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  2. Apache Maven - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Maven

    The POM example above references the JUnit coordinates as a direct dependency of the project. A project that needs, say, the Hibernate library simply has to declare Hibernate's project coordinates in its POM. Maven will automatically download the dependency and the dependencies that Hibernate itself needs (called transitive dependencies) and ...

  3. JUnit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JUnit

    Maven can be used for any Java Project. [10] It uses the Project Object Model (POM), which is an XML-based approach to configuring the build steps for the project. [10] The minimal Maven with the pom.xml build file must contain a list of dependencies and a unique project identifier. [10] Maven must be available on the build path to work. [10 ...

  4. Java code coverage tools - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_Code_Coverage_Tools

    The runtime overhead of added instrumentation is small (5–20%) and the bytecode instrumentor itself is very fast (mostly limited by file I/O speed). Memory overhead is a few hundred bytes per Java class. EMMA is 100% pure Java, has no external library dependencies, and works in any Java 2 JVM (even 1.2.x).

  5. Spring Roo - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_Roo

    This allows a user to create a new software project via the Roo shell, or use Roo on an existing project. The following is an example of the commands used by Roo to create a new application plus the Spring Boot Maven plugin run goal to compile and run the application using an embedded HTTP server:

  6. Spring Boot - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_Boot

    The simplest way for integrating Spring Boot with Spring Security is to declare the starter dependency in the build configuration file. [20] If Maven is used as the build tool, then the dependency with artifact ID spring-boot-starter-security dependency can be specified in the pom.xml configuration file. [20]

  7. TestNG - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TestNG

    TestNG is a testing framework for the Java programming language created by Cedric_Beust and inspired by JUnit and NUnit.The design goal of TestNG is to cover a wider range of test categories: unit, functional, end-to-end, integration, etc., with more powerful and easy-to-use functionalities.

  8. Apache Gump - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Apache_Gump

    Ant and Maven 1 have special hooks built in them to give Gump complete control of the classpaths used to build and test the applications. This allows Gump to build the projects against the latest versions, even if the project's own build files have hard coded dependencies against static libraries in their own CVS or subversion repository.

  9. MockServer - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MockServer

    MockServer is built using Netty and is written in Java. It runs on as an embedded server on a separate Thread or as a standalone Java Virtual Machine. MockServer can be used in several ways: via an Apache Maven Plugin as part of an Apache Maven build cycle; programmatically via an API in an @Before or @After method in a JUnit or TestNG test