Java Cucumber: Take #CucumberOptions from external source like a property file - java

Is it possible to take cucumber option values from a java .properties file?
In this SO post, it shows that it is being passed from CLI.
Here's my sample class:
#RunWith(Cucumber.class)
#CucumberOptions(
features = {"resources/features/"},
glue = {"classpath:com/"},
tags = {"#foo, #bar"}
)
public class UITestRunner {
}
Instead of hardcoding the tags here, I'd like to take it from a property file.
Any help is appreciated!

Cucumber will initially look for arguments provided by cucumber.api.cli.Main or #CucumberOptions
But you can override them providing (in this particular order):
The OS environment variable CUCUMBER_OPTIONS
The Java system property cucumber.options
The Java resource bundle cucumber.properties with a cucumber.options property
Once one of described above options is found, it will be used. Overrides are provided in a variable (or property) called cucumber.options or CUCUMBER_OPTIONS. All values, except plugin arguments will override values provided by cucumber.api.cli.Main or #CucumberOptions. Plugin option will add up to the plugins specified by cucumber.api.cli.Main or #CucumberOptions.

Hope you are aware that if running from the command line, you can use system properties
mvn test -Dcucumber.options="--features resources/features/ --tags ~#ignore" -Dtest=AnimalsTest
Which means that you can programmatically set these properties:
#RunWith(Cucumber.class)
public class CatsRunner {
#BeforeClass
public static void before() {
System.setProperty("cucumber.options", "--features resources/features/ --tags ~#ignore");
}
}
Hope that gives you some ideas. For example, you can manually read the properties from a file and then achieve what you want.
Edit: apparently the above does not work. So here's my next idea, implement your own JUnit Cucumber runner by extending the Cucumber class. Refer to this for an example. So in the constructor you should have full control.

I solved this by extending the Cucumber runner. You can find examples here:
For cucumber-jvm 4.0.0: https://github.com/martinschneider/yasew/blob/master/src/main/java/io/github/martinschneider/yasew/junit/YasewRunner.java
For cucumber-jvm 2.4.0: https://github.com/martinschneider/yasew/blob/db8cd74281139c14603e9ae05548530a7aebbade/src/main/java/io/github/martinschneider/yasew/junit/YasewRunner.java
The key part, as discussed in some of the replies and comments, is to set the cucumber.options system property:
String cucumberOptions =
"--tags #"
+ getProperty(PLATFORM_KEY, DEFAULT_PLATFORM)
+ " --glue io.github.martinschneider.yasew.steps --glue "
+ getProperty(STEPS_PACKAGE_KEY)
+ " --plugin pretty --plugin html:report --plugin json:"
+ getProperty(CUCUMBER_REPORT_DIRECTORY_KEY,
DEFAULT_CUCUMBER_REPORT_DIRECTORY)
+ "/cucumber.json"
+ " "
+ getProperty(FEATURES_DIRECTORY_KEY);
LOG.info("Setting cucumber options ({}) to {}", CUCUMBER_OPTIONS_KEY, cucumberOptions);
System.setProperty(CUCUMBER_OPTIONS_KEY, cucumberOptions);
I'm using a setup with Spring and JUnit and I'm not sure if there's a better place to put this code.
Overwriting the runner is not very elegant but it works like a charm!

An example for an override feature source line in cucumber.properties file in project tree is:
cucumber.options=-g StepDefs src\\test\\resources\\Testfeature.feature
The Cucumber for Java Book is cool. I got it after reading this post.
I experimented some time to see what path the CucumberOptions property accepts... so here above is the quick solve. ;)
StepDefs is the folder where my step definitions are located in the project tree.
I prefer this way to have everything in one place. Maybe for porting the testsuite to another system it is more common to set a System variable in the target system so the possible customer has always one directory where to place feature-files.

I was searching for a solution how to pass(over write) feature file path glue (steps) path in command line in Dcucumber options. It was quite challenging and I was unable to find the exact solution in many of the forums. Finally found a working solution
Just posting here it could help anybody.
gradle -Dcucumber.options="-g XX.XXX.XXX.steps --tags #xxxxxx featurefilepath/features/" test
You must follow this order having -g as a first option. Thaanks

