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/*
 * Copyright 2001-2012 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.concurrent

import org.scalatest.AbstractSuite
import org.scalatest.Suite
import Timeouts._
import org.scalatest.exceptions.ModifiableMessage
import org.scalatest.Resources
import org.scalatest.time.Span
import org.scalatest.exceptions.TimeoutField

/**
 * Trait that when mixed into a suite class establishes a time limit for its tests.
 *
 * 

* This trait overrides withFixture, wrapping a super.withFixture(test) call * in a failAfter invocation, specifying a timeout obtained by invoking timeLimit * and an Interruptor by invoking defaultTestInterruptor: *

* *
 * failAfter(timeLimit) {
 *   super.withFixture(test)
 * } (defaultTestInterruptor)
 * 
* *

* Note that the failAfter method executes the body of the by-name passed to it using the same * thread that invoked failAfter. This means that the same thread will run the withFixture method * as well as each test, so no extra synchronization is required. A second thread is used to run a timer, and if the timeout * expires, that second thread will attempt to interrupt the main test thread via the defaultTestInterruptor. *

* *

* The timeLimit field is abstract in this trait. Thus you must specify a time limit when you use it. * For example, the following code specifies that each test must complete within 200 milliseconds: *

* *
 * import org.scalatest.FunSpec
 * import org.scalatest.concurrent.TimeLimitedTests
 * import org.scalatest.time.Span
 * 
 * class ExampleSpec extends FunSpec with TimeLimitedTests {
 *
 *   val timeLimit = Span(200, Millis)
 *
 *   describe("A time-limited test") {
 *     it("should succeed if it completes within the time limit") {
 *       Thread.sleep(100)
 *     }
 *     it("should fail if it is taking too darn long") {
 *       Thread.sleep(300)
 *     }
 *   }
 * }
 * 
* *

* If you run the above ExampleSpec, the second test will fail with the error message: *

* *

* The test did not complete within the specified 200 millisecond time limit. *

* *

* If you prefer, you can mix in or import the members of SpanSugar and place units on the time limit, for example: *

* *
 * import org.scalatest.time.SpanSugar._
 *
 * val timeLimit = 200 millis
 * 
* *

* The failAfter method uses an Interruptor to attempt to interrupt the main test thread if the timeout * expires. The default Interruptor returned by the defaultTestInterruptor method is a * ThreadInterruptor, which calls interrupt on the main test thread. If you wish to change this * interruption strategy, override defaultTestInterruptor to return a different Interruptor. For example, * here's how you'd change the default to DoNotInterrupt, a very patient interruption strategy that does nothing to * interrupt the main test thread: *

* *
 * import org.scalatest.FunSpec
 * import org.scalatest.concurrent.TimeLimitedTests
 * import org.scalatest.time.SpanSugar._
 * 
 * class ExampleSpec extends FunSpec with TimeLimitedTests {
 * 
 *   val timeLimit = 200 millis
 * 
 *   override val defaultTestInterruptor = DoNotInterrupt
 * 
 *   describe("A time-limited test") {
 *     it("should succeed if it completes within the time limit") {
 *       Thread.sleep(100)
 *     }
 *     it("should fail if it is taking too darn long") {
 *       Thread.sleep(300)
 *     }
 *   }
 * }
 * 
* *

* Like the previous incarnation of ExampleSuite, the second test will fail with an error message that indicates * a timeout expired. But whereas in the previous case, the Thread.sleep would be interrupted after 200 milliseconds, * in this case it is never interrupted. In the previous case, the failed test requires a little over 200 milliseconds to run. * In this case, because the sleep(300) is never interrupted, the failed test requires a little over 300 milliseconds * to run. *

*/ trait TimeLimitedTests extends AbstractSuite { this: Suite => /** * A stackable implementation of withFixture that wraps a call to super.withFixture in a * failAfter invocation. * * @param test the test on which to enforce a time limit */ abstract override def withFixture(test: NoArgTest) { try { failAfter(timeLimit) { super.withFixture(test) } (defaultTestInterruptor) } catch { case e: org.scalatest.exceptions.ModifiableMessage[_] with TimeoutField => throw e.modifyMessage(opts => Some(Resources("testTimeLimitExceeded", e.timeout.prettyString))) } } /** * The time limit, in milliseconds, in which each test in a Suite that mixes in * TimeLimitedTests must complete. */ def timeLimit: Span /** * The default Interruptor strategy used to interrupt tests that exceed their time limit. * *

* This trait's implementation of this method returns ThreadInterruptor, which invokes interrupt * on the main test thread. Override this method to change the test interruption strategy. *

* * @return a ThreadInterruptor */ val defaultTestInterruptor: Interruptor = ThreadInterruptor } /* Will need to add cancelAfter to the doc comment in 2.0. */




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