MyReporter:methodFilter=*insert*,enableFiltering=true</tt>
    709 	      <br>
    710             You can have as many occurences of this option, one for each reporter that needs to be added.</td>
    711         </tr>
    712 
    713         <tr>
    714             <td>-sourcedir</td>
    715     	    <td>A semi-colon separated list of directories.</td>
    716             <td>The directories where your javadoc annotated test sources are. This option is only necessary if you are using javadoc type annotations. (e.g. <tt>"src/test"</tt> or <tt>"src/test/org/testng/eclipse-plugin;src/test/org/testng/testng"</tt>).</td>
    717         </tr>
    718 
    719        <tr>
    720            <td>-suitename</td>
    721 	   <td>The default name to use for a test suite.</td>
    722 	   <td>This specifies the suite name for a test suite defined on the command line. This option is ignored if the suite.xml file or the source code specifies a different suite name.  It is possible to create a suite name with spaces in it if you surround it with double-quotes "like this".</td>
    723         </tr>
    724         
    725         <tr>
    726             <td>-testclass</td>
    727 	    <td>A comma-separated list of classes that can be found in your classpath.</td><td>A list of class files separated by commas (e.g. <tt>"org.foo.Test1,org.foo.test2"</tt>).</td>
    728 	</tr>
    729 
    730          <tr>
    731             <td>-testjar</td>
    732 	    <td>A jar file.</td>
    733 	    <td>Specifies a jar file that contains test classes.  If a <tt>testng.xml</tt> file is found at the root of that jar file, it will be used, otherwise, all the test classes found in this jar file will be considered test classes.</td>
    734         </tr>
    735 
    736         <tr>
    737             <td>-testname</td>
    738 	    <td>The default name to use for a test.</td>
    739 	    <td>This specifies the name for a test defined on the command line. This option is ignored if the suite.xml file or the source code specifies a different test name. It is possible to create a test name with spaces in it if you surround it with double-quotes "like this".</td>
    740         </tr>
    741 
    742         <tr>
    743             <td>-testnames</td>
    744 	    <td>A comma separated list of test names.</td>
    745 	    <td>Only tests defined in a &lt;test&gt; tag matching one of these names will be run.</td>
    746         </tr>
    747 
    748         <tr>
    749             <td>-testrunfactory</td>
    750 	    <td>A Java classes that can be found on your classpath.</td>
    751 	    <td>Lets you specify your own test runners.  The class needs to implement <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/ITestRunnerFactory.html"> <tt>org.testng.ITestRunnerFactory</tt></a>.</td>
    752         </tr>
    753 
    754         <tr>
    755             <td>-threadcount</td>
    756 	    <td>The default number of threads to use when running tests in parallel.</td>
    757 	    <td>This sets the default maximum number of threads to use for running tests in parallel. It will only take effect if the parallel mode has been selected (for example, with the -parallel option). This can be overridden in the suite definition.</td>
    758         </tr>
    759 
    760 	<tr>
    761             <td>-xmlpathinjar</td>
    762 	    <td>The path of the XML file inside the jar file.</td>
    763 	    <td>This attribute should contain the path to a valid XML file inside the test jar (e.g. <tt>"resources/testng.xml"</tt>). The default is <tt>"testng.xml"</tt>, which means a file called "<tt>testng.xml</tt>" at the root of the jar file. This option will be ignored unless <tt>-testjar</tt> is specified.</td>
    764         </tr>
    765 
    766       </tbody>
    767 </table>
    768 
    769 <p>
    770 
    771 This documentation can be obtained by invoking TestNG without any arguments.
    772 
    773 <p>
    774 
    775 You can also put the command line switches in a text file, say <tt>c:\command.txt</tt>, and tell TestNG to use that file to retrieve its parameters:
    776 
    777 <pre class="brush: text">
    778   C:> more c:\command.txt
    779   -d test-output testng.xml
    780   C:> java org.testng.TestNG @c:\command.txt
    781 </pre>
    782 
    783 <p>
    784 
    785 Additionally, TestNG can be passed properties on the command line of the Java Virtual Machine, for example
    786 
    787 <pre class="brush: text">
    788 java -Dtestng.test.classpath="c:/build;c:/java/classes;" org.testng.TestNG testng.xml
    789 </pre>
    790 
    791 Here are the properties that TestNG understands:
    792 
    793 <table id="system=properties">
    794     <caption>System properties</caption>
    795     <colgroup class="option"/>
    796     <colgroup class="type"/>
    797     <colgroup class="documentation"/>
    798     <thead>
    799       <tr><th>Property</th>
    800       <th>Type</th>
    801       <th>Documentation</th></tr>
    802     </thead>
    803 
    804     <tr>
    805     <td>testng.test.classpath</td>
    806     <td>A semi-colon separated series of directories that contain your test classes.</td>
    807     <td>If this property is set, TestNG will use it to look for your test classes instead of the class path.  This is convenient if you are using the <tt>package</tt> tag in your XML file and you have a lot of classes in your classpath, most of them not being test classes.
    808     </tr>
    809 </table>
    810 
    811 <br>
    812 
    813 <b>Example:</b>
    814 
    815 <pre class="brush: text">
    816 java org.testng.TestNG -groups windows,linux -testclass org.test.MyTest
    817 </pre>
    818 
    819 The <a href="ant.html">ant task</a> and <a href="#testng-xml">testng.xml</a> allow you to launch TestNG with more parameters (methods to include, specifying parameters, etc...), so you should consider using the command line only when you are trying to learn about TestNG and you want to get up and running quickly.
    820 
    821 <p>
    822 
    823 <em>Important</em>: The command line flags that specify what tests should be run will be ignored if you also specify a <tt>testng.xml</tt> file, with the exception of <tt>-includedgroups</tt> and <tt>-excludedgroups</tt>, which will override all the group inclusions/exclusions found in <tt>testng.xml</tt>.
    824 
    825 <!-------------------------------------
    826   METHODS
    827   ------------------------------------>
    828 
    829 <h3><a class="section" name="methods">Test methods, Test classes and Test groups</a></h3>
    830 
    831 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="test-methods">Test methods</a></h4>
    832 
    833 Test methods are annotated with <tt>@Test</tt>. Methods annotated with <tt>@Test</tt> that happen to return a value will be ignored, unless you set <tt>allow-return-values</tt> to <tt>true</tt> in your <tt>testng.xml</tt>:
    834 
    835 <pre class="brush: xml">
    836 &lt;suite allow-return-values="true"&gt;
    837 
    838 or
    839 
    840 &lt;test allow-return-values="true"&gt;
    841 </pre>
    842 
    843 
    844 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="test-groups">Test groups</a></h4>
    845 
    846 <p>
    847 
    848 TestNG allows you to perform sophisticated groupings of test methods. Not 
    849 only can you declare that methods belong to groups, but you can also specify 
    850 groups that contain other groups. Then TestNG can be invoked and asked to 
    851 include a certain set of groups (or regular expressions) while excluding another 
    852 set.&nbsp; This gives you maximum flexibility in how you partition your tests 
    853 and doesn't require you to recompile anything if you want to run two different 
    854 sets of tests back to back.</p>
    855 
    856 <p>
    857 Groups are specified in your <tt>testng.xml</tt> file and can be found either under the <tt>&lt;test&gt;</tt> or <tt>&lt;suite&gt;</tt> tag. Groups specified in the <tt>&lt;suite&gt;</tt> tag apply to all the <tt>&lt;test&gt;</tt> tags underneath. Note that groups are accumulative in these tags: if you specify group "a" in <tt>&lt;suite&gt;</tt> and "b" in <tt>&lt;test&gt;</tt>, then both "a" and "b" will be included.
    858 
    859 <p>
    860 
    861 <p>For example, it is quite common to have at least two categories of tests</p><ul>
    862   <li>Check-in tests.&nbsp; These tests should be run before you submit new 
    863 	code.&nbsp; They should typically be fast and just make sure no basic 
    864 	functionality was broken.<br>
    865 &nbsp;</li>
    866   <li>Functional tests.&nbsp; These tests should cover all the functionalities 
    867 	of your software and be run at least once a day, although ideally you would 
    868 	want to run them continuously.</li></ul>
    869 
    870 
    871 	Typically, check-in tests are a subset of functional tests.&nbsp; TestNG 
    872 allows you to specify this in a very intuitive way with test groups.&nbsp; For 
    873 example, you could structure your test by saying that your entire test class 
    874 belongs to the &quot;functest&quot; group, and additionally that a couple of methods 
    875 belong to the group &quot;checkintest&quot;:
    876 
    877 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Test1.java</h3>
    878 <pre class="brush: java">
    879 public class Test1 {
    880   @Test(groups = { "functest", "checkintest" })
    881   public void testMethod1() {
    882   }
    883 
    884   @Test(groups = {"functest", "checkintest"} )
    885   public void testMethod2() {
    886   }
    887 
    888   @Test(groups = { "functest" })
    889   public void testMethod3() {
    890   }
    891 }
    892 </pre>
    893 
    894 Invoking TestNG with
    895 	<br>
    896 
    897 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
    898 <pre class="brush: xml">
    899 &lt;test name="Test1"&gt;
    900   &lt;groups&gt;
    901     &lt;run&gt;
    902       &lt;include name="functest"/&gt;
    903     &lt;/run&gt;
    904   &lt;/groups&gt;
    905   &lt;classes&gt;
    906     &lt;class name="example1.Test1"/&gt;
    907   &lt;/classes&gt;
    908 &lt;/test&gt;
    909 </pre>
    910 
    911 <p>will run all the test methods in that classes, while invoking it with <tt>checkintest</tt> will only run 
    912 <tt>testMethod1()</tt> and <tt>testMethod2()</tt>.</p>
    913 
    914 
    915 Here is another example, using regular expressions this time.&nbsp; Assume 
    916 that some of your test methods should not be run on Linux, your test would look 
    917 like:
    918 
    919 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Test1.java</h3>
    920 <pre class="brush: java">
    921 @Test
    922 public class Test1 {
    923   @Test(groups = { "windows.checkintest" }) 
    924   public void testWindowsOnly() {
    925   }
    926 
    927   @Test(groups = {"linux.checkintest"} )
    928   public void testLinuxOnly() {
    929   }
    930 
    931   @Test(groups = { "windows.functest" )
    932   public void testWindowsToo() {
    933   }
    934 }
    935 </pre>
    936 
    937 
    938 You could use the following testng.xml to launch only the Windows methods:
    939 
    940 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
    941 <pre class="brush: xml; highlight: [4,9]">
    942 &lt;test name="Test1"&gt;
    943   &lt;groups&gt;
    944     &lt;run&gt;
    945       &lt;include name="windows.*"/&gt;
    946     &lt;/run&gt;
    947   &lt;/groups&gt;
    948 
    949   &lt;classes&gt;
    950     &lt;class name="example1.Test1"/&gt;
    951   &lt;/classes&gt;
    952 &lt;/test&gt;
    953 </pre>
    954 
    955 <blockquote>
    956 <em>Note:  TestNG uses <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regular_expression">regular expressions</a>, and not <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wildmat">wildmats</a>.  Be aware of the difference (for example, "anything" is matched by ".*" -- dot star -- and not "*").</em>
    957 </blockquote>
    958 
    959 <h4><a name="method-groups">Method groups</a></h4>
    960 
    961 You can also exclude or include individual methods:
    962 
    963 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
    964 <pre class="brush: xml">
    965 &lt;test name="Test1"&gt;
    966   &lt;classes&gt;
    967     &lt;class name="example1.Test1"&gt;
    968       &lt;methods&gt;
    969         &lt;include name=".*enabledTestMethod.*"/&gt;
    970         &lt;exclude name=".*brokenTestMethod.*"/&gt;
    971       &lt;/methods&gt;
    972      &lt;/class&gt;
    973   &lt;/classes&gt;
    974 &lt;/test&gt;
    975 </pre>
    976 
    977 This can come in handy to deactivate a single method without having to recompile 
    978 anything, but I don't recommend using this technique too much since it makes 
    979 your testing framework likely to break if you start refactoring your Java code 
    980 (the regular expressions used in the tags might not match your methods any 
    981 more).