I am doing like this:-
cucmberOption.properties
#cucumber.options=--plugin html:output/cucumber-html-report
#src/test/resources
cucumber.options.feature =src/test/resources
cucumber.options.report.html=--plugin html:output/cucumber-html-report
Java Class: CreateCucumberOptions.java
Method to load properties file:-
private static void loadPropertiesFile(){
InputStream input = null;
try{
String filename = "cucumberOptions.properties";
input = CreateCucumberOptions.class.getClassLoader().getResourceAsStream(filename);
if(input==null){
LOGGER.error("Sorry, unable to find " + filename);
return;
}
prop.load(input);
}catch(IOException e){
e.printStackTrace();
}finally{
if(input!=null) {
try {
input.close();
} catch (IOException e) {
e.printStackTrace();
}
}
}
}
method to get and set CucumberOptions
private String createAndGetCucumberOption(){
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
String featureFilesPath =
prop.getProperty("cucumber.options.feature");
LOGGER.info(" featureFilesPath: " +featureFilesPath);
String htmlOutputReport =
prop.getProperty("cucumber.options.report.html");
LOGGER.info(" htmlOutputReport: " +htmlOutputReport);
sb.append(htmlOutputReport);
sb.append(" ");
sb.append(featureFilesPath);
return sb.toString();
}
private void setOptions(){
String value = createAndGetCucumberOption();
LOGGER.info(" Value: " +value);
System.setProperty(KEY, value);
}
And main method to run this:-
public static void main(String[] args) {
CreateCucumberOptions cucumberOptions = new CreateCucumberOptions();
JUnitCore junitRunner = new JUnitCore();
loadPropertiesFile();
cucumberOptions.setOptions();
junitRunner.run(cucumberTest.runners.RunGwMLCompareTests.class);
}
And RunGwMLCompareTests.class is my Cucumber class
#RunWith(Cucumber.class)
#CucumberOptions(
monochrome = true,
tags = {"#passed"},
glue = "cucumberTest.steps")
public class RunGwMLCompareTests {
public RunGwMLCompareTests(){
}
}
So basically nopw you get set output report and feature folders through properties files and others options like glue definations java class. And to run the test cases just run your main class.
Regards,
Vikram Pathania

Related

Getting a specific version of an image with Jib (Maven, Docker, testcontainers)

I'm trying to understand a comment that a colleague made. We're using testcontainers to create a fixture:
import org.testcontainers.containers.GenericContainer;
import org.testcontainers.utility.DockerImageName;
public class SalesforceFixture extends GenericContainer<SalesforceFixture> {
private static final String APPLICATION_NAME = "salesforce-emulator";
public SalesforceFixture() {
// super(ImageResolver.resolve(APPLICATION_NAME));
super(DockerImageName.parse("gcr.io/ad-selfserve/salesforce-emulator:latest"));
...
}
...
The commented code is what it used to be. The next line is my colleague's suggestion. And on that line he commented:
This is the part I don't know. The [ImageResolver] gets the specific version of the emulator, rather than the latest. You need a docker-info file for that though, which jib doesn't automatically generate (but I think it can).
This is what I know or have figured so far:
SalesforceFixture is a class that will be used by other projects to write tests. It spins up a container in Docker, running a service that emulates the real service's API. It's like a local version of the service that behaves enough like the real thing that if one writes code and tests using the fixture, it should work the same in production. (This is where my knowledge ends.)
I looked into ImageResolver—it seems to be a class we wrote that searches a filesystem for something:
public static String resolve(String applicationName, File... roots) {
Stream<File> searchPaths = Arrays.stream(roots).flatMap((value) -> {
return Stream.of(new File(value, "../" + applicationName), new File(value, applicationName));
});
Optional<File> buildFile = searchPaths.flatMap((searchFile) -> {
if (searchFile.exists()) {
File imageFile = new File(searchFile + File.separator + "/target/docker/image-name");
if (imageFile.exists()) {
return Stream.of(imageFile);
}
}
return Stream.empty();
}).findAny();
InputStream build = (InputStream)buildFile.map(ImageResolver::fileStream).orElseGet(() -> {
return searchClasspath(applicationName);
});
if (build != null) {
try {
return IOUtils.toString(build, Charset.defaultCharset()).trim();
} catch (IOException var6) {
throw new RuntimeException("An exception has occurred while reading build file", var6);
}
} else {
throw new RuntimeException("Could not resolve target image for application: " + applicationName);
}
}
But I'm confused. What filesystem? Like, what is the present working directory? My local computer, wherever I ran the Java program from? Or is this from within some container? (I don't think so.) Or maybe the directory structure inside a .jar file? Or somewhere in gcr.io?
What does he mean about a "specific version number" vs. "latest"? I mean, when I build this project, whatever it built is all I have. Isn't that equivalent to "latest"? In what case would an older version of an image be present? (That's what made me think of gcr.io.)
Or, does he mean, that in the project using this project's image, one will not be able to specify a version via Maven/pom.xml—it will always spin up the latest.
Sorry this is long, just trying to "show my work." Any hints welcome. I'll keep looking.
I can't comment on specifics of your own internal implementations, but ImageResolver seems to work on your local filesystem, e.g. it looks into your target/ directory and also touches the classpath. I can imagine this code was just written for resolving an actual image name (not an image), since it also returns a String.
Regarding latest, using a latest tag for a Docker image is generally considered an anti-pattern, so likely your colleague is commenting about this. Here is a random article from the web explaining some of the issues with latest tag:
https://vsupalov.com/docker-latest-tag/
Besides, I don't understand why you ask these questions which are very specific to your project here on SO rather than asking your colleague.

