The assertion type enables or disables the Java1.4 assertion feature, on a whole java program, or components of a program. It can be used in <java> and <junit> to add extra validation to code.
Assertions are covered in the Java 1.4.2 documentation, and the Java Language Specification
The key points to note are that a java.lang.AssertionError error is thrown when an assertion fails, and that the facility is only available on Java1.4 and later. To enable assertions one must set source="1.4", "1.5" or later in <javac> when the source is being compiled, and that the code must contain assert statements to be tested. The result of such an action is code that neither compiles or runs on earlier versions of Java. For this reason Ant itself currently contains no assertions.
When assertions are enabled (or disabled) in a task through nested assertions elements, the classloader or command line is modified with the appopriate options. This means that the JVM executed must be a Java1.4 or later JVM, even if there are no assertions in the code. Attempting to enable assertions on earlier VMs will result in an "Unrecognized option" error and the JVM will not start.
Attribute | Description | Required |
enableSystemAssertions | Flag to turn system assertions on or off. | No, default is 'unspecified' |
When the System assertions have neither been enabled or disabled, then the JVM is not given any assertion information -the default action of the current JVMs is to disable system assertions.
Note also that there is no apparent documentation for what parts of the system have built in assertions.
Enable assertions in portions of code.
Attribute | Description | Required |
class | The name of a class to enable assertions on. | No |
package | The name of a package to turn assertions on. Use "..." for the anonymous package. | No |
Disable assertions in portions of code.
Attribute | Description | Required |
class | The name of a class to disable assertions for. | No |
package | The name of a package to turn assertions off on. Use "..." for the anonymous package. | No |
Because assertions are disabled by default, it only makes sense to disable assertions where they have been enabled in a parent package.
<assertions > <enable class="Test" /> </assertions>
<assertions > <enable package="org.apache" /> </assertions>
<java fork="true" failonerror="true" classname="${classname}" classpathref="assert.classpath"> <assertions enableSystemAssertions="true" > <enable package="org.apache" /> <disable package="org.apache.ant" /> <enable class="org.apache.tools.ant.Main"/> </assertions> </java>
<assertions enableSystemAssertions="false" > <enable package="..." /> </assertions>
<assertions id="project.assertions" > <enable package="org.apache.test" /> </assertions> <java fork="true" failonerror="true" classname="${classname}" classpathref="assert.classpath"> <assertions refid="project.assertions"/> </java>
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