Thanks. FWIW I played with a bunch (Freshen, Morelia, Lettuce....) over the last few days and Lettuce appears to be the most "actively" maintained and closest to a cucumber-like implementation IMHO. I have decided to adopt it for now. I played with a few CI servers but Jenkins (Hudson) is tough to beat IMHO but I am sure this is just my personal preference. Anyways thanks for the help. Cheers, Mark
On Jul 9, 2011, at 7:05 PM, Phlip wrote: > On Jul 8, 9:36 pm, Stefan Behnel <stefan...@behnel.de> wrote: >> mark curphey, 09.07.2011 01:41: >> >>> And for CI having been using Hudson for a while, any real advantages in a >>> Python / Django world for adopting something native like Trac and one of >>> the CI plugins like Bitten? > > I'm kind'a partial to Morelia for BDD. > > Don't be fooled by Ruby's RSpec - it's _not_ "BDD". In my exalted > opinion. "BDD" means "your customer gives you requirements as > sentences, and you make them into executable statements." That's what > Cucumber does, which Morelia learns from. > > And BDD and CI are orthogonal. BDD should be part of a complete TDD > test suite, and your CI tool should run that. > > I still like CruiseControl.rb - even though it has bugs when it sees > too many git integrations. Hudson had way too many features, and CCrb > mildly presumes you know how to operate its .cruise/projects folder > manually! > -- > http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list