How should I approach for creating a command-line parser in java? [duplicate]

What is a good way of parsing command line arguments in Java?
Check these out:
http://commons.apache.org/cli/
http://www.martiansoftware.com/jsap/
Or roll your own:
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/Scanner.html
For instance, this is how you use commons-cli to parse 2 string arguments:
import org.apache.commons.cli.*;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
Options options = new Options();
Option input = new Option("i", "input", true, "input file path");
input.setRequired(true);
options.addOption(input);
Option output = new Option("o", "output", true, "output file");
output.setRequired(true);
options.addOption(output);
CommandLineParser parser = new DefaultParser();
HelpFormatter formatter = new HelpFormatter();
CommandLine cmd = null;//not a good practice, it serves it purpose
try {
cmd = parser.parse(options, args);
} catch (ParseException e) {
System.out.println(e.getMessage());
formatter.printHelp("utility-name", options);
System.exit(1);
}
String inputFilePath = cmd.getOptionValue("input");
String outputFilePath = cmd.getOptionValue("output");
System.out.println(inputFilePath);
System.out.println(outputFilePath);
}
}
usage from command line:
$> java -jar target/my-utility.jar -i asd
Missing required option: o
usage: utility-name
-i,--input <arg> input file path
-o,--output <arg> output file
Take a look at the more recent JCommander.
I created it. I’m happy to receive questions or feature requests.
I have been trying to maintain a list of Java CLI parsers.
Airline
Active Fork: https://github.com/rvesse/airline
argparse4j
argparser
args4j
clajr
cli-parser
CmdLn
Commandline
DocOpt.java
dolphin getopt
DPML CLI (Jakarta Commons CLI2 fork)
Dr. Matthias Laux
Jakarta Commons CLI
jargo
jargp
jargs
java-getopt
jbock
JCLAP
jcmdline
jcommander
jcommando
jewelcli (written by me)
JOpt simple
jsap
naturalcli
Object Mentor CLI article (more about refactoring and TDD)
parse-cmd
ritopt
Rop
TE-Code Command
picocli has ANSI colorized usage help and autocomplete
It is 2022, time to do better than Commons CLI... :-)
Should you build your own Java command line parser, or use a library?
Many small utility-like applications probably roll their own command line parsing to avoid the additional external dependency. picocli may be an interesting alternative.
Picocli is a modern library and framework for building powerful, user-friendly, GraalVM-enabled command line apps with ease. It lives in 1 source file so apps can include it as source to avoid adding a dependency.
It supports colors, autocompletion, subcommands, and more. Written in Java, usable from Groovy, Kotlin, Scala, etc.
Features:
Annotation based: declarative, avoids duplication and expresses programmer intent
Convenient: parse user input and run your business logic with one line of code
Strongly typed everything - command line options as well as positional parameters
POSIX clustered short options (<command> -xvfInputFile as well as <command> -x -v -f InputFile)
Fine-grained control: an arity model that allows a minimum, maximum and variable number of parameters, e.g, "1..*", "3..5"
Subcommands (can be nested to arbitrary depth)
Feature-rich: composable arg groups, splitting quoted args, repeatable subcommands, and many more
User-friendly: usage help message uses colors to contrast important elements like option names from the rest of the usage help to reduce the cognitive load on the user
Distribute your app as a GraalVM native image
Works with Java 5 and higher
Extensive and meticulous documentation
The usage help message is easy to customize with annotations (without programming). For example:
(source)
I couldn't resist adding one more screenshot to show what usage help messages are possible. Usage help is the face of your application, so be creative and have fun!
Disclaimer: I created picocli. Feedback or questions very welcome.
Someone pointed me to args4j lately which is annotation based. I really like it!
I've used JOpt and found it quite handy: http://jopt-simple.sourceforge.net/
The front page also provides a list of about 8 alternative libraries, check them out and pick the one that most suits your needs.
I know most people here are going to find 10 million reasons why they dislike my way, but nevermind. I like to keep things simple, so I just separate the key from the value using a '=' and store them in a HashMap like this:
Map<String, String> argsMap = new HashMap<>();
for (String arg: args) {
String[] parts = arg.split("=");
argsMap.put(parts[0], parts[1]);
}
You could always maintain a list with the arguments you are expecting, to help the user in case he forgot an argument or used a wrong one... However, if you want too many features this solution is not for you anyway.
This is Google's command line parsing library open-sourced as part of the Bazel project. Personally I think it's the best one out there, and far easier than Apache CLI.
https://github.com/pcj/google-options
Installation
Bazel
maven_jar(
name = "com_github_pcj_google_options",
artifact = "com.github.pcj:google-options:jar:1.0.0",
sha1 = "85d54fe6771e5ff0d54827b0a3315c3e12fdd0c7",
)
Gradle
dependencies {
compile 'com.github.pcj:google-options:1.0.0'
}
Maven
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.pcj</groupId>
<artifactId>google-options</artifactId>
<version>1.0.0</version>
</dependency>
Usage
Create a class that extends OptionsBase and defines your #Option(s).
package example;
import com.google.devtools.common.options.Option;
import com.google.devtools.common.options.OptionsBase;
import java.util.List;
/**
* Command-line options definition for example server.
*/
public class ServerOptions extends OptionsBase {
#Option(
name = "help",
abbrev = 'h',
help = "Prints usage info.",
defaultValue = "true"
)
public boolean help;
#Option(
name = "host",
abbrev = 'o',
help = "The server host.",
category = "startup",
defaultValue = ""
)
public String host;
#Option(
name = "port",
abbrev = 'p',
help = "The server port.",
category = "startup",
defaultValue = "8080"
)
public int port;
#Option(
name = "dir",
abbrev = 'd',
help = "Name of directory to serve static files.",
category = "startup",
allowMultiple = true,
defaultValue = ""
)
public List<String> dirs;
}
Parse the arguments and use them.
package example;
import com.google.devtools.common.options.OptionsParser;
import java.util.Collections;
public class Server {
public static void main(String[] args) {
OptionsParser parser = OptionsParser.newOptionsParser(ServerOptions.class);
parser.parseAndExitUponError(args);
ServerOptions options = parser.getOptions(ServerOptions.class);
if (options.host.isEmpty() || options.port < 0 || options.dirs.isEmpty()) {
printUsage(parser);
return;
}
System.out.format("Starting server at %s:%d...\n", options.host, options.port);
