RFR: 8351357: Add canary system test checking if Stage receives focus on show [v2]
Lukasz Kostyra
lkostyra at openjdk.org
Wed Jun 18 10:05:19 UTC 2025
> Originally this issue was supposed to resolve problems with some system tests (`MenuDoubleShortcutTest`, `TextAreaBehaviorTest` and others) failing on my Windows machine. In the process of figuring this out I found out the problem is Windows `::SetForegroundWindow()` API refusing to give focus to JFX Stage upon calling `Stage.show()`.
>
> The problem happened only when running system tests via Gradle, and with more investigation it turned out the culprit is actually running tests via a Gradle Daemon, which is the default behavior. According to [SetForegroundWindow API remarks](https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/win32/api/winuser/nf-winuser-setforegroundwindow) there is a list of conditions a process must meet to be granted a privilege of receiving focus, which is supposed to prevent focus stealing. While we do meet the required conditions, we don't meet "one of" additional conditions listed in the reference:
> - Gradle daemon is a background process, so tests started by it do not meet `The calling process is the foreground process.` and `The calling process was started by the foreground process.` conditions
> - We most probably run the tests from the terminal, so `There is currently no foreground window, and thus no foreground process.` condition fails - the foreground window is the Terminal itself.
> - Each test has fresh-started JFX stage so `The calling process received the last input event.` condition cannot be met and would require either Robot workarounds or manual interaction before each test case.
> - There is no debugger involved in the process (at least most of the time) so `Either the foreground process or the calling process is being debugged.` is also not met.
>
> As such, Windows refuses to grant JFX Stage focus, which fails some system tests relying on it.
>
> While we cannot remedy these conditions in-code (outside of hacky solutions I found with `AttachThreadInput` API which I am not a fan of) the only solution seems to be running the tests on Windows via either `gradle --no-daemon` or by setting `org.gradle.daemon=false` property somewhere in `gradle.properties`.
>
> In the process of debugging this problem I wrote a canary test to detect whether a Stage receives focus right after calling `show()`. I ran this test on all (accessible to me) platforms (Windows, Linux, macOS) - on both Linux and macOS the test passes regardless of whether the Gradle deamon is used or not. On my Windows machine (Win 11 24H2) it fails when testing through Gradle Daemon (am...
Lukasz Kostyra has updated the pull request incrementally with one additional commit since the last revision:
Review fixes
-------------
Changes:
- all: https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/1804/files
- new: https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/1804/files/542a3830..91c69833
Webrevs:
- full: https://webrevs.openjdk.org/?repo=jfx&pr=1804&range=01
- incr: https://webrevs.openjdk.org/?repo=jfx&pr=1804&range=00-01
Stats: 18 lines in 1 file changed: 12 ins; 0 del; 6 mod
Patch: https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/1804.diff
Fetch: git fetch https://git.openjdk.org/jfx.git pull/1804/head:pull/1804
PR: https://git.openjdk.org/jfx/pull/1804
More information about the openjfx-dev
mailing list