We do TDD here. If you're not comfortable with TDD, find something else to work on. Thanks.
- Code Style
- FIXME comments
- DEBT comments
Fork the project source code on github:
git clone git://github.com/infinitest/infinitest.git
You can pull only a shallow clone by specifying the number of commits you want with --depth
:
git clone git://github.com/infinitest/infinitest.git --depth 10
You need maven. Did I mention that?
mvn clean install
infinitest-lib
and infinitest-runner
are included in every plugin. infinitest-intellij
is the IntelliJ plugin, while infinitest-eclipse
is the eclipse plugin.
testWorkspace
is a collection of sample projects that we use for exploratory testing. If you find something in the wild that makes Infinitest break, it's a good idea to reproduce it in testWorkspace, fix it, and then try it again to be sure you've really fixed it.
When you finish something, release it. Also, make sure you don't push anything to github that's not in a releasable state. It's OK to temporarily disable stuff...just make sure that work in progress isn't breaking anything else.
The publish.sh
script will build a new version of the plugin, incrementing the version number, and copy it to the server hosting the update site. This copy will fail if Ben hasn't added your public ssh key to the server (See above). We like developers to do a release after implementing every feature.
Running publish.sh
copies the plugin to the experimental update site. It's suggested that you publish and then test the plugin before promoting it to the main update site. You do this using the promote.sh
script.
First, tell maven to generate eclipse project files (.project and .classpath):
mvn eclipse:eclipse
Right-click in the Eclipse Package Explorer -> Import -> Existing Projects info Workspace -> Choose the root of your infinitest-repository -> Your maven-built-projects are displayed -> DON'T copy into workspace -> Finish. The "Eclipse Application" Runtime Configuration in eclipse allows you to fire up another Eclipse instance with the Infinitest plugin loaded into it. You can also debug this instance (which can be a very effective way to explore what the Eclipse SDK actually does):
Right-click plugin.xml -> Open With -> Plug-in Manifest Editor Tab Overview -> Launch/Debug an Eclipse application
Keep in mind that while you can use Infinitest to test Infinitest, some weird things happen when you change anything in the infinitest-runner
project, because that project is actually used to run the tests, so any changes you make may conflict with the classes in whatever version of the plugin you have installed. As a result, we try to keep infinitest-runner
as thin as we can get it.
Infinitest is distributed under GNU General Public License v3.
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