for (String dirname : options.dirs) {
System.out.format("\\--> Serving static files at <%s>\n", dirname);
}
}
private static void printUsage(OptionsParser parser) {
System.out.println("Usage: java -jar server.jar OPTIONS");
System.out.println(parser.describeOptions(Collections.<String, String>emptyMap(),
OptionsParser.HelpVerbosity.LONG));
}
}
https://github.com/pcj/google-options
Take a look at the Commons CLI project, lots of good stuff in there.
Yeap.
I think you're looking for something like this:
http://commons.apache.org/cli
The Apache Commons CLI library provides an API for processing command line interfaces.
If you are already using Spring Boot, argument parsing comes out of the box.
If you want to run something after startup, implement the ApplicationRunner interface:
#SpringBootApplication
public class Application implements ApplicationRunner {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
}
#Override
public void run(ApplicationArguments args) {
args.containsOption("my-flag-option"); // test if --my-flag-option was set
args.getOptionValues("my-option"); // returns values of --my-option=value1 --my-option=value2
args.getOptionNames(); // returns a list of all available options
// do something with your args
}
}
Your run method will be invoked after the context has started up successfully.
If you need access to the arguments before you fire up your application context, you can just simply parse the application arguments manually:
#SpringBootApplication
public class Application implements ApplicationRunner {
public static void main(String[] args) {
ApplicationArguments arguments = new DefaultApplicationArguments(args);
// do whatever you like with your arguments
// see above ...
SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
}
}
And finally, if you need access to your arguments in a bean, just inject the ApplicationArguments:
#Component
public class MyBean {
#Autowired
private ApplicationArguments arguments;
// ...
}
Maybe these
JArgs command line option parsing
suite for Java - this tiny project provides a convenient, compact, pre-packaged and comprehensively documented suite of command line option parsers for the use of Java programmers. Initially, parsing compatible with GNU-style 'getopt' is provided.
ritopt, The Ultimate Options Parser for Java - Although, several command line option standards have been preposed, ritopt follows the conventions prescribed in the opt package.
I wrote another one: http://argparse4j.sourceforge.net/
Argparse4j is a command line argument parser library for Java, based on Python's argparse.
If you are familiar with gnu getopt, there is a Java port at: http://www.urbanophile.com/arenn/hacking/download.htm.
There appears to be a some classes that do this:
http://docs.sun.com/source/816-5618-10/netscape/ldap/util/GetOpt.html
http://xml.apache.org/xalan-j/apidocs/org/apache/xalan/xsltc/cmdline/getopt/GetOpt.html
airline # Github looks good. It is based on annotation and is trying to emulate Git command line structures.
Argparse4j is best I have found. It mimics Python's argparse libary which is very convenient and powerful.
I want to show you my implementation: ReadyCLI
Advantages:
for lazy programmers: a very small number of classes to learn, just see the two small examples on the README in the repository and you are already at 90% of learning; just start coding your CLI/Parser without any other knowledge;
ReadyCLI allows coding CLIs in the most natural way;
it is designed with Developer Experience in mind; it largely uses the Builder design pattern and functional interfaces for Lambda Expressions, to allow a very quick coding;
it supports Options, Flags and Sub-Commands;
it allows to parse arguments from command-line and to build more complex and interactive CLIs;
a CLI can be started on Standard I/O just as easily as on any other I/O interface, such as sockets;
it gives great support for documentation of commands.
I developed this project as I needed new features (options, flag, sub-commands) and that could be used in the simplest possible way in my projects.
If you want something lightweight (jar size ~ 20 kb) and simple to use, you can try argument-parser. It can be used in most of the use cases, supports specifying arrays in the argument and has no dependency on any other library. It works for Java 1.5 or above. Below excerpt shows an example on how to use it:
public static void main(String[] args) {
String usage = "--day|-d day --mon|-m month [--year|-y year][--dir|-ds directoriesToSearch]";
ArgumentParser argParser = new ArgumentParser(usage, InputData.class);
InputData inputData = (InputData) argParser.parse(args);
showData(inputData);
new StatsGenerator().generateStats(inputData);
}
More examples can be found here
As one of the comments mentioned earlier (https://github.com/pcj/google-options) would be a good choice to start with.
One thing I want to add-on is:
1) If you run into some parser reflection error, please try use a newer version of the guava. in my case:
maven_jar(
name = "com_google_guava_guava",
artifact = "com.google.guava:guava:19.0",
server = "maven2_server",
)
maven_jar(
name = "com_github_pcj_google_options",
artifact = "com.github.pcj:google-options:jar:1.0.0",
server = "maven2_server",
)
maven_server(
name = "maven2_server",
url = "http://central.maven.org/maven2/",
)
2) When running the commandline:
bazel run path/to/your:project -- --var1 something --var2 something -v something
3) When you need the usage help, just type:
bazel run path/to/your:project -- --help
Take a look at Spring Shell
Spring Shell’s features include
A simple, annotation driven, programming model to contribute custom commands
Use of Spring Boot auto-configuration functionality as the basis for a command plugin strategy
Tab completion, colorization, and script execution
Customization of command prompt, shell history file name, handling of results and errors
Dynamic enablement of commands based on domain specific criteria
Integration with the bean validation API
Already built-in commands, such as clear screen, gorgeous help, exit
ASCII art Tables, with formatting, alignment, fancy borders, etc.
For Spring users, we should mention also https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/javadoc-api/org/springframework/core/env/SimpleCommandLinePropertySource.html and his twin brother https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/javadoc-api/org/springframework/core/env/JOptCommandLinePropertySource.html (JOpt implementation of the same functionality).
The advantage in Spring is that you can directly bind the command line arguments to attributes, there is an example here https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/javadoc-api/org/springframework/core/env/CommandLinePropertySource.html

