8343118: [TESTBUG] java/awt/PrintJob/PrintCheckboxTest/PrintCheckboxManualTest.java fails with rror. Can't find HTML file PrintCheckboxManualTest.html

Reviewed-by: abhiscxk, dnguyen
This commit is contained in:
Prasanta Sadhukhan 2024-11-11 09:24:44 +00:00
parent ae6bb3cd29
commit f12c370d73

View File

@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
/*
* Copyright (c) 2004, 2007, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
* Copyright (c) 2004, 2024, Oracle and/or its affiliates. All rights reserved.
* DO NOT ALTER OR REMOVE COPYRIGHT NOTICES OR THIS FILE HEADER.
*
* This code is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
@ -22,84 +22,52 @@
*/
/*
@test
@bug 5045936 5055171
@summary Tests that there is no ClassCastException thrown in printing
checkbox and scrollbar with XAWT
@key printer
@run applet/manual=yesno PrintCheckboxManualTest.html
*/
* @test
* @bug 5045936 5055171
* @summary Tests that there is no ClassCastException thrown in printing
* checkbox and scrollbar with XAWT
* @key printer
* @requires (os.family == "linux")
* @library /java/awt/regtesthelpers
* @build PassFailJFrame
* @run main/manual PrintCheckboxManualTest
*/
// Note there is no @ in front of test above. This is so that the
// harness will not mistake this file as a test file. It should
// only see the html file as a test file. (the harness runs all
// valid test files, so it would run this test twice if this file
// were valid as well as the html file.)
// Also, note the area= after Your Name in the author tag. Here, you
// should put which functional area the test falls in. See the
// AWT-core home page -> test areas and/or -> AWT team for a list of
// areas.
import java.awt.Button;
import java.awt.Checkbox;
import java.awt.Frame;
import java.awt.Graphics;
import java.awt.GridLayout;
import java.awt.Panel;
import java.awt.PrintJob;
import java.awt.Scrollbar;
import java.awt.Toolkit;
import java.awt.event.ActionEvent;
import java.awt.event.ActionListener;
public class PrintCheckboxManualTest extends Panel {
private static final String INSTRUCTIONS = """
This test is for Linux with XToolkit ONLY!,
1. Click the 'Print' button on the frame
2. Select a printer in the print dialog and proceed
3. If the frame with checkbox and button on it
is printed without any exception test PASSED else FAILED.
""";
import java.awt.*;
import java.awt.event.*;
//Manual tests should run as applet tests if possible because they
// get their environments cleaned up, including AWT threads, any
// test created threads, and any system resources used by the test
// such as file descriptors. (This is normally not a problem as
// main tests usually run in a separate VM, however on some platforms
// such as the Mac, separate VMs are not possible and non-applet
// tests will cause problems). Also, you don't have to worry about
// synchronisation stuff in Applet tests the way you do in main
// tests...
public class PrintCheckboxManualTest extends Panel
{
//Declare things used in the test, like buttons and labels here
Frame f;
public static void main(String[] args) {
PrintCheckboxManualTest a = new PrintCheckboxManualTest();
a.init();
a.start();
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception {
PassFailJFrame.builder()
.title("Instructions")
.instructions(INSTRUCTIONS)
.columns(40)
.testUI(PrintCheckboxManualTest::createTestUI)
.build()
.awaitAndCheck();
}
public void init()
{
//Create instructions for the user here, as well as set up
// the environment -- set the layout manager, add buttons,
// etc.
this.setLayout (new BorderLayout ());
private static Frame createTestUI() {
String[] instructions =
{
"Linux or Solaris with XToolkit ONLY!",
"1. Click the 'Print' button on the frame",
"2. Select a printer in the print dialog and proceed",
"3. If the frame with checkbox and button on it is printed successfully test PASSED else FAILED"
};
Sysout.createDialogWithInstructions( instructions );
}//End init()
public void start ()
{
//Get things going. Request focus, set size, et cetera
setSize (200,200);
setVisible(true);
validate();
//What would normally go into main() will probably go here.
//Use System.out.println for diagnostic messages that you want
// to read after the test is done.
//Use Sysout.println for messages you want the tester to read.
f = new Frame("Print checkbox");
Frame f = new Frame("Print checkbox");
f.setLayout(new GridLayout(2, 2));
f.setSize(200, 100);
@ -111,185 +79,26 @@ public class PrintCheckboxManualTest extends Panel
f.add(sb);
Button b = new Button("Print");
b.addActionListener(new ActionListener()
{
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent ev)
{
PrintJob pj = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().getPrintJob(f, "PrintCheckboxManualTest", null);