    982 
    983 
    984 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="groups-of-groups">Groups of groups</a></h4>
    985 
    986 Groups can also include other groups.&nbsp;These groups are called &quot;MetaGroups&quot;.&nbsp; 
    987 For example, you might want to define a group &quot;all&quot; that includes &quot;checkintest&quot; 
    988 and &quot;functest&quot;.&nbsp; &quot;functest&quot; itself will contain the groups &quot;windows&quot; and 
    989 &quot;linux&quot; while &quot;checkintest will only contain &quot;windows&quot;.&nbsp; Here is how you 
    990 would define this in your property file:
    991 
    992 
    993 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
    994 <pre class="brush: xml">
    995 &lt;test name="Regression1"&gt;
    996   &lt;groups&gt;
    997     &lt;define name="functest"&gt;
    998       &lt;include name="windows"/&gt;
    999       &lt;include name="linux"/&gt;
   1000     &lt;/define&gt;
   1001  
   1002     &lt;define name="all"&gt;
   1003       &lt;include name="functest"/&gt;
   1004       &lt;include name="checkintest"/&gt;
   1005     &lt;/define&gt;
   1006  
   1007     &lt;run&gt;
   1008       &lt;include name="all"/&gt;
   1009     &lt;/run&gt;
   1010   &lt;/groups&gt;
   1011  
   1012   &lt;classes&gt;
   1013     &lt;class name="test.sample.Test1"/&gt;
   1014   &lt;/classes&gt;
   1015 &lt;/test&gt;
   1016 </pre>
   1017 
   1018 </p><!-------------------------------------
   1019   EXCLUSION
   1020   ------------------------------------>
   1021 
   1022 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="exclusions">Exclusion groups</a></h4>
   1023 
   1024 <p>TestNG allows you to include groups as well as exclude them.</p>
   1025 
   1026 
   1027 For example, it is quite usual to have tests that temporarily break because 
   1028 of a recent change, and you don't have time to fix the breakage yet.&nbsp; 4
   1029 However, you do want to have clean runs of your functional tests, so you need to 
   1030 deactivate these tests but keep in mind they will need to be reactivated.</p><p>A simple way to solve this problem is to create a group called &quot;broken&quot; and 
   1031 make these test methods belong to it.&nbsp; For example, in the above example, I 
   1032 know that testMethod2() is now broken so I want to disable it:
   1033 
   1034 
   1035 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Java</h3>
   1036 <pre class="brush: java">
   1037 @Test(groups = {"checkintest", "broken"} )
   1038 public void testMethod2() {
   1039 }
   1040 </pre>
   1041 
   1042 All I need to do now is to exclude this group from the run:
   1043 
   1044 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
   1045 <pre class="brush: xml; highlight: 5">
   1046 &lt;test name="Simple example"&gt;
   1047   &lt;groups&gt;
   1048     &lt;run&gt;
   1049       &lt;include name="checkintest"/&gt;
   1050       &lt;exclude name="broken"/&gt;
   1051     &lt;/run&gt;
   1052   &lt;/groups&gt;
   1053  
   1054   &lt;classes&gt;
   1055     &lt;class name="example1.Test1"/&gt;
   1056   &lt;/classes&gt;
   1057 &lt;/test&gt;
   1058 </pre>
   1059 
   1060 <p>This way, I will get a clean test run while keeping track of what tests are 
   1061 broken and need to be fixed later.</p>
   1062 
   1063 <blockquote>
   1064 	<p><i>Note:&nbsp; you can also disable tests on an individual basis by using the 
   1065 &quot;enabled&quot; property available on both @Test and @Before/After
   1066 	annotations.</i></p>
   1067 </blockquote>
   1068 
   1069 
   1070 <!-------------------------------------
   1071   PARTIAL GROUPS
   1072   ------------------------------------>
   1073 
   1074 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="partial-groups">Partial groups</a></h4>
   1075 
   1076 You can define  groups at the class level and then add groups at the method level:
   1077 
   1078 <h3 class="sourcetitle">All.java</h3>
   1079 <pre class="brush: java">
   1080 @Test(groups = { "checkin-test" })
   1081 public class All {
   1082 
   1083   @Test(groups = { "func-test" )
   1084   public void method1() { ... }
   1085 
   1086   public void method2() { ... }
   1087 }
   1088 </pre>
   1089 
   1090 In this class, method2() is part of the group &quot;checkin-test&quot;, which is defined 
   1091 at the class level, while method1() belongs to both &quot;checkin-test&quot; and 
   1092 &quot;func-test&quot;.
   1093 
   1094 <!-------------------------------------
   1095   PARAMETERS
   1096   ------------------------------------>
   1097 
   1098 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="parameters">Parameters</a></h4>
   1099 
   1100 <p>
   1101 
   1102 
   1103 Test methods don't have to be parameterless.&nbsp; You can use an arbitrary 
   1104 number of parameters on each of your test method, and you instruct TestNG to 
   1105 pass you the correct parameters with the <tt>@Parameters</tt> annotation.</p><p>
   1106 
   1107 
   1108 There are two ways to set these parameters:&nbsp; with <tt>testng.xml</tt> or 
   1109 programmatically.</p>
   1110 
   1111 
   1112 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="parameters-testng-xml">Parameters from <tt>testng.xml</tt></a></h5>
   1113 
   1114 
   1115 If you are using simple values for your parameters, you can specify them in your 
   1116 <tt>testng.xml</tt>:
   1117 
   1118 
   1119 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Java</h3>
   1120 <pre class="brush: java">
   1121 @Parameters({ "first-name" })
   1122 @Test
   1123 public void testSingleString(String firstName) { 
   1124   System.out.println("Invoked testString " + firstName);
   1125   assert "Cedric".equals(firstName);
   1126 }
   1127 </pre>
   1128 
   1129 In this code, we specify that the parameter <tt>firstName</tt> of your Java method 
   1130 should receive the value of the XML parameter called <tt>first-name</tt><i>.</i>&nbsp; 
   1131 This XML parameter is defined in <tt>testng.xml</tt>:<p>
   1132 
   1133 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
   1134 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1135 &lt;suite name="My suite"&gt;
   1136   &lt;parameter name="first-name"  value="Cedric"/&gt;
   1137   &lt;test name="Simple example"&gt;
   1138   &lt;-- ... --&gt;
   1139 </pre>
   1140 
   1141 <h4><span style="font-weight: 400">The same technique can be used for <tt>@Before/After </tt>and <tt>@Factory</tt> annotations:</span></h4>
   1142 
   1143 <pre class="brush: java">
   1144 @Parameters({ "datasource", "jdbcDriver" })
   1145 @BeforeMethod
   1146 public void beforeTest(String ds, String driver) {
   1147   m_dataSource = ...;                              // look up the value of datasource
   1148   m_jdbcDriver = driver;
   1149 }
   1150 </pre>
   1151 
   1152 This time, the two Java parameter <i>ds</i> 
   1153 and <i>driver</i> will receive the value given to the properties <tt>datasource</tt> 
   1154 and <tt>jdbc-driver </tt>respectively.&nbsp;
   1155 
   1156 <p>
   1157 
   1158 Parameters can be declared optional with the <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/annotations/Optional.html"><tt>Optional</tt></a> annotation:
   1159 
   1160 <pre class="brush: java">
   1161 @Parameters("db")
   1162 @Test
   1163 public void testNonExistentParameter(@Optional("mysql") String db) { ... }
   1164 </pre>
   1165 
   1166 If no parameter named "db" is found in your <tt>testng.xml</tt> file, your test method will receive the default value specified inside the <tt>@Optional</tt> annotation: "mysql".
   1167 
   1168 <p>The <tt>@Parameters</tt> annotation can be placed at the following locations:</p><ul>
   1169 	<li>On any method that already has a <tt>@Test</tt>, <tt>@Before/After</tt> 
   1170 	or <tt>@Factory</tt> annotation.</li><li>On at most one constructor of your test class.&nbsp; In this case, 
   1171 	TestNG will invoke this particular constructor with the parameters 
   1172 	initialized to the values specified in <tt>testng.xml</tt> whenever it needs 
   1173 	to instantiate your test class.&nbsp; This feature can be used to initialize fields 
   1174 	inside your classes to values that will then be used by your
   1175 	test methods.</li></ul>
   1176 	<blockquote>
   1177 	<p><i>Notes:
   1178 
   1179 </i>
   1180 	<ul>
   1181 		<li><i>The XML parameters are mapped to the Java parameters in the same order as 
   1182 they are found in the annotation, and TestNG will issue an error if the numbers 
   1183 don't match. </i>
   1184 		<li><i>Parameters are scoped. In <tt>testng.xml</tt>, you can declare them either under a 
   1185 		<tt>&lt;suite&gt;</tt> tag or under <tt>&lt;test&gt;</tt>. If two parameters have the same name, it's the one 
   1186 defined in <tt>&lt;test&gt;</tt> that has precedence. This is convenient if you need to specify 
   1187 a parameter applicable to all your tests and override its value only for certain 
   1188 tests. </i>
   1189 		</ul>
   1190 	<p></p>
   1191 </blockquote>
   1192 
   1193 
   1194 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="parameters-dataproviders">Parameters with DataProviders</a></h5>
   1195 
   1196 
   1197 <p>Specifying parameters in <tt>testng.xml</tt> might not be sufficient if you need to pass complex parameters, or parameters that need to be created  from Java (complex objects, objects read from a property file or a database, etc...). In this case, you can use a Data Provider to supply the values you need to test.&nbsp; A Data Provider is a method on your class that returns an array of array of objects.&nbsp; This method is annotated with <tt>@DataProvider</tt>:
   1198 
   1199 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Java</h3>
   1200 <pre class="brush: java">
   1201 //This method will provide data to any test method that declares that its Data Provider
   1202 //is named "test1"
   1203 @DataProvider(name = "test1")
   1204 public Object[][] createData1() {
   1205  return new Object[][] {
   1206    { "Cedric", new Integer(36) },
   1207    { "Anne", new Integer(37)}, 
   1208  };
   1209 }
   1210 
   1211 //This test method declares that its data should be supplied by the Data Provider
   1212 //named "test1"
   1213 @Test(dataProvider = "test1")
   1214 public void verifyData1(String n1, Integer n2) {
   1215  System.out.println(n1 + " " + n2);
   1216 } 
   1217 </pre>
   1218 will print
   1219 
   1220 <pre class="brush: text">
   1221 Cedric 36
   1222 Anne 37
   1223 </pre>
   1224 
   1225 A <tt>@Test</tt> method specifies its Data Provider with the <tt>dataProvider</tt> attribute.&nbsp; 
   1226 This name must correspond to a method on the same class annotated with <tt>@DataProvider(name=&quot;...&quot;)</tt> 
   1227 with a matching name.
   1228 
   1229 <p>
   1230 By default, the data provider will be looked for in the current test class or one of its base classes.  If you want to put your data provider in a different class, it needs to be a static method or a class with a non-arg constructor, and you specify the class where it can be found in the <tt>dataProviderClass</tt> attribute:
   1231 
   1232 <h3 class="sourcetitle">StaticProvider.java</h3>
   1233 <pre class="brush: java">
   1234 public class StaticProvider {
   1235   @DataProvider(name = "create")
   1236   public static Object[][] createData() {
   1237     return new Object[][] {
   1238       new Object[] { new Integer(42) }
   1239     };
   1240   }
   1241 }
   1242 
   1243 public class MyTest {
   1244   @Test(dataProvider = "create", dataProviderClass = StaticProvider.class)
   1245   public void test(Integer n) {
   1246     // ...
   1247   }
   1248 }
   1249 </pre>
   1250 
   1251 The data provider supports injection too. TestNG will use the test context for the injection.
   1252 
   1253 The Data Provider method can return one of the following two types:
   1254 
   1255 <ul>
   1256 <li>An array of array of objects (<tt>Object[][]</tt>) where the first dimension's size is the number of times the test method will be invoked and the second dimension size contains an array of objects that must be compatible with the parameter types of the test method. This is the cast illustrated by the example above.</li><li>An <tt>Iterator&lt;Object[]&gt;</tt>.  The only difference with <tt>Object[][]</tt> is that an <tt>Iterator</tt> lets you create your test data lazily.  TestNG will invoke the iterator and then the test method with the parameters returned by this iterator one by one.  This is particularly useful if you have a lot of parameter sets to pass to the method and you don't want to create all of them upfront.
   1257 </ul>
   1258 Here is an example of this feature:
   1259 
   1260 <pre class="brush: java">
   1261 @DataProvider(name = "test1")
   1262 public Iterator&lt;Object[]> createData() {
   1263   return new MyIterator(DATA);
   1264 } 
   1265 </pre>
   1266 
   1267 If you declare your <tt>@DataProvider</tt> as taking a <tt>java.lang.reflect.Method</tt>
   1268 as first parameter, TestNG will pass the current test method for this
   1269 first parameter.  This is particularly useful when several test methods
   1270 use the same <tt>@DataProvider</tt> and you want it to return different
   1271 values depending on which test method it is supplying data for.
   1272 <p>
   1273 For example, the following code prints the name of the test method inside its <tt>@DataProvider</tt>:
   1274 
   1275 <pre class="brush: java">
   1276 @DataProvider(name = "dp")
   1277 public Object[][] createData(Method m) {
   1278   System.out.println(m.getName());  // print test method name
   1279   return new Object[][] { new Object[] { "Cedric" }};
   1280 }
   1281 
   1282 @Test(dataProvider = "dp")
   1283 public void test1(String s) {
   1284 }
   1285 
   1286 @Test(dataProvider = "dp")
   1287 public void test2(String s) {
   1288 }
   1289 </pre>
   1290 
   1291 and will therefore display:
   1292 
   1293 <pre class="brush: text">
   1294 test1
   1295 test2
   1296 </pre>
   1297 
   1298 Data providers can run in parallel with the attribute <tt>parallel</tt>:
   1299 
   1300 <pre class="brush: java">
   1301 @DataProvider(parallel = true)
   1302 // ...
   1303 </pre>
   1304 
   1305 Parallel data providers running from an XML file share the same pool of threads, which has a size of 10 by default.  You can modify this value in the <tt>&lt;suite&gt;</tt> tag of your XML file:
   1306 
   1307 
   1308 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1309 &lt;suite name="Suite1" data-provider-thread-count="20" &gt;
   1310 ... 
   1311 </pre>
   1312 
   1313 If you want to run a few specific data providers in a different thread pool, you need to run them from a different XML file.
   1314 
   1315 <p>
   1316 
   1317 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="parameters-reports">Parameters in reports</a></h5>
   1318 
   1319 <p>
   1320 
   1321 Parameters used to invoke your test methods are shown in the HTML reports generated by TestNG.  Here is an example:
   1322 
   1323 <p align="center">
   1324 <img src="pics/parameters.png" />
   1325 </p>
   1326 
   1327 
   1328 </p>
   1329 
   1330 
   1331 <!-------------------------------------
   1332   DEPENDENCIES
   1333   ------------------------------------>
   1334 
   1335 
   1336 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="dependent-methods">Dependencies</a></h4>
   1337 
   1338 <p>Sometimes, you need
   1339 your test methods to be invoked in a certain order.&nbsp; Here are a
   1340 few examples:
   1341 
   1342 <ul>
   1343 <li>To make sure a certain number of test methods have completed and succeeded 
   1344 before running more test methods.
   1345 <li>To initialize your tests while wanting this initialization methods to be 
   1346 test methods as well (methods tagged with <tt>@Before/After</tt> will not be part of the 
   1347 final report).
   1348 </ul>
   1349 
   1350 TestNG allows you to specify dependencies either with annotations or
   1351 in XML.
   1352 
   1353 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="dependencies-with-annotations">Dependencies with annotations</a></h5>
   1354 
   1355 <p>You can use the attributes <tt>dependsOnMethods</tt> or <tt>dependsOnGroups</tt>, found on the <tt>@Test</tt> annotation.</p>There are two kinds of dependencies:
   1356 
   1357 <ul>
   1358 <li><b>Hard dependencies</b>.  All the methods you depend on must have run and succeeded for you to run.  If at least one failure occurred in your dependencies, you will not be invoked and marked as a SKIP in the report.
   1359 </li>
   1360 <li><b>Soft dependencies</b>.  You will always be run after the methods you depend on, even if some of them have failed.  This is useful when you just want to make sure that your test methods are run in a certain order but their success doesn't really depend on the success of others.  A soft dependency is obtained by adding <tt>"alwaysRun=true"</tt> in your <tt>@Test</tt> annotation.
   1361 </ul>
   1362 
   1363 Here is an example of a hard dependency:
   1364 
   1365 <pre class="brush: java">
   1366 @Test
   1367 public void serverStartedOk() {}
   1368 
   1369 @Test(dependsOnMethods = { "serverStartedOk" })
   1370 public void method1() {}
   1371 </pre>
   1372 
   1373 <p>In this example, <tt>method1()</tt> is declared as depending on method 
   1374 serverStartedOk(), which guarantees that serverStartedOk() 
   1375 will always be invoked first.</p><p>You can also have methods that depend on entire groups:</p>
   1376 
   1377 <pre class="brush: java">
   1378 @Test(groups = { "init" })
   1379 public void serverStartedOk() {}
   1380 
   1381 @Test(groups = { "init" })
   1382 public void initEnvironment() {}
   1383 
   1384 @Test(dependsOnGroups = { "init.*" })
   1385 public void method1() {}
   1386 </pre>
   1387 
   1388 <p>In this example, method1() is declared as depending on any group matching the 
   1389 regular expression &quot;init.*&quot;, which guarantees that the methods <tt>serverStartedOk()</tt> 
   1390 and <tt>initEnvironment()</tt> will always be invoked before <tt>method1()</tt>.&nbsp; </p>
   1391 <blockquote>
   1392 	<p><i>Note:&nbsp; as stated before, the order of invocation for methods that 
   1393 	belong in the same group is not guaranteed to be the same across test runs.</i></p></blockquote><p>If a method depended upon fails and you have a hard dependency on it (<tt>alwaysRun=false</tt>, which is the default), the methods that depend on it are <b>not</b> 
   1394 marked as <tt>FAIL</tt> but as <tt>SKIP</tt>.&nbsp; Skipped methods will be reported as such in 
   1395 the final report (in a color that is neither red nor green in HTML), 
   1396 which is important since skipped methods are not necessarily failures.</p><p>Both <tt>dependsOnGroups</tt> and <tt>dependsOnMethods</tt> accept regular 
   1397 expressions as parameters.&nbsp; For <tt>dependsOnMethods</tt>, if you are 
   1398 depending on a method which happens to have several overloaded versions, all the 
   1399 overloaded methods will be invoked.&nbsp; If you only want to invoke one of the 
   1400 overloaded methods, you should use <tt>dependsOnGroups</tt>.</p><p>For a more advanced example of dependent methods, please refer to 
   1401 <a href="http://beust.com/weblog/archives/000171.html">this article</a>, which 
   1402 uses inheritance to provide an elegant solution to the problem of multiple 
   1403 dependencies.</p>
   1404 
   1405 By default, dependent methods are grouped by class. For example, if method <tt>b()</tt> depends on method <tt>a()</tt> and you have several instances of the class that contains these methods (because of a factory of a data provider), then the invocation order will be as follows:
   1406 
   1407 <pre class="brush: plain">
   1408 a(1)
   1409 a(2)
   1410 b(2)
   1411 b(2)
   1412 </pre>
   1413 
   1414 TestNG will not run <tt>b()</tt> until all the instances have invoked their <tt>a()</tt> method.
   1415 
   1416 <p>
   1417 
   1418 This behavior might not be desirable in certain scenarios, such as for example testing a sign in and sign out of a web browser for various countries. In such a case, you would like the following ordering:
   1419 
   1420 <pre class="brush: plain">
   1421 signIn("us")
   1422 signOut("us")
   1423 signIn("uk")
   1424 signOut("uk")
   1425 </pre>
   1426 
   1427 For this ordering, you can use the XML attribute <tt>group-by-instances</tt>. This attribute is valid either on &lt;suite&gt; or &lt;test&gt;:
   1428 
   1429 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1430   &lt;suite name="Factory" group-by-instances="true"&gt;
   1431 or
   1432   &lt;test name="Factory" group-by-instances="true"&gt;
   1433 </pre>
   1434 
   1435 
   1436 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="dependencies-in-xml">Dependencies in XML</a></h5>
   1437 
   1438 Alternatively, you can specify your group dependencies in the <tt>testng.xml</tt> file. You use the <tt>&lt;dependencies&gt;</tt> tag to achieve this:
   1439 
   1440 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1441   &lt;test name="My suite"&gt;
   1442     &lt;groups&gt;
   1443       &lt;dependencies&gt;
   1444         &lt;group name="c" depends-on="a  b" /&gt;
   1445         &lt;group name="z" depends-on="c" /&gt;
   1446       &lt;/dependencies&gt;
   1447     &lt;/groups&gt;
   1448   &lt;/test&gt;
   1449 </pre>
   1450 
   1451 The <tt>&lt;depends-on&gt;</tt> attribute contains a space-separated list of groups.
   1452 
   1453 
   1454 <!-------------------------------------
   1455   FACTORIES
   1456   ------------------------------------>
   1457 
   1458 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="factories">Factories</a></h4>
   1459 
   1460 Factories allow you to create tests dynamically. For example, imagine you 
   1461 want to create a test method that will access a page on a Web site several 
   1462 times, and you want to invoke it with different values:
   1463 
   1464 <h3 class="sourcetitle">TestWebServer.java</h3>
   1465 <pre class="brush: java">
   1466 public class TestWebServer {
   1467   @Test(parameters = { "number-of-times" })
   1468   public void accessPage(int numberOfTimes) {
   1469     while (numberOfTimes-- > 0) {
   1470      // access the web page
   1471     }
   1472   }
   1473 }
   1474 </pre>
   1475 
   1476 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
   1477 <pre class="brush: java">
   1478 &lt;test name="T1"&gt;
   1479 &nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;parameter name="number-of-times" value="10"/&gt;
   1480 &nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;class name= "TestWebServer" /&gt;
   1481 &lt;/test&gt;
   1482 
   1483 &lt;test name="T2"&gt;
   1484 &nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;parameter name="number-of-times" value="20"/&gt;
   1485 &nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;class name= "TestWebServer"/&gt;
   1486 &lt;/test&gt;
   1487 
   1488 &lt;test name="T3"&gt;
   1489 &nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;parameter name="number-of-times" value="30"/&gt;
   1490 &nbsp;&nbsp;&lt;class name= "TestWebServer"/&gt;
   1491 &lt;/test&gt;
   1492 </pre>
   1493 
   1494 This can become quickly impossible to manage, so instead, you should use a factory:
   1495 
   1496 <h3 class="sourcetitle">WebTestFactory.java</h3>
   1497 <pre class="brush: java">
   1498 public class WebTestFactory {
   1499   @Factory
   1500   public Object[] createInstances() {
   1501    Object[] result = new Object[10];  
   1502    for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++) {
   1503       result[i] = new WebTest(i * 10);
   1504     }
   1505     return result;
   1506   }
   1507 }
   1508 </pre>
   1509 
   1510 and the new test class is now:
   1511 
   1512 <h3 class="sourcetitle">WebTest.java</h3>
   1513 <pre class="brush: java">
   1514 public class WebTest {
   1515   private int m_numberOfTimes;
   1516   public WebTest(int numberOfTimes) {
   1517     m_numberOfTimes = numberOfTimes;
   1518   }
   1519 
   1520   @Test
   1521   public void testServer() {
   1522    for (int i = 0; i < m_numberOfTimes; i++) {
   1523      // access the web page
   1524     }
   1525   }
   1526 }
   1527 </pre>
   1528 
   1529 <p>Your <tt>testng.xml</tt> only needs to reference the class that 
   1530 contains the factory method, since the test instances themselves will be created 
   1531 at runtime:</p>
   1532 
   1533 <pre class="brush: java">
   1534 &lt;class name="WebTestFactory" /&gt;
   1535 </pre>
   1536 
   1537 <p>The factory method can receive parameters just like <tt>@Test</tt> and <tt>@Before/After</tt> and it must return <tt>Object[]</tt>.&nbsp; 
   1538 The objects returned can be of any class (not necessarily the same class as the 
   1539 factory class) and they don't even need to contain TestNG annotations (in which 
   1540 case they will be ignored by TestNG).</p>
   1541 
   1542 <p>
   1543 
   1544 Factories can also be used with data providers, and you can leverage this functionality by putting the <tt>@Factory</tt> annotation either on a regular method or on a constructor. Here is an example of a constructor factory:
   1545 
   1546 <pre class="brush:java">
   1547   @Factory(dataProvider = "dp")
   1548   public FactoryDataProviderSampleTest(int n) {
   1549     super(n);
   1550   }
   1551 
   1552   @DataProvider
   1553   static public Object[][] dp() {
   1554     return new Object[][] {
   1555       new Object[] { 41 },
   1556       new Object[] { 42 },
   1557     };
   1558   }
   1559 </pre>
   1560 
   1561 The example will make TestNG create two test classes, on with the constructor invoked with the value 41 and the other with 42.
