Annotation Interface DisabledIf
@DisabledIf
is used to signal that the annotated test class or test
method is disabled and should not be executed if the supplied
expression()
evaluates to true
.
When applied at the class level, all test methods within that class are automatically disabled as well.
For basic examples, see the Javadoc for expression()
.
This annotation may be used as a meta-annotation to create
custom composed annotations. For example, a custom
@DisabledOnMac
annotation can be created as follows.
@Target({ElementType.TYPE, ElementType.METHOD}) @Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME) @DisabledIf( expression = "#{systemProperties['os.name'].toLowerCase().contains('mac')}", reason = "Disabled on Mac OS" ) public @interface DisabledOnMac {}
- Since:
- 5.0
- Author:
- Sam Brannen, Tadaya Tsuyukubo
- See Also:
-
SpringExtension
EnabledIf
Disabled
-
Optional Element Summary
Modifier and TypeOptional ElementDescriptionThe expression that will be evaluated to determine if the annotated test class or test method is disabled.boolean
Whether theApplicationContext
associated with the current test should be eagerly loaded in order to evaluate theexpression()
.The reason this test is disabled.
-
Element Details
-
value
- See Also:
- Default:
- ""
-
expression
The expression that will be evaluated to determine if the annotated test class or test method is disabled.If the expression evaluates to
Boolean.TRUE
or aString
equal to"true"
(ignoring case), the test will be disabled.Expressions can be any of the following.
- Spring Expression Language (SpEL) expression — for example:
@DisabledIf("#{systemProperties['os.name'].toLowerCase().contains('mac')}")
- Placeholder for a property available in the Spring
Environment
— for example:@DisabledIf("${smoke.tests.disabled}")
- Text literal — for example:
@DisabledIf("true")
Note, however, that a text literal which is not the result of dynamic resolution of a property placeholder is of zero practical value since
@DisabledIf("true")
is equivalent to@Disabled
and@DisabledIf("false")
is logically meaningless.- See Also:
- Default:
- ""
- Spring Expression Language (SpEL) expression — for example:
-
reason
String reasonThe reason this test is disabled.- See Also:
- Default:
- ""
-
loadContext
boolean loadContextWhether theApplicationContext
associated with the current test should be eagerly loaded in order to evaluate theexpression()
.Defaults to
false
so that test application contexts are not eagerly loaded unnecessarily. If an expression is based solely on system properties or environment variables or does not interact with beans in the test's application context, there is no need to load the context prematurely since doing so would be a waste of time if the test ends up being disabled.- See Also:
- Default:
- false
-