class Tag extends AnyRef
Class whose subclasses can be used to tag tests in style traits in which tests are defined as functions.
ScalaTest has two ways to tag tests: annotations and instances of this Tag
class.
To tag a test method or an entire test class, you use a tag annotation, whereas to tag a test function,
you use a Tag
object. Though not required, it is usually a good idea to define both an annotation
and a corresponding Tag
object for each conceptual tag you want, so you can tag anything: test functions, test classes,
and test methods. The name of the conceptual tag is the fully qualified name of the annotation interface, so you must
pass this name to the Tag
constructor.
For example, imagine you want to tag integration tests that use the actual database, and are, therefore, generally slower. You could
create a tag annotation and object called DbTest
. To give them both the same simple name, you can declare them in different packages.
The tag annotation must be written in Java, not Scala, because annotations written
in Scala are not accessible at runtime. Here's an example:
package com.mycompany.myproject.testing.tags; import java.lang.annotation.*; import org.scalatest.TagAnnotation @TagAnnotation @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @Target({ElementType.METHOD, ElementType.TYPE}) public @interface DbTest {}
Given this annotation's fully qualified name is com.mycompany.myproject.testing.tags.DbTest
the corresponding Tag
object decaration must have that name passed to its constructor, like this:
package com.mycompany.myproject.testing.tagobjects
object DbTest extends Tag("com.mycompany.myproject.testing.tags.DbTest")
Given these definitions, you could tag a test function as a DbTest
in, for
example, a FlatSpec
like this:
import org.scalatest.FlatSpec import com.mycompany.myproject.testing.tagobjects.DbTest
class ExampleSpec extends FlatSpec {
"Integration tests" can "sometimes be slow" taggedAs(DbTest) in { Thread.sleep(1000) } }
You could tag a test method as a DbTest
in, for
example, a Suite
like this:
import org.scalatest.Suite import com.mycompany.myproject.testing.tags.DbTest
class ExampleSuite extends Suite {
@DbTest def `integration tests can sometimes be slow` { Thread.sleep(1000) } }
And you could tag all the tests in an entire test class by annotating the class, like this:
import org.scalatest.FlatSpec import com.mycompany.myproject.testing.tags.DbTest
@DBTest class ExampleSpec extends FlatSpec {
"Integration tests" can "sometimes be slow" in { Thread.sleep(1000) }
they should "likely sometimes be excluded " in { Thread.sleep(1000) } }
In the previous example, both tests will be tagged as DBTest
s even though the
tests are not tagged as such individually.
When you run ScalaTest and want to either include or exclude DbTest
s, you'd give the fully qualified
name of the tag annotation (which is also the name passed to the corresponding Tag
constructor) to Runner
. For
example, here's how you'd exclude DbTest
s on the Runner
command line:
-l com.mycompany.myproject.testing.tags.DbTest
For examples of tagging in other style traits, see the "Tagging tests" section in the documentation for the trait:
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