   1562 
   1563 
   1564 
   1565 <!-------------------------------------
   1566   CLASS LEVEL ANNOTATIONS
   1567   ------------------------------------>
   1568 
   1569 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="class-level">Class level annotations</a></h4>
   1570 
   1571 The <tt>@Test</tt> annotation can be put on a class instead of a test method:
   1572 
   1573 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Test1.java</h3>
   1574 <pre class="brush: java">
   1575 @Test
   1576 public class Test1 {
   1577   public void test1() {
   1578   }
   1579 
   1580   public void test2() {
   1581   }
   1582 }
   1583 </pre>
   1584 The effect of a class level <tt>@Test</tt> annotation is to make all the public methods of this class to become test methods even if they are not annotated.  You can still repeat the <tt>@Test</tt> annotation on a method if you want to add certain attributes.
   1585 <p>
   1586 
   1587 For example:
   1588 
   1589 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Test1.java</h3>
   1590 <pre class="brush: java">
   1591 @Test
   1592 public class Test1 {
   1593   public void test1() {
   1594   }
   1595 
   1596   @Test(groups = "g1")
   1597   public void test2() {
   1598   }
   1599 }
   1600 </pre>
   1601 will make both <tt>test1()</tt> and <tt>test2()</tt> test methods but on top of that, <tt>test2()</tt> now belongs to the group "g1".
   1602 <p>
   1603 
   1604 
   1605 
   1606 <!-------------------------------------
   1607   PARALLEL RUNNING
   1608   ------------------------------------>
   1609 
   1610 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="parallel-running">Parallelism and time-outs</a></h4>
   1611 
   1612 You can  instruct TestNG to run your tests in separate threads in various ways.
   1613 
   1614 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="parallel-suites">Parallel suites</a></h5>
   1615 
   1616 This is useful if you are running several suite files (e.g. "<tt>java org.testng.TestNG testng1.xml testng2.xml"</tt>) and you want each of these suites to be run in a separate thread. You can use the following command line flag to specify the size of a thread pool:
   1617 
   1618 <pre class="brush: plain">
   1619 java org.testng.TestNG -suitethreadpoolsize 3 testng1.xml testng2.xml testng3.xml
   1620 </pre>
   1621 
   1622 The corresponding ant task name is <tt>suitethreadpoolsize</tt>.
   1623 
   1624 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="parallel-tests">Parallel tests, classes and methods</a></h5>
   1625 The <i>parallel</i> attribute on the &lt;suite&gt; tag can take one of following values:
   1626 
   1627 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1628 &lt;suite name="My suite" parallel="methods" thread-count="5"&gt;
   1629 </pre>
   1630 
   1631 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1632 &lt;suite name="My suite" parallel="tests" thread-count="5"&gt;
   1633 </pre>
   1634 
   1635 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1636 &lt;suite name="My suite" parallel="classes" thread-count="5"&gt;
   1637 </pre>
   1638 
   1639 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1640 &lt;suite name="My suite" parallel="instances" thread-count="5"&gt;
   1641 </pre>
   1642 
   1643 <ul>
   1644 <li>
   1645 <b><tt>parallel="methods"</tt></b>:  TestNG will run all your test methods in separate threads. Dependent methods will also run in separate threads but they will respect the order that you specified.
   1646 </li>
   1647 
   1648 <br>
   1649 
   1650 <li>
   1651 <b><tt>parallel="tests"</tt></b>:  TestNG will run all the methods in the same &lt;test&gt; tag in the same thread, but each &lt;test&gt; tag will be in a separate thread.  This allows you to group all your classes that are not thread safe in the same &lt;test&gt; and guarantee they will all run in the same thread while taking advantage of TestNG using as many threads as possible to run your tests.
   1652 </li>
   1653 
   1654 <br>
   1655 
   1656 <li>
   1657 <b><tt>parallel="classes"</tt></b>:  TestNG will run all the methods in the same class in the same thread, but each class will be run in a separate thread.
   1658 </li>
   1659 
   1660 <br/>
   1661 
   1662 <li>
   1663 <b><tt>parallel="instances"</tt></b>:  TestNG will run all the methods in the same instance in the same thread, but two methods on two different instances will be running in different threads.
   1664 </li>
   1665 
   1666 </ul>
   1667 
   1668 <p>
   1669 
   1670 
   1671 Additionally, the attribute <i>
   1672 thread-count</i> allows you to specify how many threads should be allocated for 
   1673 this execution.<blockquote>
   1674 	<p><i>Note: the <tt>@Test</tt> attribute <tt>timeOut</tt> works in both 
   1675 	parallel and non-parallel mode.</i></p></blockquote>You can also specify that a <tt>@Test</tt> method should be invoked from different threads.  You can use the attribute <tt>threadPoolSize</tt> to achieve this result:
   1676 
   1677 <pre class="brush: java">
   1678 @Test(threadPoolSize = 3, invocationCount = 10,  timeOut = 10000)
   1679 public void testServer() {
   1680 </pre>
   1681 In this example, the function <tt>testServer</tt> will be invoked ten times from three different threads.  Additionally, a time-out of ten seconds guarantees that none of the threads will block on this thread forever. 
   1682 
   1683 <!-------------------------------------
   1684   RERUNNING
   1685   ------------------------------------>
   1686 
   1687 
   1688 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="rerunning">Rerunning failed tests</a></h4>
   1689 
   1690 Every time tests fail in a suite, TestNG creates a file called <tt>testng-failed.xml</tt> in the output directory.
   1691 This XML file contains the necessary information to rerun only these methods 
   1692 that failed, allowing you to quickly reproduce the failures without having to 
   1693 run the entirety of your tests.&nbsp; Therefore, a typical session would look 
   1694 like this:
   1695 
   1696 <pre class="brush: text">
   1697 java -classpath testng.jar;%CLASSPATH% org.testng.TestNG -d test-outputs testng.xml
   1698 java -classpath testng.jar;%CLASSPATH% org.testng.TestNG -d test-outputs test-outputs\testng-failed.xml
   1699 </pre>
   1700 
   1701 <p>Note that <tt>testng-failed.xml</tt> will contain all the necessary dependent 
   1702 methods so that you are guaranteed to run the methods that failed without any 
   1703 SKIP failures.</p>
   1704 
   1705 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="junit">JUnit tests</a></h4>
   1706 
   1707 TestNG can run JUnit 3 and JUnit 4 tests.&nbsp; All you need to do is
   1708 put the JUnit jar file on the classpath, specify your JUnit test classes in the <tt>testng.classNames</tt>
   1709 property and set the <tt>testng.junit</tt> property to true:
   1710 
   1711 <p></p>
   1712 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
   1713 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1714 &lt;test name="Test1" junit="true"&gt;
   1715   &lt;classes&gt;
   1716     &lt;!-- ... --&gt;
   1717 </pre>
   1718 
   1719 <p>The behavior of TestNG in this case is similar to JUnit depending on the JUnit version found on the class path:<br>
   1720 </p>
   1721 <ul>
   1722     <li>JUnit 3:
   1723 <ul>
   1724   <li>All methods starting with test* in your classes will be run</li><li>If there is a method setUp() on your test class, it will be invoked before 
   1725 	every test method</li><li>If there is a method tearDown() on your test class, it will be invoked 
   1726 	before after every test method</li><li>If your test class contains a method suite(), all the tests returned by 
   1727 	this method will be invoked</li></ul>
   1728     </li>
   1729     <li>JUnit 4:
   1730         <ul>
   1731             <li>TestNG will use the <tt>org.junit.runner.JUnitCore</tt> runner to run your tests</li>
   1732         </ul>
   1733     </li>
   1734 </ul>
   1735 
   1736 <!-------------------------------------
   1737   JUNIT
   1738 --------------------------------------->
   1739 
   1740 
   1741 <!-------------------------------------
   1742   RUNNING TESTNG
   1743  ------------------------------------>
   1744 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="running-testng-programmatically">Running TestNG programmatically</a></h4>
   1745 
   1746 You can invoke TestNG from your own programs very easily:
   1747 
   1748 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Java</h3>
   1749 <pre class="brush: java">
   1750 TestListenerAdapter tla = new TestListenerAdapter();
   1751 TestNG testng = new TestNG();
   1752 testng.setTestClasses(new Class[] { Run2.class });
   1753 testng.addListener(tla);
   1754 testng.run(); 
   1755 </pre>
   1756 
   1757 This example creates a <tt><a href="http://testng.org/javadocs/org/testng/TestNG.html">TestNG</a></tt> object and runs the test class <tt>Run2</tt>.  It also adds a <tt>TestListener</tt>.  You can either use the adapter class <tt><a href="http://testng.org/javadocs/org/testng/TestListenerAdapter.html">org.testng.TestListenerAdapter</a></tt> or implement <tt><a href="http://testng.org/javadocs/org/testng/ITestListener.html">org.testng.ITestListener</a></tt> yourself.  This interface contains various callback methods that let you keep track of when a test starts, succeeds, fails, etc... 
   1758 <p>
   1759 Similary, you can invoke TestNG on a <tt>testng.xml</tt> file or you can create a virtual <tt>testng.xml</tt> file yourself.  In order to do this, you can use the classes found the package <tt><a href="http://testng.org/javadocs/org/testng/xml/package-frame.html">org.testng.xml</a></tt>:  <tt><a href="http://testng.org/javadocs/org/testng/xml/XmlClass.html">XmlClass</a></tt>, <tt><a href="http://testng.org/javadocs/org/testng/xml/XmlTest.html">XmlTest</a></tt>, etc...  Each of these classes correspond to their XML tag counterpart.
