diff --git a/src/test/java/net/floodlightcontroller/debugevent/EventTest.java b/src/test/java/net/floodlightcontroller/debugevent/EventTest.java index 07fd9db91bda74e91d43287b21c259e86d2d920f..9ae64f5c537be8442e8ede113a2b41158fa02ad3 100644 --- a/src/test/java/net/floodlightcontroller/debugevent/EventTest.java +++ b/src/test/java/net/floodlightcontroller/debugevent/EventTest.java @@ -3,11 +3,6 @@ package net.floodlightcontroller.debugevent; import static org.junit.Assert.assertFalse; import static org.junit.Assert.assertTrue; -import java.text.DateFormat; -import java.util.regex.Matcher; -import java.util.regex.Pattern; -import java.util.Date; - import org.junit.Test; import net.floodlightcontroller.debugevent.Event; @@ -48,13 +43,15 @@ public class EventTest { // check Event.getFormattedEvent() assertTrue(ed.equals(e.getFormattedEvent(RiverEvent.class, "test"))); + /* Why does it matter? Java's built-in Date does not format in ISO8601... // ensure timestamp comes in ISO8601 time // e.g.: 1969-12-31T16:00:00.001-08:00 Pattern pat = Pattern.compile("\\d{4}-\\d{2}-\\d{2}T\\d{2}:\\d{2}:\\d{2}\\.\\d{3}[+-]\\d{2}:\\d{2}"); Date t1 = e.getFormattedEvent(RiverEvent.class, "test2").getTimestamp(); Matcher m1 = pat.matcher(t1.toString()); - //TODO @Ryan does the date-time format really matter? assertTrue(m1.matches()); + assertTrue(m1.matches()); + */ // ensure that cached value is not returned for incorrect class assertFalse(ed.equals(e.getFormattedEvent(River.class, "test")));