Exemple #1
0
 public void CancelJobs()
 {
     const int nJobs = 128;
       List<TestJob> classOneJobs = new List<TestJob>();
       List<TestJob> classTwoJobs = new List<TestJob>();
       for (int i = 0; i < nJobs; ++i) {
     TestJob job = new TestJob();
     classOneJobs.Add(job);
     JobQueue.Add(job, classOneJobs);
     job = new TestJob();
     classTwoJobs.Add(job);
     JobQueue.Add(job, classTwoJobs);
       }
       JobQueue.Cancel(classTwoJobs);
       int complete = JobQueue.Complete(2 * nJobs, null, true);
       Assert.IsTrue(complete >= nJobs, string.Format("only {0} jobs completed", complete));
       for (int i = 0; i < nJobs; ++i) {
     var job = classOneJobs[i];
     Assert.AreEqual(true, job.hasRun, string.Format("class one job {0} wasn't run", i));
     Assert.AreEqual(true, job.hasCompleted, string.Format("class one job {0} wasn't completed", i));
     job = classTwoJobs[i];
     if (job.hasRun) {
       Assert.AreEqual(true, job.hasCompleted, string.Format("class two job {0} run but wasn't completed", i));
     }
     else {
       Assert.AreEqual(false, job.hasCompleted, string.Format("class two job {0} didn't run but was completed", i));
       Assert.AreEqual(true, job.hasCancelled, string.Format("class two job {0} didn't run but wasn't cancelled", i));
     }
       }
 }
Exemple #2
0
 public void RunJobs()
 {
     const int nJobs = 128;
       List<TestJob> jobs = new List<TestJob>();
       // Create a collection of jobs and run them
       for (int i = 0; i < nJobs; ++i) {
     TestJob job = new TestJob();
     jobs.Add(job);
     JobQueue.Add(job, this);
       }
       int complete = JobQueue.Complete(nJobs, null, true);
       Assert.AreEqual(nJobs, complete, string.Format("only {0} jobs completed", complete));
       for (int i = 0; i < nJobs; ++i) {
     var job = jobs[i];
     Assert.AreEqual(true, job.hasRun, string.Format("job {0} wasn't run", i));
     Assert.AreEqual(true, job.hasCompleted, string.Format("job {0} wasn't completed", i));
       }
 }