   1760 <p>
   1761 For example, suppose you want to create the following virtual file:
   1762 
   1763 <pre class="brush: java">
   1764 &lt;suite name="TmpSuite" &gt;
   1765   &lt;test name="TmpTest" &gt;
   1766     &lt;classes&gt;
   1767       &lt;class name="test.failures.Child"  /&gt;
   1768     &lt;classes&gt;
   1769     &lt;/test&gt;
   1770 &lt;/suite&gt;
   1771 </pre>
   1772 
   1773 You would use the following code:
   1774 
   1775 <pre class="brush: java">
   1776 XmlSuite suite = new XmlSuite();
   1777 suite.setName("TmpSuite");
   1778 
   1779 XmlTest test = new XmlTest(suite);
   1780 test.setName("TmpTest");
   1781 List&lt;XmlClass&gt; classes = new ArrayList&lt;XmlClass&gt;();
   1782 classes.add(new XmlClass("test.failures.Child"));
   1783 test.setXmlClasses(classes) ;
   1784 </pre>
   1785 And then you can pass this <tt>XmlSuite</tt> to TestNG:
   1786 
   1787 <pre class="brush: java">
   1788 List&lt;XmlSuite&gt; suites = new ArrayList&lt;XmlSuite&gt;();
   1789 suites.add(suite);
   1790 TestNG tng = new TestNG();
   1791 tng.setXmlSuites(suites);
   1792 tng.run(); 
   1793 </pre>
   1794 
   1795 <p>Please see the <a href="../doc/javadocs/org/testng/package-summary.html" target="mainFrame">JavaDocs</a> for the entire API.</p><p>
   1796 
   1797 
   1798 <!-------------------------------------
   1799   BEANSHELL
   1800  ------------------------------------>
   1801 	
   1802 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="beanshell">BeanShell and advanced group selection</a></h4>
   1803 
   1804 
   1805 	<p>If the <tt>&lt;include&gt;</tt> and <tt>&lt;exclude&gt;</tt> tags in <tt>testng.xml</tt> are not enough for your needs, you can use a <a href="http://beanshell.org">BeanShell</a> expression to decide whether a certain test method should be included in a test run or not. You specify this expression just under the <tt>&lt;test&gt;</tt> tag:</p>
   1806 
   1807 <h3 class="sourcetitle">testng.xml</h3>
   1808 <pre class="brush: xml">
   1809 &lt;test name="BeanShell test"&gt;
   1810    &lt;method-selectors&gt;
   1811      &lt;method-selector&gt;
   1812        &lt;script language="beanshell"&gt;&lt;![CDATA[
   1813          groups.containsKey("test1")
   1814        ]]&gt;&lt;/script&gt;
   1815      &lt;/method-selector&gt;
   1816    &lt;/method-selectors&gt;
   1817   &lt;!-- ... --&gt;
   1818 </pre>
   1819 
   1820 When a <tt>&lt;script&gt;</tt> tag is found in <tt>testng.xml</tt>, TestNG will ignore subsequent <tt>&lt;include&gt;</tt> and <tt>&lt;exclude&gt;</tt> of groups and methods in the current <tt>&lt;test&gt;</tt> tag:&nbsp; your BeanShell expression will be the only way to decide whether a test method is included or not.</p><p>Here are additional information on the BeanShell script:</p><ul>
   1821 <li>
   1822 It must return a boolean value.&nbsp; Except for this constraint, any valid BeanShell code is allowed (for example, you might want to return <tt>true </tt>during week days and false during weekends, which would allow you to run tests differently depending on the date).<br>&nbsp;
   1823 </li>
   1824 <li>
   1825 TestNG defines the following variables for your convenience:<br>&nbsp; <b><tt>java.lang.reflect.Method method</tt></b>:&nbsp; the current test method.<br>&nbsp; <b>org.testng.ITestNGMethod testngMethod</b>:&nbsp; the description of the current test method.<br>&nbsp; <b><tt>java.util.Map&lt;String, String&gt; groups</tt></b>:&nbsp; a map of the groups the current test method belongs to.<br>&nbsp;
   1826 </li>
   1827 <li>
   1828 You might want to surround your expression with a <tt>CDATA</tt> declaration (as shown above) to avoid tedious quoting of reserved XML characters).<br>&nbsp;
   1829 </li>
   1830 </ul>
   1831 
   1832 <!-------------------------------------
   1833   ANNOTATION TRANSFORMERS
   1834  ------------------------------------>
   1835 	
   1836 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="annotationtransformers">Annotation Transformers</a></h4>
   1837 
   1838 TestNG allows you to modify the content of all the annotations at runtime.  This is especially useful if the annotations in the source code are right most of the time, but there are a few situations where you'd like to override their value.
   1839 <p>
   1840 
   1841 In order to achieve this, you need to use an Annotation Transformer.
   1842 
   1843 <p>
   1844 
   1845 An Annotation Transformer is a class that implements the following interface:
   1846 
   1847 <pre class="brush: java">
   1848 public interface IAnnotationTransformer {
   1849 
   1850   /**
   1851    * This method will be invoked by TestNG to give you a chance
   1852    * to modify a TestNG annotation read from your test classes.
   1853    * You can change the values you need by calling any of the
   1854    * setters on the ITest interface.
   1855    * 
   1856    * Note that only one of the three parameters testClass,
   1857    * testConstructor and testMethod will be non-null.
   1858    * 
   1859    * @param annotation The annotation that was read from your
   1860    * test class.
   1861    * @param testClass If the annotation was found on a class, this
   1862    * parameter represents this class (null otherwise).
   1863    * @param testConstructor If the annotation was found on a constructor,
   1864    * this parameter represents this constructor (null otherwise).
   1865    * @param testMethod If the annotation was found on a method,
   1866    * this parameter represents this method (null otherwise).
   1867    */
   1868   public void transform(ITest annotation, Class testClass,
   1869       Constructor testConstructor, Method testMethod);
   1870 }
   1871 </pre>
   1872 
   1873 Like all the other TestNG listeners, you can specify this class either on the command line or with ant:
   1874 
   1875 <p>
   1876 
   1877 <pre class="brush: java">
   1878   java org.testng.TestNG -listener MyTransformer testng.xml
   1879 </pre>
   1880 
   1881 or programmatically:
   1882 
   1883 <p>
   1884 
   1885 <pre class="brush: java">
   1886   TestNG tng = new TestNG();
   1887   tng.setAnnotationTransformer(new MyTransformer());
   1888   // ...
   1889 </pre>
   1890 
   1891 When the method <tt>transform()</tt> is invoked, you can call any of the setters on the <tt>ITest test</tt> parameter to alter its value before TestNG proceeds further.
   1892 <p>
   1893 For example, here is how you would override the attribute <tt>invocationCount</tt> but only on the test method <tt>invoke()</tt> of one of your test classes:
   1894 
   1895 <pre class="brush: java">
   1896   public class MyTransformer implements IAnnotationTransformer {
   1897     public void transform(ITest annotation, Class testClass,
   1898         Constructor testConstructor, Method testMethod)
   1899     {
   1900       if ("invoke".equals(testMethod.getName())) {
   1901         annotation.setInvocationCount(5);
   1902       }
   1903     }
   1904   }
   1905 </pre>
   1906 
   1907 <tt>IAnnotationTransformer</tt> only lets you modify a <tt>@Test</tt> annotation.  If you need to modify another TestNG annotation (a configuration annotation, <tt>@Factory</tt> or <tt>@DataProvider</tt>), use an <tt>IAnnotationTransformer2</tt>.
   1908 
   1909 <!-------------------------------------
   1910   METHOD INTERCEPTORS
   1911  ------------------------------------>
   1912 	
   1913 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="methodinterceptors">Method Interceptors</a></h4>
   1914 
   1915 Once TestNG has calculated in what order the test methods will be invoked, these methods are split in two groups:
   1916 
   1917 <ul>
   1918   <li><em>Methods run sequentially</em>.  These are all the test methods that have dependencies or dependents.  These methods will be run in a specific order.
   1919   <li><em>Methods run in no particular order</em>.  These are all the methods that don't belong in the first category.  The order in which these test methods are run is random and can vary from one run to the next (although by default, TestNG will try to group test methods by class).
   1920 </ul>
   1921 
   1922 In order to give you more control on the methods that belong to the second category, TestNG defines the following interface:
   1923 
   1924 <pre class="brush: java">
   1925 public interface IMethodInterceptor {
   1926   
   1927   List&lt;IMethodInstance&gt; intercept(List&lt;IMethodInstance&gt; methods, ITestContext context);
   1928 
   1929 }
   1930 
   1931 </pre>
   1932 
   1933 The list of methods passed in parameters are all the methods that can be run in any order.  Your <tt>intercept</tt> method is expected to return a similar list of <tt>IMethodInstance</tt>, which can be either of the following:
   1934 
   1935 <ul>
   1936   <li>The same list you received in parameter but in a different order.
   1937   <li>A smaller list of <tt>IMethodInstance</tt> objects.
   1938   <li>A bigger list of <tt>IMethodInstance</tt> objects.
   1939 </ul>
   1940 
   1941 Once you have defined your interceptor, you pass it to TestNG as a listener.  For example:
   1942 
   1943 <p>
   1944 
   1945 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Shell</h3>
   1946 <pre class="brush: text">
   1947 java -classpath "testng-jdk15.jar:test/build" org.testng.TestNG -listener test.methodinterceptors.NullMethodInterceptor
   1948    -testclass test.methodinterceptors.FooTest
   1949 </pre>
   1950 
   1951 For the equivalent <tt>ant</tt> syntax, see the <tt>listeners</tt> attribute in the <a href="ant.html">ant documentation</a>.
   1952 <p>
   1953 For example, here is a Method Interceptor that will reorder the methods so that test methods that belong to the group "fast" are always run first:
   1954 
   1955 <pre class="brush: java">
   1956 public List&lt;IMethodInstance&gt; intercept(List&lt;IMethodInstance&gt; methods, ITestContext context) {
   1957   List&lt;IMethodInstance&gt; result = new ArrayList&lt;IMethodInstance&gt;();
   1958   for (IMethodInstance m : methods) {
   1959     Test test = m.getMethod().getConstructorOrMethod().getAnnotation(Test.class);
   1960     Set&lt;String&gt; groups = new HashSet&lt;String&gt;();
   1961     for (String group : test.groups()) {
   1962       groups.add(group);
   1963     }
   1964     if (groups.contains("fast")) {
   1965       result.add(0, m);
   1966     }
   1967     else {
   1968       result.add(m);
   1969     }
   1970   }
   1971   return result;
   1972 }
   1973 </pre>
   1974 
   1975 
   1976 <!-------------------------------------
   1977   TESTNG LISTENERS
   1978  ------------------------------------>
   1979 	
   1980 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="testng-listeners">TestNG Listeners</a></h4>
   1981 
   1982 There are several interfaces that allow you to modify TestNG's behavior.  These interfaces are broadly called "TestNG Listeners".  Here are a few listeners:
   1983 
   1984 <ul>
   1985   <li><tt>IAnnotationTransformer</tt> (<a href="#annotationtransformers">doc</a>, <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IAnnotationTransformer.html">javadoc</a>)
   1986   <li><tt>IAnnotationTransformer2</tt> (<a href="#annotationtransformers">doc</a>, <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IAnnotationTransformer2.html">javadoc</a>)
   1987   <li><tt>IHookable</tt> (<a href="#ihookable">doc</a>, <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IHookable.html">javadoc</a>)
   1988   <li><tt>IInvokedMethodListener</tt> (doc, <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IInvokedMethodListener.html">javadoc</a>)
   1989   <li><tt>IMethodInterceptor</tt> (<a href="#methodinterceptors">doc</a>, <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IMethodInterceptor.html">javadoc</a>)
   1990   <li><tt>IReporter</tt> (<a href="#logging-reporters">doc</a>, <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IReporter.html">javadoc</a>)
   1991   <li><tt>ISuiteListener</tt> (doc, <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/ISuiteListener.html">javadoc</a>)
   1992   <li><tt>ITestListener</tt> (<a href="#logging-listeners">doc</a>, <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/ITestListener.html">javadoc</a>)
   1993 </ul>
   1994 
   1995 When you implement one of these interfaces, you can let TestNG know about it with either of the following ways:
   1996 
   1997 <ul>
   1998   <li><a href="#running-testng">Using -listener on the command line.</a>
   1999   <li><a href="ant.html">Using &lt;listeners&gt; with ant.</a>
   2000   <li>Using &lt;listeners&gt; in your <tt>testng.xml</tt> file.
   2001   <li>Using the <tt>@Listeners</tt> annotation on any of your test classes.
   2002   <li>Using <tt>ServiceLoader</tt>.
