@Retention(value=RUNTIME)
@Inherited
@Documented
@API(status=STABLE,
since="1.0")
public @interface Testable
@Testable is used to signal to IDEs and tooling vendors that the
annotated or meta-annotated element is testable.
In this context, the term "testable" means that the annotated element
(typically a method, field, or class) can be executed by a TestEngine
as a test or test container on the JUnit Platform.
@TestableSome clients of the JUnit Platform, notably IDEs such as IntelliJ IDEA,
operate only on sources for test discovery. Thus, they cannot use the full
runtime discovery mechanism of the JUnit Platform since it relies on compiled
classes. @Testable therefore serves as an alternative mechanism for
IDEs to discover potential tests by analyzing the source code only.
@Testable will typically be used as a meta-annotation in order to
create a custom composed annotation that inherits the semantics
of @Testable. For example, the @Test and @TestFactory
annotations in JUnit Jupiter are meta-annotated with @Testable.
For test programming models that do not rely on annotations, test classes,
test methods, or test fields may be directly annotated with @Testable.
Alternatively, if concrete test classes extend from a base class, the base class
can be annotated with @Testable. Note that @Testable is an
@Inherited annotation.
@Testable but contains a method or field
that is annotated or meta-annotated with @Testable, the class must
be considered to be a testable class.@Testable are present on
classes, methods, or fields in compiled byte code (e.g., in JARs in the user's
classpath), IDEs and tooling vendors must also take such annotation
hierarchies into consideration when performing annotation processing for
source code.A TestEngine must not in any way perform
discovery based on the presence of @Testable. In terms of
discovery, the presence of @Testable should only be meaningful to
clients such as IDEs and tooling vendors. A TestEngine implementation
is therefore required to discover tests based on information specific to
that test engine (e.g., annotations specific to that test engine).
Since JUnit Platform version 1.7, @Testable may target any
declaration element type. This
includes the aforementioned method, field, and class elements.