java jar arguments for swing application [duplicate]

What is a good way of parsing command line arguments in Java?
Check these out:
http://commons.apache.org/cli/
http://www.martiansoftware.com/jsap/
Or roll your own:
http://docs.oracle.com/javase/7/docs/api/java/util/Scanner.html
For instance, this is how you use commons-cli to parse 2 string arguments:
import org.apache.commons.cli.*;
public class Main {
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
Options options = new Options();
Option input = new Option("i", "input", true, "input file path");
input.setRequired(true);
options.addOption(input);
Option output = new Option("o", "output", true, "output file");
output.setRequired(true);
options.addOption(output);
CommandLineParser parser = new DefaultParser();
HelpFormatter formatter = new HelpFormatter();
CommandLine cmd = null;//not a good practice, it serves it purpose
try {
cmd = parser.parse(options, args);
} catch (ParseException e) {
System.out.println(e.getMessage());
formatter.printHelp("utility-name", options);
System.exit(1);
}
String inputFilePath = cmd.getOptionValue("input");
String outputFilePath = cmd.getOptionValue("output");
System.out.println(inputFilePath);
System.out.println(outputFilePath);
}
}
usage from command line:
$> java -jar target/my-utility.jar -i asd
Missing required option: o
usage: utility-name
-i,--input <arg> input file path
-o,--output <arg> output file
Take a look at the more recent JCommander.
I created it. I’m happy to receive questions or feature requests.
I have been trying to maintain a list of Java CLI parsers.
Airline
Active Fork: https://github.com/rvesse/airline
argparse4j
argparser
args4j
clajr
cli-parser
CmdLn
Commandline
DocOpt.java
dolphin getopt
DPML CLI (Jakarta Commons CLI2 fork)
Dr. Matthias Laux
Jakarta Commons CLI
jargo
jargp
jargs
java-getopt
jbock
JCLAP
jcmdline
jcommander
jcommando
jewelcli (written by me)
JOpt simple
jsap
naturalcli
Object Mentor CLI article (more about refactoring and TDD)
parse-cmd
ritopt
Rop
TE-Code Command
picocli has ANSI colorized usage help and autocomplete
It is 2022, time to do better than Commons CLI... :-)
Should you build your own Java command line parser, or use a library?
Many small utility-like applications probably roll their own command line parsing to avoid the additional external dependency. picocli may be an interesting alternative.
Picocli is a modern library and framework for building powerful, user-friendly, GraalVM-enabled command line apps with ease. It lives in 1 source file so apps can include it as source to avoid adding a dependency.
It supports colors, autocompletion, subcommands, and more. Written in Java, usable from Groovy, Kotlin, Scala, etc.
Features:
Annotation based: declarative, avoids duplication and expresses programmer intent
Convenient: parse user input and run your business logic with one line of code
Strongly typed everything - command line options as well as positional parameters
POSIX clustered short options (<command> -xvfInputFile as well as <command> -x -v -f InputFile)
Fine-grained control: an arity model that allows a minimum, maximum and variable number of parameters, e.g, "1..*", "3..5"
Subcommands (can be nested to arbitrary depth)
Feature-rich: composable arg groups, splitting quoted args, repeatable subcommands, and many more
User-friendly: usage help message uses colors to contrast important elements like option names from the rest of the usage help to reduce the cognitive load on the user
Distribute your app as a GraalVM native image
Works with Java 5 and higher
Extensive and meticulous documentation
The usage help message is easy to customize with annotations (without programming). For example:
(source)
I couldn't resist adding one more screenshot to show what usage help messages are possible. Usage help is the face of your application, so be creative and have fun!
Disclaimer: I created picocli. Feedback or questions very welcome.
Someone pointed me to args4j lately which is annotation based. I really like it!
I've used JOpt and found it quite handy: http://jopt-simple.sourceforge.net/
The front page also provides a list of about 8 alternative libraries, check them out and pick the one that most suits your needs.
I know most people here are going to find 10 million reasons why they dislike my way, but nevermind. I like to keep things simple, so I just separate the key from the value using a '=' and store them in a HashMap like this:
Map<String, String> argsMap = new HashMap<>();
for (String arg: args) {
String[] parts = arg.split("=");
argsMap.put(parts[0], parts[1]);
}
You could always maintain a list with the arguments you are expecting, to help the user in case he forgot an argument or used a wrong one... However, if you want too many features this solution is not for you anyway.
This is Google's command line parsing library open-sourced as part of the Bazel project. Personally I think it's the best one out there, and far easier than Apache CLI.
https://github.com/pcj/google-options
Installation
Bazel
maven_jar(
name = "com_github_pcj_google_options",
artifact = "com.github.pcj:google-options:jar:1.0.0",
sha1 = "85d54fe6771e5ff0d54827b0a3315c3e12fdd0c7",
)
Gradle
dependencies {
compile 'com.github.pcj:google-options:1.0.0'
}
Maven
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.pcj</groupId>
<artifactId>google-options</artifactId>
<version>1.0.0</version>
</dependency>
Usage
Create a class that extends OptionsBase and defines your #Option(s).
package example;
import com.google.devtools.common.options.Option;
import com.google.devtools.common.options.OptionsBase;
import java.util.List;
/**
* Command-line options definition for example server.
*/
public class ServerOptions extends OptionsBase {
#Option(
name = "help",
abbrev = 'h',
help = "Prints usage info.",
defaultValue = "true"
)
public boolean help;
#Option(
name = "host",
abbrev = 'o',
help = "The server host.",
category = "startup",
defaultValue = ""
)
public String host;
#Option(
name = "port",
abbrev = 'p',
help = "The server port.",
category = "startup",
defaultValue = "8080"
)
public int port;
#Option(
name = "dir",
abbrev = 'd',
help = "Name of directory to serve static files.",
category = "startup",
allowMultiple = true,
defaultValue = ""
)
public List<String> dirs;
}
Parse the arguments and use them.
package example;
import com.google.devtools.common.options.OptionsParser;
import java.util.Collections;
public class Server {
public static void main(String[] args) {
OptionsParser parser = OptionsParser.newOptionsParser(ServerOptions.class);
parser.parseAndExitUponError(args);
ServerOptions options = parser.getOptions(ServerOptions.class);
if (options.host.isEmpty() || options.port < 0 || options.dirs.isEmpty()) {
printUsage(parser);
return;
}
System.out.format("Starting server at %s:%d...\n", options.host, options.port);