   2003 </ul>
   2004 
   2005 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="listeners-testng-xml">Specifying listeners with <tt>testng.xml</tt> or in Java</a></h5>
   2006 
   2007 Here is how you can define listeners in your <tt>testng.xml</tt> file:
   2008 
   2009 <pre class="brush: xml">
   2010 &lt;suite&gt;
   2011 
   2012   &lt;listeners&gt;
   2013     &lt;listener class-name="com.example.MyListener" /&gt;
   2014     &lt;listener class-name="com.example.MyMethodInterceptor" /&gt;
   2015   &lt;/listeners&gt;
   2016 
   2017 ...
   2018 
   2019 </pre>
   2020 
   2021 Or if you prefer to define these listeners in Java:
   2022 
   2023 <pre class="brush: java">
   2024 @Listeners({ com.example.MyListener.class, com.example.MyMethodInterceptor.class })
   2025 public class MyTest {
   2026   // ...
   2027 }
   2028 </pre>
   2029 
   2030 The <tt>@Listeners</tt> annotation can contain any class that extends <tt>org.testng.ITestNGListener</tt> <b>except</b> <tt>IAnnotationTransformer</tt> and <tt>IAnnotationTransformer2</tt>.  The reason is that these listeners need to be known very early in the process so that TestNG can use them to rewrite your annotations, therefore you need to specify these listeners in your <tt>testng.xml</tt> file.
   2031 
   2032 <p>
   2033 
   2034 Note that the <tt>@Listeners</tt> annotation will apply to your entire suite file, just as if you had specified it in a <tt>testng.xml</tt> file. If you want to restrict its scope (for example, only running on the current class), the code in your listener could first check the test method that's about to run and decide what to do then.
   2035 
   2036 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="listeners-service-loader">Specifying listeners with <tt>ServiceLoader</tt></a></h5>
   2037 
   2038 Finally, the JDK offers a very elegant mechanism to specify implementations of interfaces on the class path via the <tt><a href="http://download.oracle.com/javase/6/docs/api/java/util/ServiceLoader.html">ServiceLoader</a></tt> class.
   2039 
   2040 <p>
   2041 With ServiceLoader, all you need to do is create a jar file that contains your listener(s) and a few configuration files, put that jar file on the classpath when you run TestNG and TestNG will automatically find them.
   2042 <p>
   2043 
   2044 Here is a concrete example of how it works.
   2045 
   2046 <p>
   2047 
   2048 Let's start by creating a listener (any TestNG listener should work):
   2049 
   2050 <pre class="brush: java">
   2051 package test.tmp;
   2052 
   2053 public class TmpSuiteListener implements ISuiteListener {
   2054   @Override
   2055   public void onFinish(ISuite suite) {
   2056     System.out.println("Finishing");
   2057   }
   2058 
   2059   @Override
   2060   public void onStart(ISuite suite) {
   2061     System.out.println("Starting");
   2062   }
   2063 }
   2064 </pre>
   2065 
   2066 Compile this file, then create a file at the location <tt>META-INF/services/org.testng.ITestNGListener</tt>, which will name the implementation(s) you want for this interface.
   2067 
   2068 <p>
   2069 
   2070 You should end up with the following directory structure, with only two files:
   2071 
   2072 <pre class="brush: plain; highlight: [4, 7]">
   2073 $ tree
   2074 |____META-INF
   2075 | |____services
   2076 | | |____org.testng.ITestNGListener
   2077 |____test
   2078 | |____tmp
   2079 | | |____TmpSuiteListener.class
   2080 
   2081 $ cat META-INF/services/org.testng.ITestNGListener
   2082 test.tmp.TmpSuiteListener
   2083 </pre>
   2084 
   2085 Create a jar of this directory:
   2086 
   2087 <pre class="brush: plain">
   2088 $ jar cvf ../sl.jar .
   2089 added manifest
   2090 ignoring entry META-INF/
   2091 adding: META-INF/services/(in = 0) (out= 0)(stored 0%)
   2092 adding: META-INF/services/org.testng.ITestNGListener(in = 26) (out= 28)(deflated -7%)
   2093 adding: test/(in = 0) (out= 0)(stored 0%)
   2094 adding: test/tmp/(in = 0) (out= 0)(stored 0%)
   2095 adding: test/tmp/TmpSuiteListener.class(in = 849) (out= 470)(deflated 44%)
   2096 </pre>
   2097 
   2098 Next, put this jar file on your classpath when you invoke TestNG:
   2099 
   2100 <pre class="brush: plain">
   2101 $ java -classpath sl.jar:testng.jar org.testng.TestNG testng-single.yaml
   2102 Starting
   2103 f2 11 2
   2104 PASSED: f2("2")
   2105 Finishing
   2106 </pre>
   2107 
   2108 This mechanism allows you to apply the same set of listeners to an entire organization just by adding a jar file to the classpath, instead of asking every single developer to remember to specify these listeners in their testng.xml file. 
   2109 
   2110 <!-------------------------------------
   2111   DEPENDENCY INJECTION
   2112  ------------------------------------>
   2113 	
   2114 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="dependency-injection">Dependency injection</a></h4>
   2115 
   2116 TestNG supports two different kinds of dependency injection: native (performed by TestNG itself) and external (performed by a dependency injection framework such as Guice).
   2117 
   2118 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="native-dependency-injection">Native dependency injection</a></h5>
   2119 
   2120 TestNG lets you declare additional parameters in your methods.  When this happens, TestNG will automatically fill these parameters with the right value.  Dependency injection can be used in the following places:
   2121 
   2122 <ul>
   2123   
   2124 <li>
   2125   Any @Before method or @Test method can declare a parameter of type <tt>ITestContext</tt>.
   2126 <li>
   2127   Any @AfterMethod method can declare a parameter of type <tt>ITestResult</tt>, which will reflect the result of the test method that was just run.
   2128 <li>
   2129   Any @Before and @After methods can declare a parameter of type <tt>XmlTest</tt>, which contain the current <tt>&lt;test&gt;</tt> tag.
   2130 <li>
   2131   Any @BeforeMethod (and @AfterMethod) can declare a parameter of type
   2132   <tt>java.lang.reflect.Method</tt>.  This parameter will receive the
   2133   test method that will be called once this @BeforeMethod finishes (or
   2134   after the method as run for @AfterMethod).
   2135 <li>
   2136   Any @BeforeMethod can declare a parameter of type <tt>Object[]</tt>.  This parameter will receive the list of parameters that are about to be fed to the upcoming test method, which could be either injected by TestNG, such as <tt>java.lang.reflect.Method</tt> or come from a <tt>@DataProvider</tt>.
   2137 <li>
   2138   Any @DataProvider can declare a parameter of type
   2139   <tt>ITestContext</tt> or <tt>java.lang.reflect.Method</tt>.  The
   2140   latter parameter will receive the test method that is about to be invoked.
   2141 </ul>
   2142 
   2143 You can turn off injection with the <tt>@NoInjection</tt> annotation:
   2144 
   2145 <pre class="brush: java; highlight: [9]">
   2146 public class NoInjectionTest {
   2147 
   2148   @DataProvider(name = "provider")
   2149   public Object[][] provide() throws Exception {
   2150       return new Object[][] { { CC.class.getMethod("f") } };
   2151   }
   2152 
   2153   @Test(dataProvider = "provider")
   2154   public void withoutInjection(@NoInjection Method m) {
   2155       Assert.assertEquals(m.getName(), "f");
   2156   }
   2157 
   2158   @Test(dataProvider = "provider")
   2159   public void withInjection(Method m) {
   2160       Assert.assertEquals(m.getName(), "withInjection");
   2161   }
   2162 }
   2163 </pre>
   2164 
   2165 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="guice-dependency-injection">Guice dependency injection</a></h5>
   2166 
   2167 If you use Guice, TestNG gives you an easy way to inject your test objects with a Guice module:
   2168 
   2169 <pre class="brush: java">
   2170 @Guice(modules = GuiceExampleModule.class)
   2171 public class GuiceTest extends SimpleBaseTest {
   2172 
   2173   @Inject
   2174   ISingleton m_singleton;
   2175 
   2176   @Test
   2177   public void singletonShouldWork() {
   2178     m_singleton.doSomething();
   2179   }
   2180 
   2181 }
   2182 </pre>
   2183 
   2184 In this example, <tt>GuiceExampleModule</tt> is expected to bind the interface <tt>ISingleton</tt> to some concrete class:
   2185 
   2186 <pre class="brush: java">
   2187 public class GuiceExampleModule implements Module {
   2188 
   2189   @Override
   2190   public void configure(Binder binder) {
   2191     binder.bind(ISingleton.class).to(ExampleSingleton.class).in(Singleton.class);
   2192   }
   2193 
   2194 }
   2195 </pre>
   2196 
   2197 If you need more flexibility in specifying which modules should be used to instantiate your test classes, you can specify a module factory:
   2198 
   2199 <pre class="brush: java">
   2200 @Guice(moduleFactory = ModuleFactory.class)
   2201 public class GuiceModuleFactoryTest {
   2202 
   2203   @Inject
   2204   ISingleton m_singleton;
   2205 
   2206   @Test
   2207   public void singletonShouldWork() {
   2208     m_singleton.doSomething();
   2209   }
   2210 }
   2211 </pre>
   2212 
   2213 The module factory needs to implement the interface <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IModuleFactory.html">IModuleFactory</a>:
   2214 
   2215 <pre class="brush: java">
   2216 public interface IModuleFactory {
   2217  /**
   2218    * @param context The current test context
   2219    * @param testClass The test class
   2220    *
   2221    * @return The Guice module that should be used to get an instance of this
   2222    * test class.
   2223    */
   2224   Module createModule(ITestContext context, Class&lt;?&gt; testClass);
   2225 }
   2226 </pre>
   2227 
   2228 Your factory will be passed an instance of the test context and the test class that TestNG needs to instantiate. Your <tt>createModule</tt> method should return a Guice Module that will know how to instantiate this test class. You can use the test context to find out more information about your environment, such as parameters specified in <tt>testng.xml</tt>, etc...
   2229 
   2230 You will get even more flexibility and Guice power with <tt>parent-module</tt> and <tt>guice-stage</tt> suite parameters.
   2231 <tt>guice-stage</tt> allow you to chose the <a href="https://github.com/google/guice/wiki/Bootstrap"><tt>Stage</tt></a> used to create the parent injector.
   2232 The default one is <tt>DEVELOPMENT</tt>. Other allowed values are <tt>PRODUCTION</tt> and <tt>TOOL</tt>.
   2233 Here is how you can define parent-module in your test.xml file:
   2234 
   2235 <pre class="brush: xml">
   2236 <suite parent-module="com.example.SuiteParenModule" guice-stage="PRODUCTION">
   2237 </suite>
   2238 </pre>
   2239 
   2240 TestNG will create this module only once for given suite. Will also use this module for obtaining instances of test specific Guice modules and module factories, then will create child injector for each test class.
   2241 
   2242 With such approach you can declare all common bindings in parent-module also you can inject binding declared in parent-module in module and module factory. Here is an example of this functionality:
   2243 
   2244 <pre class="brush: java">
   2245 package com.example;
   2246 
   2247 public class ParentModule extends AbstractModule {
   2248   @Override
   2249   protected void conigure() {
   2250     bind(MyService.class).toProvider(MyServiceProvider.class);
   2251     bind(MyContext.class).to(MyContextImpl.class).in(Singleton.class);
   2252   }
   2253 }
   2254 </pre>
   2255 
   2256 <pre class="brush: java">
   2257 package com.example;
   2258 
   2259 public class TestModule extends AbstractModule {
   2260   private final MyContext myContext;
   2261 
   2262   @Inject
   2263   TestModule(MyContext myContext) {
   2264     this.myContext = myContext
   2265   }
   2266   
   2267   @Override
   2268   protected void configure() {
   2269     bind(MySession.class).toInstance(myContext.getSession());
   2270   }
   2271 }
   2272 </pre>
   2273 
   2274 <pre class="brush: xml">
   2275 <suite parent-module="com.example.ParentModule">
   2276 </suite>
   2277 </pre>
   2278 
   2279 <pre class="brush: java">
   2280 package com.example;
   2281 
   2282 @Test
   2283 @Guice(modules = TestModule.class)
   2284 public class TestClass {
   2285   @Inject
   2286   MyService myService;
   2287   @Inject
   2288   MySession mySession;
   2289   
   2290   public void testServiceWithSession() {
   2291     myService.serve(mySession);
   2292   }
   2293 }
   2294 </pre>
   2295 
   2296 As you see ParentModule declares binding for MyService and MyContext classes. Then MyContext is injected using constructor injection into TestModule class, which also declare binding for MySession. Then parent-module in test XML file is set to ParentModule class, this enables injection in TestModule. Later in TestClass you see two injections:
   2297  * MyService - binding taken from ParentModule
   2298  * MySession - binding taken from TestModule
   2299 This configuration ensures you that all tests in this suite will be run with same session instance, the MyContextImpl object is only created once per suite, this give you possibility to configure common environment state for all tests in suite. 
