doc/ReleaseNotes4.9.html
Release theme: Test-class and suite level Rules.
The ClassRule annotation extends the idea of method-level Rules, adding static fields that can affect the operation of a whole class. Any subclass of ParentRunner, including the standard BlockJUnit4ClassRunner and Suite classes, will support ClassRules.
For example, here is a test suite that connects to a server once before all the test classes run, and disconnects after they are finished:
@RunWith(Suite.class)
@SuiteClasses({A.class, B.class, C.class})
public class UsesExternalResource {
public static Server myServer= new Server();
@ClassRule
public static ExternalResource resource= new ExternalResource() {
@Override
protected void before() throws Throwable {
myServer.connect();
};
@Override
protected void after() {
myServer.disconnect();
};
};
}
In JUnit 4.9, fields that can be annotated with either @Rule or @ClassRule should be of type TestRule. The old MethodRule type, which only made sense for method-level rules, will still work, but is deprecated.
Most built-in Rules have been moved to the new type already, in a way that should be transparent to most users. TestWatchman has been deprecated, and replaced by TestWatcher, which has the same functionality, but implements the new type.
Maven bundles have, in the past, been uploaded by kind volunteers. Starting with this release, the JUnit team is attempting to perform this task ourselves.
The Common Public License that JUnit is released under is now included in the source repository.
github#98: assumeTrue() does not work with expected exceptions
github#74: Categories + Parameterized
github#38: ParentRunner filters more than once
github#248: protected BlockJUnit4ClassRunner#rules method removed from 4.8.2
github#187: Accidental dependency on Java 6
Thanks to @kcooney for:
Thanks to @kcooney for: