I have a big web project with many javascript Jasmine unit tests.
In that web project, i use grunt, karma and jasmine.
Is there any way to launch only one test javascript with grunt with a command line ?
Launching all tests is long, so how to do that without modify my gruntfile.js or my karma-unit.conf.js ??
I tried the following command, but it is more a hack than a real solution :
karma run -- --grep=filteredtestexpr
I am not sure of the best way to specify which test to run from the command line. But it seems like your problem can be solved with the following two pointers:
Change the name of a test from it to iit and karma will run only that test (actually all iit tests).
Change describe to ddescribe to run the entire describe block.
Also, use xit and xdescribe to explicitly exclude tests.
I'm trying to add a new test case to existing test org.codehaus.groovy.grails.web.mapping.ReverseUrlMappingTests in grails-test-suite-web submodule of grails-core project.
https://github.com/grails/grails-core/blob/master/grails-test-suite-web/src/test/groovy/org/grails/web/mapping/ReverseUrlMappingTests.groovy
I have a problem with running single test case using Gradle. When I do:
./gradlew -Dtest.single=ReverseUrlMappingTests :grails-test-suite-web:test
It ends with:
FAILURE: Build failed with an exception.
* What went wrong:
Execution failed for task ':test'.
> Could not find matching test for pattern: ReverseUrlMappingTests
* Try:
Run with --stacktrace option to get the stack trace. Run with --info or --debug option to get more log output.
This test can be run in full test cycle ./gradlew test but it's waste of the time when we wanna red-green-refactor only one simple test case. I also noticed that the same problem occurs when I try to run in the same manner spock.lang.Specification subclass test.
Here's my question: is it possible to run single grails-core test with Gradle?
It's grails-core 2.4.x branch clone
The question has been edited to indicate that the test is on the 2.4.x branch, which affects the answer. I have made relevant changes below.
Something like this will work...
./gradlew :g-t-s-w:test --tests *ReverseUrlMappingTests*
When you do that, you are still going to be running some other tests because of the way our build is written. If you want to get rid of them you can comment out the following:
test.dependsOn execIsolatedTests
That is in grails-test-suite-web/build.gradle at https://github.com/grails/grails-core/blob/644233cfff266f391c44ef3ec56036a3b1c9bb19/grails-test-suite-web/build.gradle#L98
You could also do something like this...
./gradlew -DsingleTest.single=ReverseUrlMappingTests grails-test-suite-web:singleTest
I am new to Gradle. I use Gradle 1.10 and Ubuntu 13.
I want to know if there's any command to execute only one unit test class, similar to testOnly in SBT.
To run a single test class Airborn's answer is good.
With using some command line options, which found here, you can simply do something like this.
gradle test --tests org.gradle.SomeTest.someSpecificFeature
gradle test --tests '*SomeTest.someSpecificFeature'
gradle test --tests '*SomeSpecificTest'
gradle test --tests 'all.in.specific.package*'
gradle test --tests '*IntegTest'
gradle test --tests '*IntegTest*ui*'
gradle test --tests '*IntegTest.singleMethod'
gradle someTestTask --tests '*UiTest' someOtherTestTask --tests '*WebTest*ui'
From version 1.10 of gradle it supports selecting tests, using a test filter. For example,
apply plugin: 'java'
test {
filter {
//specific test method
includeTestsMatching "org.gradle.SomeTest.someSpecificFeature"
//specific test method, use wildcard for packages
includeTestsMatching "*SomeTest.someSpecificFeature"
//specific test class
includeTestsMatching "org.gradle.SomeTest"
//specific test class, wildcard for packages
includeTestsMatching "*.SomeTest"
//all classes in package, recursively
includeTestsMatching "com.gradle.tooling.*"
//all integration tests, by naming convention
includeTestsMatching "*IntegTest"
//only ui tests from integration tests, by some naming convention
includeTestsMatching "*IntegTest*ui"
}
}
For multi-flavor environments (a common use-case for Android), check this answer, as the --tests argument will be unsupported and you'll get an error.
In versions of Gradle prior to 5, the test.single system property can be used to specify a single test.
You can do gradle -Dtest.single=ClassUnderTestTest test if you want to test single class or use regexp like gradle -Dtest.single=ClassName*Test test you can find more examples of filtering classes for tests under this link.
Gradle 5 removed this option, as it was superseded by test filtering using the --tests command line option.