   2300 
   2301 <!-------------------------------------
   2302   INVOKED METHOD LISTENERS
   2303  ------------------------------------>
   2304 	
   2305 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="invokedmethodlistener">Listening to method invocations</a></h4>
   2306 
   2307 The listener <tt><a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IInvokedMethodListener.html">IInvokedMethodListener</a></tt> allows you to be notified whenever TestNG is about to invoke a test (annotated with <tt>@Test</tt>) or configuration (annotated with any of the <tt>@Before</tt> or <tt>@After</tt> annotation) method.  You need to implement the following interface:
   2308 
   2309 <pre class="brush: java">
   2310 public interface IInvokedMethodListener extends ITestNGListener {
   2311   void beforeInvocation(IInvokedMethod method, ITestResult testResult);
   2312   void afterInvocation(IInvokedMethod method, ITestResult testResult);
   2313 }
   2314 </pre>
   2315 
   2316 and declare it as a listener, as explained in <a href="#testng-listeners">the section about TestNG listeners</a>.
   2317 
   2318 <p>
   2319 
   2320 
   2321 <!-------------------------------------
   2322   IHOOKABLE AND ICONFIGURABLE
   2323   ------------------------------------>
   2324 
   2325 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="ihookable">Overriding test methods</a></h4>
   2326 
   2327 TestNG allows you to override and possibly skip the invocation of test methods. One example of where this is useful is if you need to your test methods with a specific security manager. You achieve this by providing a listener that implements <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IHookable.html"><tt>IHookable</tt></a>.
   2328 <p>
   2329 Here is an example with JAAS:
   2330 
   2331 <pre class="brush: java">
   2332 public class MyHook implements IHookable {
   2333   public void run(final IHookCallBack icb, ITestResult testResult) {
   2334     // Preferably initialized in a @Configuration method
   2335     mySubject = authenticateWithJAAs();
   2336    
   2337     Subject.doAs(mySubject, new PrivilegedExceptionAction() {
   2338       public Object run() {
   2339         icb.callback(testResult);
   2340       }
   2341     };
   2342   }
   2343 }
   2344 </pre>
   2345 
   2346 <p>
   2347 <!-------------------------------------
   2348   IALTERSUITELISTENER
   2349   ------------------------------------>
   2350 
   2351 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="ialtersuite">Altering suites (or) tests</a></h4>
   2352 Sometimes you may need to just want to alter a suite (or) a test tag in a suite xml in runtime without having to
   2353 change the contents of a suite file.
   2354 
   2355 <p>
   2356 A classic example for this would be to try and leverage your existing suite file and try using it for simulating a load test
   2357 on your "Application under test".
   2358 At the minimum you would end up duplicating the contents of your &lt;test&gt; tag multiple
   2359 times and create a new suite xml file and work with. But this doesn't seem to scale a lot.
   2360 
   2361 <p>
   2362 TestNG allows you to alter a suite (or) a test tag in your suite xml file at runtime via listeners.
   2363 You achieve this by providing a listener that implements <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IAlterSuiteListener.html"><tt>IAlterSuiteListener</tt></a>.
   2364 Please refer to <a href="#testng-listeners">Listeners section</a> to learn about listeners.
   2365 <p>
   2366 Here is an example that shows how the suite name is getting altered in runtime:
   2367 
   2368 <pre class="brush: java">
   2369 public class AlterSuiteNameListener implements IAlterSuiteListener {
   2370 
   2371     @Override
   2372     public void alter(List&lt;XmlSuite&gt; suites) {
   2373         XmlSuite suite = suites.get(0);
   2374         suite.setName(getClass().getSimpleName());
   2375     }
   2376 }
   2377 </pre>
   2378 
   2379 This listener can only be added with either of the following ways: 
   2380 <ul>
   2381   <li>Through the <tt>&lt;listeners&gt;</tt> tag in the suite xml file.</li>
   2382   <li>Through a <a href="#listeners-service-loader">Service Loader</a></li>
   2383 </ul>
   2384 
   2385 This listener cannot be added to execution using the <tt>@Listeners</tt> annotation.
   2386 
   2387 <!------------------------------------
   2388   TEST SUCCESS
   2389   ------------------------------------>
   2390 
   2391 <h3><a class="section" indent="." name="test-results">Test results</a></h3>
   2392 
   2393 
   2394 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="success-failure">Success, failure and assert</a></h4>
   2395 
   2396 
   2397 <p>A test is considered successful if it completed without throwing any 
   2398 exception or if&nbsp; it threw an exception that was expected (see the 
   2399 documentation for the <tt>expectedExceptions</tt> attribute found on the <tt>@Test</tt> annotation).
   2400 </p>
   2401 
   2402 <p>Your test methods will typically be made of calls that can throw an 
   2403 exception, or of various assertions (using the Java &quot;assert&quot; keyword).&nbsp; An 
   2404 &quot;assert&quot; failing will trigger an AssertionErrorException, which in turn will 
   2405 mark the method as failed (remember to use -ea on the JVM if you are not seeing 
   2406 the assertion errors).</p><p>Here is an example test method:</p>
   2407 
   2408 <pre class="brush: java">
   2409 @Test
   2410 public void verifyLastName() {
   2411   assert "Beust".equals(m_lastName) : "Expected name Beust, for" + m_lastName;
   2412 }
   2413 </pre>
   2414 
   2415 TestNG also include JUnit's Assert class, which lets you perform 
   2416 assertions on complex objects:
   2417 
   2418 <pre class="brush: java">
   2419 import static org.testng.AssertJUnit.*;
   2420 //...
   2421 @Test
   2422 public void verify() {
   2423   assertEquals("Beust", m_lastName);
   2424 }
   2425 </pre>
   2426 <p>Note that the above code use a static import in order to be able to use the
   2427 <tt>assertEquals</tt> method without having to prefix it by its class.
   2428 
   2429 <!-------------------------------------
   2430   LOGGING
   2431   ------------------------------------>
   2432 </p>
   2433 
   2434 <h4><a class="section" indent=".." name="logging">Logging and results</a></h4>
   2435 
   2436 The results of the test run are created in a file called <tt>index.html</tt> in the 
   2437 directory specified when launching SuiteRunner.&nbsp; This file points to 
   2438 various other HTML and text files that contain the result of the entire test 
   2439 run.&nbsp; You can see a typical example
   2440 <a href="http://testng.org/test-output/index.html">here</a>.
   2441 
   2442 <p>
   2443 It's very easy to generate your own reports with TestNG with Listeners and Reporters:
   2444 
   2445 <ul>
   2446 <li><b>Listeners</b> implement the interface <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/ITestListener.html"><tt>org.testng.ITestListener</tt></a> and are notified in real time of when a test starts, passes, fails, etc...</li><li><b>Reporters</b> implement the interface <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IReporter.html"><tt>org.testng.IReporter</tt></a> and are notified when all the suites have been run by TestNG.  The IReporter instance receives a list of objects that describe the entire test run.</li></ul>For example, if you want to generate a PDF report of your test run, you don't need to be notified in real time of the test run so you should probably use an <tt>IReporter</tt>.  If you'd like to write a real-time reporting of your tests, such as a GUI with a progress bar or a text reporter displaying dots (".") as each test is invoked (as is explained below), <tt>ITestListener</tt> is your best choice.
   2447 
   2448 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="logging-listeners">Logging Listeners</a></h5>
   2449 
   2450 Here is a listener that displays a "." for each passed test, a "F" for each failure and a "S" for each skip:
   2451 
   2452 <pre class="brush: java">
   2453 public class DotTestListener extends TestListenerAdapter {
   2454   private int m_count = 0;
   2455 
   2456   @Override
   2457   public void onTestFailure(ITestResult tr) {
   2458     log("F");
   2459   }
   2460 
   2461   @Override
   2462   public void onTestSkipped(ITestResult tr) {
   2463     log("S");
   2464   }
   2465 
   2466   @Override
   2467   public void onTestSuccess(ITestResult tr) {
   2468     log(".");
   2469   }
   2470 
   2471   private void log(String string) {
   2472     System.out.print(string);
   2473     if (++m_count % 40 == 0) {
   2474       System.out.println("");
   2475     }
   2476   }
   2477 } 
   2478 </pre>
   2479 
   2480 In this example, I chose to extend <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/TestListenerAdapter.html"><tt>TestListenerAdapter</tt></a>, which implements <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/ITestListener.html"><tt>ITestListener</tt></a> with empty methods, so I don't have to override other methods from the interface that I have no interest in.  You can implement the interface directly if you prefer.
   2481 
   2482 <p>
   2483 Here is how I invoke TestNG to use this new listener:
   2484 
   2485 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Shell</h3>
   2486 <pre class="brush: text">
   2487 java -classpath testng.jar;%CLASSPATH% org.testng.TestNG -listener org.testng.reporters.DotTestListener test\testng.xml
   2488 </pre>
   2489 
   2490 and the output:
   2491 
   2492 <p>
   2493 
   2494 <h3 class="sourcetitle">Shell</h3>
   2495 <pre class="brush: text">
   2496 ........................................
   2497 ........................................
   2498 ........................................
   2499 ........................................
   2500 ........................................
   2501 .........................
   2502 ===============================================
   2503 TestNG JDK 1.5
   2504 Total tests run: 226, Failures: 0, Skips: 0
   2505 ===============================================
   2506 </pre>
   2507 
   2508 Note that when you use <tt>-listener</tt>, TestNG will automatically determine the type of listener you want to use.
   2509 
   2510 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="logging-reporters">Logging Reporters</a></h5>
   2511 
   2512 The <a href="../javadocs/org/testng/IReporter.html"><tt>org.testng.IReporter</tt></a> interface only has one method:
   2513 
   2514 <pre class="brush: java">
   2515 public void generateReport(List&lt;ISuite</a>&gt; suites, String outputDirectory)
   2516 </pre>
   2517 
   2518 This method will be invoked by TestNG when all the suites have been run and you can inspect its parameters to access all the information on the run that was just completed.
