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/*
 * Copyright 2001-2013 Artima, Inc.
 *
 * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
 * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
 * You may obtain a copy of the License at
 *
 *     http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
 *
 * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
 * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
 * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
 * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
 * limitations under the License.
 */
package org.scalatest.events


import java.util.Arrays
import org.scalactic.ArrayHelper.deep

/**
 * Class used to specify a sequential order for events reported during a test run, so they
 * can be arranged in that order in a report even if the events were fired in some other order
 * during concurrent or distributed execution.
 *
 * 

* An Ordinal is an immutable object holding a run stamp and a sequence * of stamps. * The run stamp is an integer that identifies a particular run. All events * reported during the same run should share the same run stamp. By contrast, each * event reported during a particular run should have a different stamp sequence. * One use case for the run stamp is that the initial run from ScalaTest's GUI * will have run stamp 0. Subsequent reruns will have run stamps 1, * 2, 3, etc., so that reports in the GUI can simply be sorted in "ordinal" order. Another * use case is a set of servers used to run multiple tests simultaneously in a distributed * fashion. The run stamp can be used to identify the run to which an event belongs. *

* *

* The stamp sequence is designed to allow a sequential order of events to be specified during * concurrent execution of ScalaTest suites. ScalaTest's model for concurrent execution is that * the suites that make up a run may be executed concurrently, but the tests within a single suite * will be executed sequentially. In addition to tests, suites may contain nested suites. The default implementation * of execute in class Suite will first invoke runNestedSuites and * then runTests. If no Distributor is passed to execute, the * runNestedSuites method will execute the nested suites sequentially via the same thread * that invoked runNestedSuites. As a result, suites will by default executed in depth first order * when executed sequentially. If a Distributor is passed to execute, the * runNestedSuites method will simply put its nested suites into the Distributor * and return. Some other threads or processes must then execute those nested suites. Given the default * implementations of execute and runNestedSuites described here, the Ordinal * will allow the events from a concurrent run to be sorted in the same depth-first order that the events * from a corresponding sequential run would arrive. *

* *

* Each event reported during a run should be given a unique Ordinal. An Ordinal is required * by all Event subclasses, instances of which are used to send information to the report * function passed to a Suite's execute method. The first Ordinal for a run * can be produced by passing a run stamp to Ordinal's lone public constructor: *

* *
 * val firstOrdinal = new Ordinal(99)
 * 
* *

* The run stamp can be any integer. The Ordinal created in this way can be passed along with the first * reported event of the run, such as a RunStarting event. Thereafter, new Ordinals for the same run * can be obtained by calling either next or nextNewOldPair on the previously obtained Ordinal. * In other words, given an Ordinal, you can obtain the next Ordinal by invoking one of these two * "next" methods on the Ordinal you have in hand. Before executing a new Suite, the nextNewOldPair * method should be invoked. This will return two new Ordinals, one for the new Suite about to be executed, and * one for the currently executing entity (either a Suite or some sort of test runner). At any other time, the next Ordinal * can be obtained by simply invoking next on the current Ordinal. *

* *

* You can convert an Ordinal to a List by invoking toList on it. The resulting List will contain * the run stamp as its first element, and the contents of its stamps sequence as the subsequent elements. The stamps * sequence will initially be composed of a single element with the value 0. Thus, toList invoked on the firstOrdinal shown above will * result in: *

* *
 * firstOrdinal.toList // results in: List(99, 0)
 * 
* *

* Each time next is invoked, the rightmost integer returned by toList will increment: *

* *
 * val secondOrdinal = firstOrdinal.next
 * secondOrdinal.toList // results in: List(99, 1)
 * 
 * val thirdOrdinal = secondOrdinal.next
 * thirdOrdinal.toList  // result is : List(99, 2)
 * 
* *

* When nextNewOldPair is invoked the result will be a tuple whose first element is the first Ordinal for * the new Suite about to be executed (for example, a nested Suite of the currently executing Suite). The * second element is the next Ordinal for the currently executing Suite or other entity: *

* *
 * val (nextForNewSuite, nextForThisRunner) = thirdOrdinal.nextNewOldPair
 * nextForNewSuite.toList   // results in: (99, 2, 0)
 * nextForThisRunner.toList // results in: (99, 3)
 * 
* *

* The toList method of the Ordinal for the new suite starts with the same sequence of elements as the Ordinal from which it was * created, but has one more element, a 0, appended at the end. Subsequent invocations of next on this series of Ordinals will * increment that last element: *

* *
 * val newSuiteOrdinal2 = nextForNewSuite.next
 * newSuiteOrdinal2.toList // results in: List(99, 2, 1)
 * 
 * val newSuiteOrdinal3 = newSuiteOrdinal2.next
 * newSuiteOrdinal3.toList  // result is : List(99, 2, 2)
 * 
* *