for (String dirname : options.dirs) {
System.out.format("\\--> Serving static files at <%s>\n", dirname);
}
}
private static void printUsage(OptionsParser parser) {
System.out.println("Usage: java -jar server.jar OPTIONS");
System.out.println(parser.describeOptions(Collections.<String, String>emptyMap(),
OptionsParser.HelpVerbosity.LONG));
}
}
https://github.com/pcj/google-options
Take a look at the Commons CLI project, lots of good stuff in there.
Yeap.
I think you're looking for something like this:
http://commons.apache.org/cli
The Apache Commons CLI library provides an API for processing command line interfaces.
If you are already using Spring Boot, argument parsing comes out of the box.
If you want to run something after startup, implement the ApplicationRunner interface:
#SpringBootApplication
public class Application implements ApplicationRunner {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
}
#Override
public void run(ApplicationArguments args) {
args.containsOption("my-flag-option"); // test if --my-flag-option was set
args.getOptionValues("my-option"); // returns values of --my-option=value1 --my-option=value2
args.getOptionNames(); // returns a list of all available options
// do something with your args
}
}
Your run method will be invoked after the context has started up successfully.
If you need access to the arguments before you fire up your application context, you can just simply parse the application arguments manually:
#SpringBootApplication
public class Application implements ApplicationRunner {
public static void main(String[] args) {
ApplicationArguments arguments = new DefaultApplicationArguments(args);
// do whatever you like with your arguments
// see above ...
SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
}
}
And finally, if you need access to your arguments in a bean, just inject the ApplicationArguments:
#Component
public class MyBean {
#Autowired
private ApplicationArguments arguments;
// ...
}
Maybe these
JArgs command line option parsing
suite for Java - this tiny project provides a convenient, compact, pre-packaged and comprehensively documented suite of command line option parsers for the use of Java programmers. Initially, parsing compatible with GNU-style 'getopt' is provided.
ritopt, The Ultimate Options Parser for Java - Although, several command line option standards have been preposed, ritopt follows the conventions prescribed in the opt package.
I wrote another one: http://argparse4j.sourceforge.net/
Argparse4j is a command line argument parser library for Java, based on Python's argparse.
If you are familiar with gnu getopt, there is a Java port at: http://www.urbanophile.com/arenn/hacking/download.htm.
There appears to be a some classes that do this:
http://docs.sun.com/source/816-5618-10/netscape/ldap/util/GetOpt.html
http://xml.apache.org/xalan-j/apidocs/org/apache/xalan/xsltc/cmdline/getopt/GetOpt.html
airline # Github looks good. It is based on annotation and is trying to emulate Git command line structures.
Argparse4j is best I have found. It mimics Python's argparse libary which is very convenient and powerful.
I want to show you my implementation: ReadyCLI
Advantages:
for lazy programmers: a very small number of classes to learn, just see the two small examples on the README in the repository and you are already at 90% of learning; just start coding your CLI/Parser without any other knowledge;
ReadyCLI allows coding CLIs in the most natural way;
it is designed with Developer Experience in mind; it largely uses the Builder design pattern and functional interfaces for Lambda Expressions, to allow a very quick coding;
it supports Options, Flags and Sub-Commands;
it allows to parse arguments from command-line and to build more complex and interactive CLIs;
a CLI can be started on Standard I/O just as easily as on any other I/O interface, such as sockets;
it gives great support for documentation of commands.
I developed this project as I needed new features (options, flag, sub-commands) and that could be used in the simplest possible way in my projects.
If you want something lightweight (jar size ~ 20 kb) and simple to use, you can try argument-parser. It can be used in most of the use cases, supports specifying arrays in the argument and has no dependency on any other library. It works for Java 1.5 or above. Below excerpt shows an example on how to use it:
public static void main(String[] args) {
String usage = "--day|-d day --mon|-m month [--year|-y year][--dir|-ds directoriesToSearch]";
ArgumentParser argParser = new ArgumentParser(usage, InputData.class);
InputData inputData = (InputData) argParser.parse(args);
showData(inputData);
new StatsGenerator().generateStats(inputData);
}
More examples can be found here
As one of the comments mentioned earlier (https://github.com/pcj/google-options) would be a good choice to start with.
One thing I want to add-on is:
1) If you run into some parser reflection error, please try use a newer version of the guava. in my case:
maven_jar(
name = "com_google_guava_guava",
artifact = "com.google.guava:guava:19.0",
server = "maven2_server",
)
maven_jar(
name = "com_github_pcj_google_options",
artifact = "com.github.pcj:google-options:jar:1.0.0",
server = "maven2_server",
)
maven_server(
name = "maven2_server",
url = "http://central.maven.org/maven2/",
)
2) When running the commandline:
bazel run path/to/your:project -- --var1 something --var2 something -v something
3) When you need the usage help, just type:
bazel run path/to/your:project -- --help
Take a look at Spring Shell
Spring Shell’s features include
A simple, annotation driven, programming model to contribute custom commands
Use of Spring Boot auto-configuration functionality as the basis for a command plugin strategy
Tab completion, colorization, and script execution
Customization of command prompt, shell history file name, handling of results and errors
Dynamic enablement of commands based on domain specific criteria
Integration with the bean validation API
Already built-in commands, such as clear screen, gorgeous help, exit
ASCII art Tables, with formatting, alignment, fancy borders, etc.
For Spring users, we should mention also https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/javadoc-api/org/springframework/core/env/SimpleCommandLinePropertySource.html and his twin brother https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/javadoc-api/org/springframework/core/env/JOptCommandLinePropertySource.html (JOpt implementation of the same functionality).
The advantage in Spring is that you can directly bind the command line arguments to attributes, there is an example here https://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/javadoc-api/org/springframework/core/env/CommandLinePropertySource.html

