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https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IGNITE-10762?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:comment-tabpanel&focusedCommentId=16726115#comment-16726115
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Oleg Ignatenko commented on IGNITE-10762:
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(i) Test suites containing fixed set of classes can be easily reworked to
idiomatic JUnit 4 way with {{@SuiteClasses}} etc. If {{suite()}} method
contains some initialization code this code should probably be extracted to
separate method annotated with {{@BeforeClass}}.
For test suites that contain dynamically created sets of test classes the way
would be somewhat more complicated, options to consider are either extending
{{Suite}} class ([as shown eg
here|http://day-today-learning.blogspot.com/2014/08/dynamic-suite-for-junit-test-cases.html])
or by using {{JUnitCore}} API ([as shown eg
here|https://www.logicbig.com/tutorials/unit-testing/junit/junit-core.html]).
> migrate test suites from Junit 3 to 4
> -------------------------------------
>
> Key: IGNITE-10762
> URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/IGNITE-10762
> Project: Ignite
> Issue Type: Sub-task
> Reporter: Ivan Pavlukhin
> Priority: Major
> Labels: MakeTeamcityGreenAgain
>
> It seems that {{@Ignore}} annotation is processed incorrectly when a test in
> Junit 4 style is included into Junit 3 test suite (wrapped into
> {{JUnit4TestAdapter}}). Actually such test is skipped silently when it is
> called during a suite execution. So, for full a blown usage of {{@Ignore}}
> test suites must be migrated to Junit 4 as well. Expected behavior here is
> reporting that a particular test method was ignored after tests execution.
> Ignored tests should be visible in CI.
> Apparently such unexpected behavior of {{@Ignore}} can be caused by
> {{JUnit4TestAdapter}} as it explicitly filters test method marked with this
> annotation.
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