You are viewing a plain text version of this content. The canonical link for it is here.
Posted to commits@jmeter.apache.org by fs...@apache.org on 2019/08/24 19:24:21 UTC

[jmeter] branch master updated: Java 11 is a bit more picky on Locale names.

This is an automated email from the ASF dual-hosted git repository.

fschumacher pushed a commit to branch master
in repository https://gitbox.apache.org/repos/asf/jmeter.git


The following commit(s) were added to refs/heads/master by this push:
     new e28196c  Java 11 is a bit more picky on Locale names.
e28196c is described below

commit e28196c5c43b1e916a940d929d8705916d677309
Author: Felix Schumacher <fe...@internetallee.de>
AuthorDate: Sat Aug 24 21:23:36 2019 +0200

    Java 11 is a bit more picky on Locale names.
---
 .../src/test/groovy/org/apache/jorphan/util/ConverterSpec.groovy        | 2 +-
 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)

diff --git a/src/jorphan/src/test/groovy/org/apache/jorphan/util/ConverterSpec.groovy b/src/jorphan/src/test/groovy/org/apache/jorphan/util/ConverterSpec.groovy
index 176add1..39e91ef 100644
--- a/src/jorphan/src/test/groovy/org/apache/jorphan/util/ConverterSpec.groovy
+++ b/src/jorphan/src/test/groovy/org/apache/jorphan/util/ConverterSpec.groovy
@@ -145,7 +145,7 @@ class ConverterSpec extends Specification {
 
     def toLocalDate(String dateString, int format) {
         def date = DateFormat
-                .getDateInstance(format, Locale.forLanguageTag("en_US"))
+                .getDateInstance(format, Locale.forLanguageTag("en-US"))
                 .parse(dateString)
         return date
     }