Java - having to test many inputs manually

I am using eclipse and need to test many files for my application. This mean, I have to go to: `run -> run configurations -> arguments', change them and re-run, for about 30 different test files.
Is there a quicker way to do this?
I have googled java automated testing. Just need some guidance, I am abit confused.
thanks
daniel
You should setup a Maven project or an ant build file to perform a suite of tests in one click rather than going one by one as you currently do.
Otherwise you can simply put all the tests you want to run in a specific package or folder then select : "Run all tests in the selected project, package or source folder" in the JUnit Run/debug configuration :
Another way with Eclipse is to create a test suite :
Open the New wizard
Select Java > JUnit > JUnit Test Suite and click Next.
Enter a name for your test suite class
Select the classes that should be included in the suite.
if it's just command line variations, you can sort it out adding a simple class like this (wrote this on the fly without a javac, may have errors)
public class PropertyRunner {
private static String commands [] = {"TEST_1", "TEST_2", "TEST_3" };
public static void main(String[] args) throws FileNotFoundException, IOException
{
Properties config = new Properties();
config.load(new FileInputStream("config.props"));
// config.props contains all my tests in the format:
// TEST_1=-a|-k|ccccc
// TEST_2=-b|-k|ccccd
// TEST_3=-c|-k|FEFEF
// now run test cases:
for (String key : commands) {
String cmdLine = config.getProperty(key);
// cmdLine is in format "-a|-b|ccccc"
String childArgs[] = cmdLine.split("\\|");
// Exec your main class passing args directly or via threads
// YourApp.main(childArgs);
}
System.exit(0);
}
}
It's pretty simple, you store all your command lines in a property file, and then iterate on every key executing your real main class and passing the arguments read from the property file.