   2519 
   2520 <p>
   2521 
   2522 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="logging-junitreports">JUnitReports</a></h5>
   2523 
   2524 <p>
   2525 
   2526 
   2527 TestNG contains a listener that takes the TestNG results 
   2528 and outputs an XML file that can then be fed to JUnitReport.  <a href="http://testng.org/test-report/junit-noframes.html">
   2529 Here</a> is an example, and the ant task to create this report:
   2530 
   2531 <h3 class="sourcetitle">build.xml</h3>
   2532 <pre class="brush: xml">
   2533 &lt;target name="reports"&gt;
   2534   &lt;junitreport todir="test-report"&gt;
   2535     &lt;fileset dir="test-output"&gt;
   2536       &lt;include name="*/*.xml"/&gt;
   2537     &lt;/fileset&gt;
   2538  
   2539     &lt;report format="noframes"  todir="test-report"/&gt;
   2540   &lt;/junitreport&gt;
   2541 &lt;/target&gt;
   2542 </pre>
   2543 <blockquote>
   2544 	<em>Note:&nbsp; a current incompatibility between the JDK 1.5 and JUnitReports 
   2545 prevents the frame version from working, so you need to specify &quot;noframes&quot; to 
   2546 get this to work for now.</em>
   2547 	</blockquote>
   2548 
   2549 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="logging-reporter-api">Reporter API</a></h5>
   2550 
   2551 <p>
   2552 If you need to log messages that should appear in the generated HTML reports, you can use the class <tt><a href="../javadocs/org/testng/Reporter.html">org.testng.Reporter</a></tt>:
   2553 
   2554 <blockquote class="brush: text">
   2555 <font color="#ffffff">&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;</font><font color="#000000">Reporter.log</font><font color="#000000">(</font><font color="#2a00ff">&#34;M3 WAS CALLED&#34;</font><font color="#000000">)</font><font color="#000000">;</font>
   2556 
   2557 </blockquote>
   2558 
   2559 <p align="center">
   2560 
   2561 <img src="pics/show-output1.png" />
   2562 <img src="pics/show-output2.png" />
   2563 
   2564 </p>
   2565 
   2566 <h5><a class="section" indent="..." name="logging-xml-reports">XML Reports</a></h5>
   2567 
   2568 <p>
   2569 TestNG offers an XML reporter capturing TestNG specific information that is not available in JUnit reports. This is particulary useful when the user's test environment needs to consume XML results with TestNG-specific data that the JUnit format can't provide.  Below is a sample of the output of such a reporter:
   2570 </p>
   2571 
   2572 <pre class="brush: xml">
   2573 &lt;testng-results&gt;
   2574   &lt;suite name=&quot;Suite1&quot;&gt;
   2575     &lt;groups&gt;
   2576       &lt;group name=&quot;group1&quot;&gt;
   2577         &lt;method signature=&quot;com.test.TestOne.test2()&quot; name=&quot;test2&quot; class=&quot;com.test.TestOne&quot;/&gt;
   2578         &lt;method signature=&quot;com.test.TestOne.test1()&quot; name=&quot;test1&quot; class=&quot;com.test.TestOne&quot;/&gt;
   2579       &lt;/group&gt;
   2580       &lt;group name=&quot;group2&quot;&gt;
   2581         &lt;method signature=&quot;com.test.TestOne.test2()&quot; name=&quot;test2&quot; class=&quot;com.test.TestOne&quot;/&gt;
   2582       &lt;/group&gt;
   2583     &lt;/groups&gt;
   2584     &lt;test name=&quot;test1&quot;&gt;
   2585       &lt;class name=&quot;com.test.TestOne&quot;&gt;
   2586         &lt;test-method status=&quot;FAIL&quot; signature=&quot;test1()&quot; name=&quot;test1&quot; duration-ms=&quot;0&quot;
   2587               started-at=&quot;2007-05-28T12:14:37Z&quot; description=&quot;someDescription2&quot;
   2588               finished-at=&quot;2007-05-28T12:14:37Z&quot;&gt;
   2589           &lt;exception class=&quot;java.lang.AssertionError&quot;&gt;
   2590             &lt;short-stacktrace&gt;
   2591               &lt;![CDATA[
   2592                 java.lang.AssertionError
   2593                 ... Removed 22 stack frames
   2594               ]]&gt;
   2595             &lt;/short-stacktrace&gt;
   2596           &lt;/exception&gt;
   2597         &lt;/test-method&gt;
   2598         &lt;test-method status=&quot;PASS&quot; signature=&quot;test2()&quot; name=&quot;test2&quot; duration-ms=&quot;0&quot;
   2599               started-at=&quot;2007-05-28T12:14:37Z&quot; description=&quot;someDescription1&quot;
   2600               finished-at=&quot;2007-05-28T12:14:37Z&quot;&gt;
   2601         &lt;/test-method&gt;
   2602         &lt;test-method status=&quot;PASS&quot; signature=&quot;setUp()&quot; name=&quot;setUp&quot; is-config=&quot;true&quot; duration-ms=&quot;15&quot;
   2603               started-at=&quot;2007-05-28T12:14:37Z&quot; finished-at=&quot;2007-05-28T12:14:37Z&quot;&gt;
   2604         &lt;/test-method&gt;
   2605       &lt;/class&gt;
   2606     &lt;/test&gt;
   2607   &lt;/suite&gt;
   2608 &lt;/testng-results&gt;
   2609 </pre>
   2610 <p>This reporter is injected along with the other default listeners so you can get this type of output by default. The listener provides some properties that can tweak the reporter to fit your needs. The following table contains a list of these properties with a short explanation:
   2611 </p>
   2612 <table border="1" width="100%" id="table6">
   2613   <tr>
   2614     <th>Property</th>
   2615     <th>Comment</th>
   2616     <th>Default value</th>
   2617   </tr>
   2618   <tr>
   2619     <td>outputDirectory</td>
   2620     <td>A <tt>String</tt> indicating the directory where should the XML files be outputed.</td>
   2621     <td>The TestNG output directory</td>
   2622   </tr>
   2623   <tr>
   2624     <td>timestampFormat</td>
   2625     <td>Specifies the format of date fields that are generated by this reporter</td>
   2626     <td>yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss'Z'</td>
   2627   </tr>
   2628   <tr>
   2629     <td>fileFragmentationLevel</td>
   2630     <td>An integer having the values 1, 2 or 3, indicating the way that the XML files are generated:
   2631       <br>
   2632 <pre>
   2633    1 - will generate all the results in one file.
   2634    2 - each suite is generated in a separate XML file that is linked to the main file.
   2635    3 - same as 2 plus separate files for test-cases that are referenced from the suite files.
   2636 </pre>
   2637     </td>
   2638     <td>1</td>
   2639   </tr>
   2640   <tr>
   2641     <td>splitClassAndPackageNames</td>
   2642     <td>This boolean specifies the way that class names are generated for the <tt>&lt;class&gt;</tt> element.
   2643       For example, you will get <tt>&lt;class class="com.test.MyTest"&gt;</tt> for false and <tt>&lt;class class="MyTest" package="com.test"&gt;</tt> for true.
   2644     </td>
   2645     <td>false</td>
   2646   </tr>
   2647   <tr>
   2648     <td>generateGroupsAttribute</td>
   2649     <td>A boolean indicating if a <tt>groups</tt> attribute should be generated for the <tt>&lt;test-method&gt;</tt> element. This feature aims at providing a
   2650       straight-forward method of retrieving the groups that include a test method without having to surf through the <tt>&lt;group&gt;</tt> elements.
   2651     </td>
   2652     <td>false</td>
   2653   </tr>
   2654   <tr>
   2655     <td>generateTestResultAttributes</td>
   2656     <td>
   2657       A boolean indicating if an <tt>&lt;attributes&gt;</tt> tag should be generated for each <tt>&lt;test-method&gt;</tt> element, containing the test result
   2658       attributes (See <tt>ITestResult.setAttribute()</tt> about setting test result attributes). Each attribute <tt>toString()</tt> representation will be
   2659       written in a <tt>&lt;attribute name="[attribute name]"&gt;</tt> tag.
   2660     </td>
   2661     <td>false</td>
   2662   </tr>
   2663   <tr>
   2664     <td>stackTraceOutputMethod</td>
   2665     <td>Specifies the type of stack trace that is to be generated for exceptions and has the following values:
   2666          <br>
   2667 <pre>
   2668    0 - no stacktrace (just Exception class and message).
   2669    1 - a short version of the stack trace keeping just a few lines from the top
   2670    2 - the complete stacktrace with all the inner exceptions
   2671    3 - both short and long stacktrace
   2672 </pre>
   2673     </td>
   2674     <td>2</td>
   2675   </tr>
   2676   <tr>
   2677     <td>generateDependsOnMethods</td>
   2678     <td>Use this attribute to enable/disable the generation of a <tt>depends-on-methods</tt> attribute for the <tt>&lt;test-method&gt;</tt> element.
   2679     </td>
   2680     <td>true</td>
   2681   </tr>
   2682   <tr>
   2683     <td>generateDependsOnGroups</td>
   2684     <td>Enable/disable the generation of a <tt>depends-on-groups</tt> attribute for the <tt>&lt;test-method&gt;</tt> element.
   2685     </td>
   2686     <td>true</td>
   2687   </tr>
   2688 </table>
   2689 <p>
   2690   In order to configure this reporter you can use the <tt>-reporter</tt> option in the command line or the <a href="http://testng.org/doc/ant.html">Ant</a>
   2691   task with the nested <tt>&lt;reporter&gt;</tt> element. For each of these you must specify the class <tt>org.testng.reporters.XMLReporter</tt>.
   2692   Please note that you cannot configure the built-in reporter because this one will only use default settings. If you need just the XML report with custom settings
   2693   you will have to add it manually with one of the two methods and disable the default listeners.
   2694 </p>
   2695 
   2696 <!------------------------------------
   2697   YAML
   2698   ------------------------------------>
   2699 
   2700 <h3><a class="section" name="yaml">YAML</a></h3>
   2701 
   2702 TestNG supports <a href="http://www.yaml.org/">YAML</a> as an alternate way of specifying your suite file. For example, the following XML file:
   2703 
   2704 <pre class="brush: xml">
   2705 <!DOCTYPE suite SYSTEM "http://beust.com/testng/testng-1.0.dtd" >
   2706 
   2707 <suite name="SingleSuite" verbose="2" thread-count="4" >
   2708 
   2709   &lt;parameter name="n" value="42" /&gt;
   2710 
   2711   <test name="Regression2">
   2712     <groups>
   2713       <run>
   2714         &lt;exclude name="broken" /&gt;
   2715       </run>
   2716     </groups>
   2717 
   2718     <classes>
   2719       &lt;class name="test.listeners.ResultEndMillisTest" /&gt;
   2720     </classes>
   2721   </test>
   2722 </suite>
   2723 </pre>
   2724 <p>and here is its YAML version:</p>
   2725 <pre class="brush: plain">
   2726 name: SingleSuite
   2727 threadCount: 4
   2728 parameters: { n: 42 }
   2729 
   2730 tests:
   2731   - name: Regression2
   2732     parameters: { count: 10 }
   2733     excludedGroups: [ broken ]
   2734     classes:
   2735       - test.listeners.ResultEndMillisTest
   2736 </pre>
   2737 
   2738 Here is <a href="https://github.com/cbeust/testng/blob/master/src/test/resources/testng.xml">TestNG's own suite file</a>, and its <a href="https://github.com/cbeust/testng/blob/master/src/test/resources/testng.yaml">YAML counterpart</a>.
   2739 
   2740 <p>
   2741 
   2742 You might find the YAML file format easier to read and to maintain. YAML files are also recognized by the TestNG Eclipse plug-in. You can find more information about YAML and TestNG in this <a href="http://beust.com/weblog/2010/08/15/yaml-the-forgotten-victim-of-the-format-wars/">blog post</a>.
   2743 
   2744 
   2745 <!---------------------------------------------------------------------->
   2746 
   2747 <a name="testng-dtd">
   2748 &nbsp;<hr width="100%">
   2749 <p>Back to my <a href="http://beust.com/weblog">home page</a>.</p><p>Or check out some of my other projects:</p><ul>
   2750 	<li><a href="http://beust.com/ejbgen">EJBGen</a>:&nbsp; an EJB tag 
   2751 	generator.</li><li><a href="http://testng.org">TestNG</a>:&nbsp; A testing framework using annotations, test groups and method parameters. </li><li><a href="http://beust.com/doclipse">Doclipse</a>:&nbsp; a JavaDoc tag 
   2752 	Eclipse plug-in.</li><li><a href="http://beust.com/j15">J15</a>:&nbsp; an Eclipse plug-in to help 
   2753 	you migrate your code to the new JDK 1.5 constructs.</li><li><a href="http://beust.com/sgen">SGen</a>:&nbsp; a replacement for 
   2754 	XDoclet with an easy plug-in architecture.</li><li><a href="http://beust.com/canvas">Canvas</a>:&nbsp; a template generator 
   2755 	based on the Groovy language.</li></ul><p>
   2756 </p>
   2757 
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   2764 	
   2765