[
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-5775?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=13913117#comment-13913117
]
Mark Miller commented on SOLR-5775:
-----------------------------------
Almost none of these even had a JIRA issue. -1 on a wholesale JIRA to ignore
whatever tests one person want's to canvas. A failing test should get a JIRA
issue that describes the fail and each addressed individually.
{noformat}
the fact that 'ant test' has not worked for me locally in months was enough for
me to raise the issue.
{noformat}
You should have simply raised that months ago by filing a JIRA issue for each
of the tests that were preventing you from getting a clean run, or emailing the
list and saying I can't get a clean run, or whatever. I don't think it's okay
if a dev cannot get a clean run, but devs have to communicate that - it's
different for everyone. I've gotten clean runs 90% of the time for months. Then
we could have worked on the issue. Considering most of the current fails are
around slow tests under SSL, if you had brought it up months ago, sounds like
it only would have been a test or two to look at.
> Disable constantly failing solr tests
> -------------------------------------
>
> Key: SOLR-5775
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/SOLR-5775
> Project: Solr
> Issue Type: Bug
> Components: Build
> Reporter: Robert Muir
>
> Currently, solr tests are failing 90%+ of the time. We've been through this
> before many times, the argument is always that someone is looking at the
> failures and knows which ones are bad.
> This argument is a lie. Nobody is watching these failures, or
> DistributedQueryComponentOptimizationTest would not have failed repeatedly
> for two straight days when the fix was trivial (I fixed this last night:
> http://svn.apache.org/r1571930)
> Its frustrating to me as a committer, solr tests *NEVER* pass on my machine,
> no matter how many times I try. How can i possibly commit something without
> knowing i am making the situation even worse?
> This is all a big problem for developers, release managers, even users of the
> project. The test suite should pass.
> The old argument that "solr tests are allowed to fail" is no longer valid. I
> will disable all constantly failing tests.
--
This message was sent by Atlassian JIRA
(v6.1.5#6160)
---------------------------------------------------------------------
To unsubscribe, e-mail: [email protected]
For additional commands, e-mail: [email protected]