Polish documentation

* Remove double occurrence of InfluxDbHealthIndicator.
* Fix JUnit 5 `@ExtendWith` references
* Use consistent casing of HtmlUnit.

See gh-18718
pull/18727/head
Philippe De Neve 5 years ago committed by Phillip Webb
parent c5138c56ff
commit 8f990d97ab

@ -688,9 +688,6 @@ The following `HealthIndicators` are auto-configured by Spring Boot when appropr
| {spring-boot-actuator-module-code}/influx/InfluxDbHealthIndicator.java[`InfluxDbHealthIndicator`]
| Checks that an InfluxDB server is up.
| {spring-boot-actuator-module-code}/influx/InfluxDbHealthIndicator.java[`InfluxDbHealthIndicator`]
| Checks that an InfluxDB server is up.
| {spring-boot-actuator-module-code}/jms/JmsHealthIndicator.java[`JmsHealthIndicator`]
| Checks that a JMS broker is up.

@ -5920,7 +5920,7 @@ The annotation works by <<boot-features-testing-spring-boot-applications-detecti
In addition to `@SpringBootTest` a number of other annotations are also provided for <<boot-features-testing-spring-boot-applications-testing-autoconfigured-tests,testing more specific slices>> of an application.
TIP: If you are using JUnit 4, don't forget to also add `@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)` to your test, otherwise the annotations will be ignored.
If you are using JUnit 5, there's no need to add the equivalent `@RunWith(SpringExtension.class)` as `@SpringBootTest` and the other `@…Test` annotations are already annotated with it.
If you are using JUnit 5, there's no need to add the equivalent `@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)` as `@SpringBootTest` and the other `@…Test` annotations are already annotated with it.
By default, `@SpringBootTest` will not start a server.
You can use the `webEnvironment` attribute of `@SpringBootTest` to further refine how your tests run:
@ -6315,7 +6315,7 @@ The following example uses `MockMvc`:
TIP: If you need to configure elements of the auto-configuration (for example, when servlet filters should be applied) you can use attributes in the `@AutoConfigureMockMvc` annotation.
If you use HtmlUnit or Selenium, auto-configuration also provides an HTMLUnit `WebClient` bean and/or a `WebDriver` bean.
If you use HtmlUnit or Selenium, auto-configuration also provides an HtmlUnit `WebClient` bean and/or a Selenium `WebDriver` bean.
The following example uses HtmlUnit:
[source,java,indent=0]

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