In case you have a multi-module project :
let us say your module structure is
root-module
-> a-module
-> b-module
and the test(testToRun) you are looking to run is in b-module, with full path : com.xyz.b.module.TestClass.testToRun
As here you are interested to run the test in b-module, so you should see the tasks available for b-module.
./gradlew :b-module:tasks
The above command will list all tasks in b-module with description.
And in ideal case, you will have a task named test to run the unit tests in that module.
./gradlew :b-module:test
Now, you have reached the point for running all the tests in b-module, finally you can pass a parameter to the above task to run tests which matches the certain path pattern
./gradlew :b-module:test --tests "com.xyz.b.module.TestClass.testToRun"
Now, instead of this if you run
./gradlew test --tests "com.xyz.b.module.TestClass.testToRun"
It will run the test task for both module a and b, which might result in failure as there is nothing matching the above pattern in a-module.
Please note that --tests option may not work if you have different build types/flavors (fails with Unknown command-line option '--tests'). In this case, it's necessary to specify the particular test task (e.g. testProdReleaseUnitTest instead of just test)
After much figuring out, the following worked for me:
gradle test --tests "a.b.c.MyTestFile.mySingleTest"
For multi modules projects it's necessary to use module's name and buildType:
./gradlew :module_name:testDebugUnitTest --tests com.package_name.TestsClass.*
To run some test method the same command, but with test's name:
./gradlew :module_name:testDebugUnitTest --tests com.package_name.TestsClass.test
Below is the command to run a single test class using gradlew command line option:
gradlew.bat Connected**your bundleVariant**AndroidTest -Pandroid.testInstrumentationRunnerArguments.class=com.example.TestClass
Below example to run class com.example.TestClass with variant Variant_1:
gradlew.bat ConnectedVariant_1AndroidTest -Pandroid.testInstrumentationRunnerArguments.class=com.example.TestClass
Run a single test called MyTest:
./gradlew app:testDebug --tests=com.example.MyTest
You should try to add asteriks (*) to the end.
gradle test --tests "com.a.b.c.*"
In my case, my eclipse java compiler warnings were set too high, and eclipse was not recognizing my class as valid for execution. Updating my compiler settings fixed the problem. You can read more about it here: annotation-nonnull-cannot-be-resolved
This worked for me
Release case:
gradle testReleaseUnitTest --tests testClass
Debug case:
gradle testDebugUnitTest --tests AsyncExecutorTest
You can see de projects with: gradle -q projects and move to the project where is the class to test
I'm in the middle of my first ever stab at setting up Jenkins to build and run unit tests /code coverage with my CakePHP project. So far I have successfully got Jenkins fetching and building automatically from my BitBucket repository - a small victory in itself.
Next thing I want to happen is for the unit tests to run and code coverage reports to be populated.
Here is my build.xml, which is being executed in Jenkins with the (only) build command phing -f $WORKSPACE/build.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<project name="Consumer Love" default="phpunit">
<target name="phpunit">
<exec command="cake test app --coverage-clover logs/reports/clover.xml"></exec>
</target>
</project>
I think the issue is that when you run cake test app it asks for a prompt of which specific tests you want to run, I have been unable to figure out a method to run all of my CakePHP app unit tests.
The solution was to create a custom CakePHP Test suite which adds specific files/directories to be tested, then run that suite with the command cake test app AllTests.
For example, here is my Test/Case/AllTests.php:
/*
* Custom test suite to execute all tests
*/
class AllTestsTest extends PHPUnit_Framework_TestSuite {
public static function suite() {
$path = APP . 'Test' . DS . 'Case' . DS;
$suite = new CakeTestSuite('All tests');
$suite->addTestDirectory($path . 'Model' . DS);
return $suite;
}
}
This testsuite simply adds the Models directory to the testing environment, so all my model tests now get executed. As you can see it can be extended to run more/all tests as seen fit.
Try cake test app all. I can't confirm this makes the difference just now, but I've pulled this out of a phing build file where I'm doing the same thing as you so it should be good.
It is possible to run Scala's partest test suite with something like ant test, but is it possible to just rerun a single, failed test?
Additionally, is it possible to run only tests which have failed in a test run before?
If you are referring to the Scala repository build and the partest test suite, after having run the default ant build task, you can either run:
test/partest --failed
to run the last set of tests that failed, or:
test/partest test/files/<folder>/<testname>
This assumes you have previously done a:
test/partest --all
or called partest for some other test category.