Tag object that indicates a test is CPU-intensive (i.e., consumes a lot of CPU time when it runs).
Tag object that indicates a Selenium test uses the Chrome browser.
Tag object that indicates a test is disk-intensive (i.e., consumes a lot of disk-IO bandwidth when it runs).
Tag object that indicates a test is disk-intensive (i.e., consumes a lot of disk-IO bandwidth when it runs).
The corresponding tag annotation for this tag object is org.scalatest.tags.Disk.
This tag object can be used to tag test functions (in style traits other than Spec, in which tests are methods not functions) as being disk-intensive.
See the "tagging tests" section in the documentation for your chosen styles to see the syntax. Here's an example for FlatSpec:
package org.scalatest.examples.tagobjects.disk
import org.scalatest._
import tagobjects.Disk
class SetSpec extends FlatSpec {
"An empty Set" should "have size 0" taggedAs(Disk) in {
assert(Set.empty.size === 0)
}
}
Tag object that indicates a Selenium test uses the Firefox browser.
Tag object that indicates a Selenium test uses the HtmlUnit browser.
Tag that indicates a Selenium test uses the Internet Explorer browser.
Tag object that indicates a test is network-intensive (i.e., consumes a lot of network bandwidth when it runs).
Tag object that indicates a test is network-intensive (i.e., consumes a lot of network bandwidth when it runs).
The corresponding tag annotation for this tag object is org.scalatest.tags.Network.
This tag object can be used to tag test functions (in style traits other than Spec, in which tests are methods not functions) as being network-intensive.
See the "tagging tests" section in the documentation for your chosen styles to see the syntax. Here's an example for FlatSpec:
package org.scalatest.examples.tagobjects.network
import org.scalatest._
import tagobjects.Network
class SetSpec extends FlatSpec {
"An empty Set" should "have size 0" taggedAs(Network) in {
assert(Set.empty.size === 0)
}
}
Tag object that indicates a test is a candidate for retrying on either failure, cancellation, or both.
Tag object that indicates a test is a candidate for retrying on either failure, cancellation, or both.
This tag object is intended to be used in conjunction with trait Retries, to
identify tests that are candidates for retrying.
The corresponding tag annotation for this tag object is org.scalatest.tags.Retryable.
This tag object can be used to tag test functions (in style traits other than Spec, in which tests are methods
not functions) as being a candidate for retries. See the "tagging tests" section in the documentation for your chosen styles to
see the syntax. Here's an example for FlatSpec:
package org.scalatest.examples.tagobjects.retryable
import org.scalatest._
import tagobjects.Retryable
class SetSpec extends FlatSpec with Retries {
override def withFixture(test: NoArgTest) = {
if (isRetryable(test))
withRetry { super.withFixture(test) }
else
super.withFixture(test)
}
"An empty Set" should "have size 0" taggedAs(Retryable) in {
assert(Set.empty.size === 0)
}
}
Tag object that indicates a Selenium test uses the Safari browser.
Tag object that indicates a test is slow (i.e., takes a long time to run).
Tag object that indicates a test is slow (i.e., takes a long time to run).
The corresponding tag annotation for this tag object is org.scalatest.tags.Slow.
This tag object can be used to tag test functions (in style traits other than Spec, in which tests are methods not functions) as being slow.
See the "tagging tests" section in the documentation for your chosen styles to see the syntax. Here's an example for FlatSpec:
package org.scalatest.examples.tagobjects.slow
import org.scalatest._
import tagobjects.Slow
class SetSpec extends FlatSpec {
"An empty Set" should "have size 0" taggedAs(Slow) in {
assert(Set.empty.size === 0)
}
}
Tag object that indicates a test is CPU-intensive (i.e., consumes a lot of CPU time when it runs).
The corresponding tag annotation for this tag object is
org.scalatest.tags.CPU. This tag object can be used to tag test functions (in style traits other thanSpec, in which tests are methods not functions) as being CPU-intensive. See the "tagging tests" section in the documentation for your chosen styles to see the syntax. Here's an example forFlatSpec:package org.scalatest.examples.tagobjects.cpu import org.scalatest._ import tagobjects.CPU class SetSpec extends FlatSpec { "An empty Set" should "have size 0" taggedAs(CPU) in { assert(Set.empty.size === 0) } }