How do I set log4j level on the command line?

I want to add some log.debug statements to a class I'm working on, and I'd like to see that in output when running the test. I'd like to override the log4j properties on the command line, with something like this:
-Dlog4j.logger.com.mypackage.Thingie=DEBUG
I do this kind of thing frequently. I am specifically only interested in a way to pass this on the command line. I know how to do it with a config file, and that doesn't suit my workflow.
As part of your jvm arguments you can set -Dlog4j.configuration=file:"<FILE_PATH>". Where FILE_PATH is the path of your log4j.properties file.
Please note that as of log4j2, the new system variable to use is log4j.configurationFile and you put in the actual path to the file (i.e. without the file: prefix) and it will automatically load the factory based on the extension of the configuration file:
-Dlog4j.configurationFile=/path/to/log4jconfig.{ext}
These answers actually dissuaded me from trying the simplest possible thing! Simply specify a threshold for an appender (say, "console") in your log4j.configuration like so:
log4j.appender.console.threshold=${my.logging.threshold}
Then, on the command line, include the system property -Dlog4j.info -Dmy.logging.threshold=INFO. I assume that any other property can be parameterized in this way, but this is the easiest way to raise or lower the logging level globally.
With Log4j2, this can be achieved using the following utility method added to your code.
private static void setLogLevel() {
if (Boolean.getBoolean("log4j.debug")) {
Configurator.setLevel(System.getProperty("log4j.logger"), Level.DEBUG);
}
}
You need these imports
import org.apache.logging.log4j.Level;
import org.apache.logging.log4j.core.config.Configurator;
Now invoke the setLogLevel method in your main() or whereever appropriate and pass command line params -Dlog4j.logger=com.mypackage.Thingie and -Dlog4j.debug=true.
log4j does not support this directly.
As you do not want a configuration file, you most likely use programmatic configuration. I would suggest that you look into scanning all the system properties, and explicitly program what you want based on this.
Based on Thorbjørn Ravn Andersens suggestion I wrote some code that makes this work
Add the following early in the main method and it is now possible to set the log level from the comand line. This have been tested in a project of mine but I'm new to log4j and might have made some mistake. If so please correct me.
Logger.getRootLogger().setLevel(Level.WARN);
HashMap<String,Level> logLevels=new HashMap<String,Level>();
logLevels.put("ALL",Level.ALL);
logLevels.put("TRACE",Level.TRACE);
logLevels.put("DEBUG",Level.DEBUG);
logLevels.put("INFO",Level.INFO);
logLevels.put("WARN",Level.WARN);
logLevels.put("ERROR",Level.ERROR);
logLevels.put("FATAL",Level.FATAL);
logLevels.put("OFF",Level.OFF);
for(String name:System.getProperties().stringPropertyNames()){
String logger="log4j.logger.";
if(name.startsWith(logger)){
String loggerName=name.substring(logger.length());
String loggerValue=System.getProperty(name);
if(logLevels.containsKey(loggerValue))
Logger.getLogger(loggerName).setLevel(logLevels.get(loggerValue));
else
Logger.getRootLogger().warn("unknown log4j logg level on comand line: "+loggerValue);
}
}
In my pretty standard setup I've been seeing the following work well when passed in as VM Option (commandline before class in Java, or VM Option in an IDE):
-Droot.log.level=TRACE
Based on #lijat, here is a simplified implementation. In my spring-based application I simply load this as a bean.
public static void configureLog4jFromSystemProperties()
{
final String LOGGER_PREFIX = "log4j.logger.";
for(String propertyName : System.getProperties().stringPropertyNames())
{
if (propertyName.startsWith(LOGGER_PREFIX)) {
String loggerName = propertyName.substring(LOGGER_PREFIX.length());
String levelName = System.getProperty(propertyName, "");
Level level = Level.toLevel(levelName); // defaults to DEBUG
if (!"".equals(levelName) && !levelName.toUpperCase().equals(level.toString())) {
logger.error("Skipping unrecognized log4j log level " + levelName + ": -D" + propertyName + "=" + levelName);
continue;
}
logger.info("Setting " + loggerName + " => " + level.toString());
Logger.getLogger(loggerName).setLevel(level);
}
}
}

Categories

Resources