Hi Alex,

web part of the ActiveMQ is least tested. I started some effort in
that area and you can now find RestTest in activemq-web-demo module.
That module should contain all tests, as it is easy to start web
server in the test and have the whole demo-app environment ready for
testing.

The idea is to have there tests for Ajax and WebSocket stuff. It'd be
great to use something like WebDriver to run your js tests and verify
that everything passes. Every contribution from your side is more than
welcome.

Cheers
--
Dejan Bosanac - http://twitter.com/dejanb

Open Source Integration - http://fusesource.com/
ActiveMQ in Action - http://www.manning.com/snyder/
Blog - http://www.nighttale.net



On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 7:38 PM, Alex Dean <a...@crackpot.org> wrote:
> I have been able to run tests for activemq-core via maven.  Thanks.  I'm 
> looking for tests in activemq-web, and not finding any.  Are there no tests 
> for AjaxServlet, MessageListenerServlet, etc?  I suspect maybe I'm looking in 
> the wrong place.
>
> alex
>
> On Sep 22, 2010, at 11:44 AM, Dejan Bosanac wrote:
>
>> Hi Alex,
>>
>> the best thing for starters is to check some unit tests and get
>> familiar with them. We're doing all the development based on those,
>> there you can easily start/stop broker(s), send/consume messages.
>>
>> You can run them both from Eclipse (IDE) and using maven, like
>>
>> $ cd activemq-core
>> $ mvn -Dtest=JMSConsumerTest test
>>
>> You can also rely on logging (see src/test/resources/log4j.properties)
>> to adjust it to your needs and put some additional traces where you
>> need them.
>>
>> For debugging, also, just run the test using Eclipse (or any other
>> debugging tool you need). There are also options for debugging
>> standalone brokers if you wish.
>>
>> As for the eclipse, you can always only use the submodule you're
>> interested in, like activemq-core
>>
>> You can also check IntelliJ IDEA.
>>
>>
>> Cheers
>> --
>> Dejan Bosanac - http://twitter.com/dejanb
>>
>> Open Source Integration - http://fusesource.com/
>> ActiveMQ in Action - http://www.manning.com/snyder/
>> Blog - http://www.nighttale.net
>>
>>
>>
>> On Wed, Sep 22, 2010 at 6:07 PM, Alex Dean <a...@crackpot.org> wrote:
>>> I've not done much Java development, and definitely not on a codebase of 
>>> the size of ActiveMQ.  I'm finding it a little difficult to get started, 
>>> and I could use some help.  I wrote previously about some problems I've had 
>>> getting Eclipse set up, but even once I've sorted that out I'm not sure 
>>> where to go next.
>>>
>>> I want to be able to :
>>>  * compile any changes i've made in the code
>>>  * set some breakpoints in the code
>>>  * start the server
>>>  * make a request from a client
>>>  * watch what's happening at the breakpoints I've set
>>>
>>> I'd also like to know how to run the activemq unit tests, both as a full 
>>> suite and individually.
>>>
>>> It doesn't matter to me whether all of this is done in Eclipse, or via a 
>>> combination of IDE & command-line programs.  I don't care about sticking 
>>> with Eclipse.  If anyone can point me at a different (though still free) 
>>> IDE/editor, I have no objection to switching.
>>>
>>> Can someone point me at a tutorial on how to do some/all of this?  I've 
>>> been googling for 'activemq eclipse' 'activemq development' and similar 
>>> phrases, and not finding anything.
>>>
>>> A 'getting started' guide, that that provided by the Geoserver project 
>>> (http://geoserver.org/display/GEOSDOC/3+Eclipse+Quickstart) would be 
>>> wonderful.  I'd be willing to write one, get screenshots, etc, if only I 
>>> knew what to put in it. :)
>>>
>>> Help?
>>>
>>> thanks,
>>> alex
>>
>
>

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