Hello all I have done some experiments, and basically all the questions in my previous mail can be ignored. I think it is all a question of timing, which I sort of understand. Perhaps someone can clarify for me. All my previous tests involved running the whole test suite, to ensure the set-up and tear-down methods were run. As an experiment, I selected the one red method and clicked ‘Run Tests’. After about 10 seconds, a halt appeared with the message ‘Test took too long’. When I clicked ‘Proceed’, the green appeared almost immediately. I tried again several times with similar results, although the halt occurred at different places in the code. I went back to my old P6 version and tried running tests on the one method; each time, it ran to green in about 11-12 seconds. So back now to the P7 version; wondered if there is now a setting for permitted test duration. Eventually found it under ‘System’, default 10 secs. Changed to 15 secs, re-run red test, now comes up green. Re-run whole test suite, all green. So it all comes down to my ignorance of test settings. But Pharo is less than helpful; if you run the whole test suite, there is no way to distinguish a test which failed due to a wrong assertion from one which was terminated for taking too long – or did I miss something? Peter Kenny |
Peter,
You can override #defaultTimeLimit on the class side of the offending test. Yes, this can be confusing. There is a new test runner under development, DrTest, in Pharo 8. Sven > On 20 Oct 2019, at 16:37, PBKResearch <[hidden email]> wrote: > > Hello all > > I have done some experiments, and basically all the questions in my previous mail can be ignored. I think it is all a question of timing, which I sort of understand. Perhaps someone can clarify for me. > > All my previous tests involved running the whole test suite, to ensure the set-up and tear-down methods were run. As an experiment, I selected the one red method and clicked ‘Run Tests’. After about 10 seconds, a halt appeared with the message ‘Test took too long’. When I clicked ‘Proceed’, the green appeared almost immediately. I tried again several times with similar results, although the halt occurred at different places in the code. I went back to my old P6 version and tried running tests on the one method; each time, it ran to green in about 11-12 seconds. > > So back now to the P7 version; wondered if there is now a setting for permitted test duration. Eventually found it under ‘System’, default 10 secs. Changed to 15 secs, re-run red test, now comes up green. Re-run whole test suite, all green. > > So it all comes down to my ignorance of test settings. But Pharo is less than helpful; if you run the whole test suite, there is no way to distinguish a test which failed due to a wrong assertion from one which was terminated for taking too long – or did I miss something? > > Peter Kenny |
Sven
Thanks - the real problem is my unfamiliarity with P7, so hints like this are helpful. I am happier with familiar systems, but I will switch to the latest Moose suite soon. Peter -----Original Message----- From: Pharo-users <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Sven Van Caekenberghe Sent: 20 October 2019 17:31 To: Any question about pharo is welcome <[hidden email]> Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Strategy for investigating test failures Peter, You can override #defaultTimeLimit on the class side of the offending test. Yes, this can be confusing. There is a new test runner under development, DrTest, in Pharo 8. Sven > On 20 Oct 2019, at 16:37, PBKResearch <[hidden email]> wrote: > > Hello all > > I have done some experiments, and basically all the questions in my previous mail can be ignored. I think it is all a question of timing, which I sort of understand. Perhaps someone can clarify for me. > > All my previous tests involved running the whole test suite, to ensure the set-up and tear-down methods were run. As an experiment, I selected the one red method and clicked ‘Run Tests’. After about 10 seconds, a halt appeared with the message ‘Test took too long’. When I clicked ‘Proceed’, the green appeared almost immediately. I tried again several times with similar results, although the halt occurred at different places in the code. I went back to my old P6 version and tried running tests on the one method; each time, it ran to green in about 11-12 seconds. > > So back now to the P7 version; wondered if there is now a setting for permitted test duration. Eventually found it under ‘System’, default 10 secs. Changed to 15 secs, re-run red test, now comes up green. Re-run whole test suite, all green. > > So it all comes down to my ignorance of test settings. But Pharo is less than helpful; if you run the whole test suite, there is no way to distinguish a test which failed due to a wrong assertion from one which was terminated for taking too long – or did I miss something? > > Peter Kenny |
Confusion of failing test aside - is this something that got worse in Pharo 7? Did these tests pass in under 10s in 6 and take longer in 7? This would be a concrete thing to address, and something to check in 8. Tim Sent from my iPhone > On 20 Oct 2019, at 20:11, PBKResearch <[hidden email]> wrote: > > Sven > > Thanks - the real problem is my unfamiliarity with P7, so hints like this are helpful. I am happier with familiar systems, but I will switch to the latest Moose suite soon. > > Peter > > -----Original Message----- > From: Pharo-users <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Sven Van Caekenberghe > Sent: 20 October 2019 17:31 > To: Any question about pharo is welcome <[hidden email]> > Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Strategy for investigating test failures > > Peter, > > You can override #defaultTimeLimit on the class side of the offending test. > > Yes, this can be confusing. > > There is a new test runner under development, DrTest, in Pharo 8. > > Sven > >> On 20 Oct 2019, at 16:37, PBKResearch <[hidden email]> wrote: >> >> Hello all >> >> I have done some experiments, and basically all the questions in my previous mail can be ignored. I think it is all a question of timing, which I sort of understand. Perhaps someone can clarify for me. >> >> All my previous tests involved running the whole test suite, to ensure the set-up and tear-down methods were run. As an experiment, I selected the one red method and clicked ‘Run Tests’. After about 10 seconds, a halt appeared with the message ‘Test took too long’. When I clicked ‘Proceed’, the green appeared almost immediately. I tried again several times with similar results, although the halt occurred at different places in the code. I went back to my old P6 version and tried running tests on the one method; each time, it ran to green in about 11-12 seconds. >> >> So back now to the P7 version; wondered if there is now a setting for permitted test duration. Eventually found it under ‘System’, default 10 secs. Changed to 15 secs, re-run red test, now comes up green. Re-run whole test suite, all green. >> >> So it all comes down to my ignorance of test settings. But Pharo is less than helpful; if you run the whole test suite, there is no way to distinguish a test which failed due to a wrong assertion from one which was terminated for taking too long – or did I miss something? >> >> Peter Kenny > > > |
