CXF uses a standard maven build system and unit testing conventions. For those not familiar with that, here are some basic hints:

Unit testing

System/Integration testing

We have a special "systest" maven module that contains a large number of more complex test cases that involve full client/server interactions, server startups, etc... For the most part, they are just JUnit tests exactly like above, but test broader aspects. We have special utility classes (see below) to help these tests fork server process, test results, etc... Running the systests is exactly like running the unit tests, just in the systest module.

Usable testing utility classes

Debugging

There are generally two ways of running a test in a debugger.

  1. Within the IDE. If you setup eclipse properly, almost all the tests are runnable directly in eclipse. Right click on the test and select "Run As -> JUnit Test" (or "Debug As"). The test should just run.
  2. Externally via jpda. This is much harder. By default, mvn will fork the unit tests into a JVM that doesn't have JPDA enabled. However, it can be done. First, set your MAVEN_OPTS like:
    export JPDA_OPTS="-Xdebug -Xrunjdwp:transport=dt_socket,address=8000,server=y,suspend=n"
    export MAVEN_OPTS="-XX:MaxPermSize=192m -Xmx512M $JPDA_OPTS"
    
    Then you would need to run the test like "mvn test -Dtest=MyTest -Dsurefire.fork.mode=never". When mvn starts, you can attach your external debugger to it and assign breakpoints and such.

Caveats: When debugging systests, they tend to fork background servers. If you need to debug the server side part of the interaction, you will need to disable that forking. Usually, the easiest way is to find the "setup" code for the test and look for a "launchServer(Server.class)" line and add a ", true" parameter to tell the server launcher to run the server "in process".