This page (revision-44) was last changed on 17-Dec-2012 21:25 by Albrecht Striffler

This page was created on 17-Dec-2012 12:25 by Jochen Reutelshöfer

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Version Date Modified Size Author Changes ... Change note
44 17-Dec-2012 21:25 5 KB Albrecht Striffler to previous
43 17-Dec-2012 21:22 5 KB Albrecht Striffler to previous | to last
42 17-Dec-2012 17:47 5 KB constin to previous | to last
41 17-Dec-2012 16:48 5 KB Jochen Reutelshöfer to previous | to last

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At line 4 changed one line
Knowledge engineering with KnowWE is supported by a continuous integration framework, that allows to embed automated tests on the knowledge. These tests are executed on regular bases (triggers can be configured) and in case of failure the users are alerted. An overview about the history and the testing results in provided on a dashboard. This allows for a safe development process. The use of the existing CI features is described [here|Doc CIDashboard]
Knowledge engineering with KnowWE is supported by a continuous integration framework, that allows to embed automated tests on the knowledge. These tests are executed on regular bases (triggers can be configured) and in case of failure the users are alerted. An overview about the history and the testing results is provided on a dashboard. This allows for a safe development process. The use of the existing CI features is described [here|Doc CIDashboard]
At line 48 changed one line
The actual test processing is executed within the method execute() of the Test-interface. As the first argument the test object is passed. The parameters, already being checked for consistency, are passed by a String array. (In case of inconsistent parameters, the test is not executed at all, but a corrsponding error message is shown to the user or written to the logs.) Further, ignore parameters are passed, which allows the user to specify exceptional cases that should not cause the test to fail. This, however, makes sense only in very few cases an can be omitted otherwise.
The actual test processing is executed within the method execute() of the Test-interface. As the first argument the test object is passed. The parameters, already being checked for consistency, are passed by as a String array. (In case of inconsistent parameters, the test is not executed at all, but a corrsponding error message is shown to the user or written to the logs.) Further, ignore parameters are passed, which allows the user to specify exceptional cases that should not cause the test to fail. This, however, makes sense only in very few cases an can be omitted otherwise.