Tim: No, on P6 the test took 11-12 seconds (judged on my ability to count seconds) and the same on P7. Presumably P6 did not have a limit, or it was over 10s. Peter
-----Original Message----- From: Pharo-users <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Tim Mackinnon Sent: 20 October 2019 22:35 To: Any question about pharo is welcome <[hidden email]> Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Strategy for investigating test failures Confusion of failing test aside - is this something that got worse in Pharo 7? Did these tests pass in under 10s in 6 and take longer in 7? This would be a concrete thing to address, and something to check in 8. Tim Sent from my iPhone > On 20 Oct 2019, at 20:11, PBKResearch <[hidden email]> wrote: > > Sven > > Thanks - the real problem is my unfamiliarity with P7, so hints like this are helpful. I am happier with familiar systems, but I will switch to the latest Moose suite soon. > > Peter > > -----Original Message----- > From: Pharo-users <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Sven Van Caekenberghe > Sent: 20 October 2019 17:31 > To: Any question about pharo is welcome <[hidden email]> > Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Strategy for investigating test failures > > Peter, > > You can override #defaultTimeLimit on the class side of the offending test. > > Yes, this can be confusing. > > There is a new test runner under development, DrTest, in Pharo 8. > > Sven > >> On 20 Oct 2019, at 16:37, PBKResearch <[hidden email]> wrote: >> >> Hello all >> >> I have done some experiments, and basically all the questions in my previous mail can be ignored. I think it is all a question of timing, which I sort of understand. Perhaps someone can clarify for me. >> >> All my previous tests involved running the whole test suite, to ensure the set-up and tear-down methods were run. As an experiment, I selected the one red method and clicked ‘Run Tests’. After about 10 seconds, a halt appeared with the message ‘Test took too long’. When I clicked ‘Proceed’, the green appeared almost immediately. I tried again several times with similar results, although the halt occurred at different places in the code. I went back to my old P6 version and tried running tests on the one method; each time, it ran to green in about 11-12 seconds. >> >> So back now to the P7 version; wondered if there is now a setting for permitted test duration. Eventually found it under ‘System’, default 10 secs. Changed to 15 secs, re-run red test, now comes up green. Re-run whole test suite, all green. >> >> So it all comes down to my ignorance of test settings. But Pharo is less than helpful; if you run the whole test suite, there is no way to distinguish a test which failed due to a wrong assertion from one which was terminated for taking too long – or did I miss something? >> >> Peter Kenny > > > |
In reply to this post by Tim Mackinnon
Tim: No, on P6 the test took 11-12 seconds (judged on my ability to count seconds) and the same on P7. Presumably P6 did not have a limit, or it was over 10s. Peter
-----Original Message----- From: Pharo-users <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Tim Mackinnon Sent: 20 October 2019 22:35 To: Any question about pharo is welcome <[hidden email]> Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Strategy for investigating test failures Confusion of failing test aside - is this something that got worse in Pharo 7? Did these tests pass in under 10s in 6 and take longer in 7? This would be a concrete thing to address, and something to check in 8. Tim Sent from my iPhone > On 20 Oct 2019, at 20:11, PBKResearch <[hidden email]> wrote: > > Sven > > Thanks - the real problem is my unfamiliarity with P7, so hints like this are helpful. I am happier with familiar systems, but I will switch to the latest Moose suite soon. > > Peter > > -----Original Message----- > From: Pharo-users <[hidden email]> On Behalf Of Sven Van Caekenberghe > Sent: 20 October 2019 17:31 > To: Any question about pharo is welcome <[hidden email]> > Subject: Re: [Pharo-users] Strategy for investigating test failures > > Peter, > > You can override #defaultTimeLimit on the class side of the offending test. > > Yes, this can be confusing. > > There is a new test runner under development, DrTest, in Pharo 8. > > Sven > >> On 20 Oct 2019, at 16:37, PBKResearch <[hidden email]> wrote: >> >> Hello all >> >> I have done some experiments, and basically all the questions in my previous mail can be ignored. I think it is all a question of timing, which I sort of understand. Perhaps someone can clarify for me. >> >> All my previous tests involved running the whole test suite, to ensure the set-up and tear-down methods were run. As an experiment, I selected the one red method and clicked ‘Run Tests’. After about 10 seconds, a halt appeared with the message ‘Test took too long’. When I clicked ‘Proceed’, the green appeared almost immediately. I tried again several times with similar results, although the halt occurred at different places in the code. I went back to my old P6 version and tried running tests on the one method; each time, it ran to green in about 11-12 seconds. >> >> So back now to the P7 version; wondered if there is now a setting for permitted test duration. Eventually found it under ‘System’, default 10 secs. Changed to 15 secs, re-run red test, now comes up green. Re-run whole test suite, all green. >> >> So it all comes down to my ignorance of test settings. But Pharo is less than helpful; if you run the whole test suite, there is no way to distinguish a test which failed due to a wrong assertion from one which was terminated for taking too long – or did I miss something? >> >> Peter Kenny > > > |
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