aka regexing for fun and profit.
This also makes sure that there are no statements after the
throwing statement, since these would be dead code. There
were a surprising number of places with assertions after
the throw, and none of these are actually triggered in tests
ever. When I found these, I replaced them with try/catch/rethrow
which makes the assertions actually happen:
before:
// This is the ExceptionRule that checks EppException marshaling
thrown.expect(FooException.class);
doThrowingThing();
assertSomething(); // Dead code!
after:
try {
doThrowingThing();
assertWithMessage("...").fail();
} catch (FooException e) {
assertSomething();
// For EppExceptions:
assertAboutEppExceptins().that(e).marshalsToXml();
}
To make this work, I added EppExceptionSubject.
-------------
Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=135793407
It's best to be consistent and use the same thing everywhere. "clientId" was
already used in more places and is shorter and no more ambiguous, so it's the
logical one to win out.
Note that this CL is almost solely a big Eclipse-assisted refactoring. There are
two places that I did not change clientIdentifier -- the actual entity field on
Registrar (though I did change all getters and setters), and the name of a
column on the exported registrar spreadsheet. Both would require data
migrations.
Also fixes a few minor nits discovered in touched files, including an incorrect
test in OfyFilterTest.java and some superfluous uses of String.format() when
calling checkArgument().
-------------
Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=133956465
Per mcilwain's suggestion in the LRP design doc, LRP tokens should use a Base58 alphabet. I'll move PasswordGenerator out of the tools package and into a utils class in a future CL, as we'll want to use this generator in the LrpToken class itself rather than relegate the token definition to a tool.
-------------
Created by MOE: https://github.com/google/moe
MOE_MIGRATED_REVID=132358363
The dark lord Gosling designed the Java package naming system so that
ownership flows from the DNS system. Since we own the domain name
registry.google, it seems only appropriate that we should use
google.registry as our package name.
This change renames directories in preparation for the great package
rename. The repository is now in a broken state because the code
itself hasn't been updated. However this should ensure that git
correctly preserves history for each file.
2016-05-13 18:55:08 -04:00
Renamed from javatests/com/google/domain/registry/tools/SetupOteCommandTest.java (Browse further)