if (pj != null)
{
try
{
b.addActionListener(new ActionListener() {
public void actionPerformed(ActionEvent ev) {
PrintJob pj = Toolkit.getDefaultToolkit().
getPrintJob(f, "PrintCheckboxManualTest",
null);
if (pj != null) {
try {
Graphics g = pj.getGraphics();
f.printAll(g);
g.dispose();
pj.end();
Sysout.println("Test PASSED");
}
catch (ClassCastException cce)
{
Sysout.println("Test FAILED: ClassCastException");
// throw new RuntimeException("Test FAILED: ClassCastException", cce);
}
catch (Exception e)
{
Sysout.println("Test FAILED: unknown Exception");
// throw new Error("Test FAILED: unknown exception", e);
} catch (ClassCastException cce) {
throw new RuntimeException("Test FAILED: ClassCastException", cce);
} catch (Exception e) {
throw new Error("Test FAILED: unknown exception", e);
}
}
}
});
f.add(b);
f.setVisible(true);
}// start()
//The rest of this class is the actions which perform the test...
//Use Sysout.println to communicate with the user NOT System.out!!
//Sysout.println ("Something Happened!");
return f;
}
}
/* Place other classes related to the test after this line */
/****************************************************
Standard Test Machinery
DO NOT modify anything below -- it's a standard
chunk of code whose purpose is to make user
interaction uniform, and thereby make it simpler
to read and understand someone else's test.
****************************************************/
/**
This is part of the standard test machinery.
It creates a dialog (with the instructions), and is the interface
for sending text messages to the user.
To print the instructions, send an array of strings to Sysout.createDialog
WithInstructions method. Put one line of instructions per array entry.
To display a message for the tester to see, simply call Sysout.println
with the string to be displayed.
This mimics System.out.println but works within the test harness as well
as standalone.
*/
class Sysout
{
private static TestDialog dialog;
public static void createDialogWithInstructions( String[] instructions )
{
dialog = new TestDialog( new Frame(), "Instructions" );
dialog.printInstructions( instructions );
dialog.setVisible(true);
println( "Any messages for the tester will display here." );
}
public static void createDialog( )
{
dialog = new TestDialog( new Frame(), "Instructions" );
String[] defInstr = { "Instructions will appear here. ", "" } ;
dialog.printInstructions( defInstr );
dialog.setVisible(true);
println( "Any messages for the tester will display here." );
}
public static void printInstructions( String[] instructions )
{
dialog.printInstructions( instructions );
}
public static void println( String messageIn )
{
dialog.displayMessage( messageIn );
}
}// Sysout class
/**
This is part of the standard test machinery. It provides a place for the
test instructions to be displayed, and a place for interactive messages
to the user to be displayed.
To have the test instructions displayed, see Sysout.
To have a message to the user be displayed, see Sysout.
Do not call anything in this dialog directly.
*/
class TestDialog extends Dialog
{
TextArea instructionsText;
TextArea messageText;
int maxStringLength = 80;
//DO NOT call this directly, go through Sysout
public TestDialog( Frame frame, String name )
{
super( frame, name );
int scrollBoth = TextArea.SCROLLBARS_BOTH;
instructionsText = new TextArea( "", 15, maxStringLength, scrollBoth );
add( "North", instructionsText );
messageText = new TextArea( "", 5, maxStringLength, scrollBoth );
add("Center", messageText);
pack();
setVisible(true);
}// TestDialog()
//DO NOT call this directly, go through Sysout
public void printInstructions( String[] instructions )
{
//Clear out any current instructions
instructionsText.setText( "" );
//Go down array of instruction strings
String printStr, remainingStr;
for( int i=0; i < instructions.length; i++ )
{
//chop up each into pieces maxSringLength long
remainingStr = instructions[ i ];
while( remainingStr.length() > 0 )
{
//if longer than max then chop off first max chars to print
if( remainingStr.length() >= maxStringLength )
{
//Try to chop on a word boundary
int posOfSpace = remainingStr.
lastIndexOf( ' ', maxStringLength - 1 );
if( posOfSpace <= 0 ) posOfSpace = maxStringLength - 1;
printStr = remainingStr.substring( 0, posOfSpace + 1 );
remainingStr = remainingStr.substring( posOfSpace + 1 );
}
//else just print
else
{
printStr = remainingStr;
remainingStr = "";
}
instructionsText.append( printStr + "\n" );
}// while
}// for
}//printInstructions()
//DO NOT call this directly, go through Sysout
public void displayMessage( String messageIn )
{
messageText.append( messageIn + "\n" );
System.out.println(messageIn);
}
}// TestDialog class