* This behavior allows events fired by Suite running concurrently to be reordered in a pre-determined sequence after all the events * have been reported. The ordering of two Ordinals can be determined by first comparing the first element of the Lists obtained * by invoking toList on both Ordinals. These values represent the runStamp. If one run stamp is a lower number than * the other, that Ordinal comes first. For example, an Ordinal with a run stamp of 98 is ordered before an Ordinal with * a run stamp of 99. If the run stamps are equal, the next number in the list is inspected. As with the run stamps, an Ordinal with a lower * number is ordered before an Ordinal with a higher number. If two corresponding elements are equal, the next pair of elements will be inspected. * This will continue no down the length of the Lists until a position is found where the element values are not equal, or the end of one or both of * the Lists are reached. If the two Lists are identical all the way to the end, and both Lists have the same lengths, * then the Ordinals are equal. (Equal Ordinals will not happen if correctly used by creating a new Ordinal for * each fired event and each new Suite.). If the two Lists are identical all the way to the end of one, but the other List * is longer (has more elements), then the shorter list is ordered before the longer one. *

* *

* As an example, here are some Ordinal List forms in order: *

* *
 * List(99, 0)
 * List(99, 1)
 * List(99, 2)
 * List(99, 2, 0)
 * List(99, 2, 1)
 * List(99, 2, 2)
 * List(99, 2, 2, 0)
 * List(99, 2, 2, 1)
 * List(99, 2, 2, 2)
 * List(99, 2, 3)
 * List(99, 2, 4)
 * List(99, 2, 4, 0)
 * List(99, 2, 4, 1)
 * List(99, 2, 4, 2)
 * List(99, 3)
 * List(99, 4)
 * List(99, 4, 0)
 * List(99, 4, 1)
 * List(99, 5)
 * 
* * @param runStamp A number that identifies a particular run * * @author Bill Venners */ final class Ordinal private (val runStamp: Int, private val stamps: Array[Int]) extends Ordered[Ordinal] with java.io.Serializable { /** * Construct a the first Ordinal for a run. * * @param runStamp a number that identifies a particular run */ def this(runStamp: Int) = this(runStamp, Array(0)) /** * Construct the next Ordinal for the current suite or other entity, such as a runner. */ def next: Ordinal = { val newArray = new Array[Int](stamps.length) // Can't seem to clone val zipped = stamps.zipWithIndex for ((num, idx) <- zipped) newArray(idx) = num newArray(stamps.length - 1) += 1 new Ordinal(runStamp, newArray) } /** * Construct two new Ordinals, one for a new Suite about to be executed and * one for the current Suite or other entity, such as a runner. The Ordinal * for the new Suite is the first (_1) element in the tuple: * *
   * val (nextOrdinalForNewSuite, nextOrdinalForThisSuite) currentOrdinal.nextNewOldPair
   * 
* *

* The reason the next Ordinal for the new Suite is first is because it will * be ordered before the next Ordinal for the current Suite (or other * entity such as a runner). In fact, any event reported within the context of the new Suite or * its nested Suites will be ordered before the next Ordinal for the current Suite. *

* * @return a tuple whose first element is the first Ordinal for the new Suite and whose * second element is the next Ordinal for the current Suite or other entity, such * as a runner. */ def nextNewOldPair: (Ordinal, Ordinal) = { val newArrayForNewSuite = new Array[Int](stamps.length + 1) val newArrayForOldSuite = new Array[Int](stamps.length) val zipped = stamps.zipWithIndex for ((num, idx) <- zipped) { newArrayForNewSuite(idx) = num newArrayForOldSuite(idx) = num } newArrayForOldSuite(stamps.length - 1) += 1 (new Ordinal(runStamp, newArrayForNewSuite), new Ordinal(runStamp, newArrayForOldSuite)) } /** * Returns a List[Int] representation of this Ordinal. A set of Ordinals will be ordered * in the same order as the set of List[Int]s that are returned by invoking this method on each of the Ordinals. * The first element of the returned List[Int] is the runStamp. * * @return a List[Int] representation of this Ordinal. */ def toList: List[Int] = runStamp :: stamps.toList /** * Compares this Ordinal with the passed Ordinal for order. If this object is "less than" (ordered before) * the passed object, compare will return a negative integer. If this class is "greater than" (ordered after) * the passed object, compare will return a positive integer. Otherwise, this Ordinal is equal to * the passed object, and compare will return 0. * * @return a negative integer, 0, or positive integer indicating this Ordinal is less than, equal to, or greater than the passed Ordinal. */ def compare(that: Ordinal) = { val runStampDiff = this.runStamp - that.runStamp if (runStampDiff == 0) { val shorterLength = if (this.stamps.length < that.stamps.length) this.stamps.length else that.stamps.length var i = 0 var diff = 0 while (diff == 0 && i < shorterLength) { diff = this.stamps(i) - that.stamps(i) i += 1 } // If they were equal all the way to the shorterLength, the longest array // one is the greater ordinal. This is because the newSuite stuff happens // before the next thing that happens in the old suite. if (diff != 0) diff else this.stamps.length - that.stamps.length } else runStampDiff } /** * Indicates whether the passed object is equal to this one. * * @param the object with which to compare this one for equality * @return true if the passed object is equal to this one */ override def equals(other: Any): Boolean = other match { case that: Ordinal => runStamp == that.runStamp && (deep(stamps) == deep(that.stamps)) case _ => false } /** * Returns a hash code value for this object. * * @return a hash code for this object */ override def hashCode: Int = 41 * ( 41 + runStamp ) + Arrays.hashCode(stamps) /** * Returns a string that includes the integers returned by toList. */ override def toString: String = toList.mkString("Ordinal(", ", ", ")") }




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