I have a bunch of tests (JUnit) and a lot of logging performed using log4j in various code called from those tests.
I now need to separate logs in files between tests similarly to how JUnit separates stdout and stderr. The easiest way I see is to somehow log test class&name (for example, using MDC) along with the logging messages.
I can't just direct all logging to console and rely on JUnit to assign stdout to proper test since piece of logging that I want to analyze should not be visible in standard output.
The only solution I see is to have some special #Rule that will put test class&method name into MDC, however I'd rather not change the tests themselves since it would complicate further support.
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I am running UI testing with Jest and I am using a custom reporter to generate a JUNIT.xml file at the end of the run https://github.com/jest-community/jest-junit , so that my azure pipeline can read it and generate nice analytics. My test framework is organize around Test suite that represent a big functionality, then each aspect of that functionality is check within a test contain in the suite ( That check might require multiple steps ) and I would like show each of those steps. This way i think it would be more readable for anyone looking at the report and it would be very easy to get context on why a test failed.
I try to put assertion at each steps. But JUNIT only record the assertion that failed.
I also try to change the way my test are organize and make a step a test itself. But, in Jest, and it seem in a lot of other runner as well ( at least in Node ) it seem that it's not possible to guarantee easily that test are run in a specific sequence. Also, it's really verbose to code suite like this.
Does anybody have an idea on how I could achieve this granularity ?
Thank you.
I come from Java world and I mostly used JUnit, and now I have some problems expressing some aspects of tests with NUnit 3. In JUnit, each test creates its own instance of a test class, so it's perfectly valid to create some instance variables in a test class, set up them in #Before method, test method and helpers can access these variables freely without worrying they would be overwritten by other tests run in parallel, and #After tears down the test data nicely. With NUnit it does not work and SetUp and TearDown methods seem to be useless in this case, because test fixture instance is reused between invocations of test method(s), so fields of test fixture class can (and are) overwritten by every invocation of a test method (my class has a few test methods, and each of them generates several test cases, so there are some tens of invocations in one test run).
I do not know how to work around this problem. In my scenario, set up would create a temporary folder, which would be used as a work folder for following test case. Tear down would delete the temporary folder afterwards, cleaning up all intermediate files created by tested method. But now, when SetUp creates and stores a temporary folder path in instance field (so it can be read by test logic and somewhat complicated asserts and verifiers), the value of such field is overwritten by test cases run in parallel. I considered several approaches:
implement an IDisposable which would represent a context of each test, and enclose it with using in each test method - I do not like this idea, because I do not like the idea of IDisposable being used as anything else than resource management tool and combinig IDisposable with using to simulate set up/tear down smells to me like an abuse of this particular language feature,
create a method which accepts a delegate for actual test logic, and which invokes custom SetUpTestCase/TearDownTestCase methods. The method would invoke set up, then test delegate, and tear down afterwards. What I do not like about this approach is that it does not play well with test methods which accept parameters - each set of test methods parametrized in particular way would need a corresponding delegate type. Also it somewhat seems to be against spirit of NUnit and the way of describing test methods with attributes - after all, why should the main logic of my test be delegated to anything? Shouldn't the [Test] or [TestCase] method be actual test?
maybe there's some way to use more advanced aspects of NUnit, like actions or some callbacks/triggers/whatever, I am just too unexperienced to see these. What I particularly miss is the way to transfer data from set up method (for example, a path to a temporary folder created by it) to the test method that follows. I cannot use instance fields for this, and I do not know whether there exists any "tag" structure which would pass test-specific data between methods invoked on different stages of a test lifecycle?
Generally, SetUp and TearDown attributes seem pretty useless to me, if they cannot set up the test case without their result being overwritten immediately by another test case run in parallel. What am I missing here?
How can I implemented such per-test case, scoped setup/tear down behavior with NUnit? What do I do wrong, or what do I miss?
As you have established, the TestFixture class is instantiated once before the OneTimeSetUp is called; then for each test it runs a set of SetUp, Test and TearDown; and finally, the OneTimeTearDown.
If you want the tests to be run in parallel (which is not the default) then you must specify The Parallelizable Attribute. Whether you do that or not, it is a good idea for your tests to be written independently, so they do not conflict with each other - they need to be structured.
The AAA (Arrange, Act, Assert) pattern is a common way of structuring unit tests for a method under test. If your tests are to be run in parallel, then TestFixture fields are not suitable for holding information which may conflict across parallel tests, in the same way that it wouldn't be suitable in a multithreaded class.
I'd suggest using a private method in the TestFixture to set up the temporary folder - it will need to have some way of providing a unique folder name, so that the parallel tests do not interact - perhaps use a Guid or CallerMemberName as part of the folder name, and return the folder name.
This method should be called from the Arrange part of the test. And you'll need a try...finally wrapping the rest of the Test to ensure the folder gets torn down. Or you could go with your IDisposable idea - I don't think there's anything wrong with that: the whole point of that is to guarantee tidying up resources (both managed and unmanaged) when something goes out of scope.
Your second suggestion of a delegate would also be fine if you used lambda expressions rather than strictly-defined delegates - the lambda expression can capture variables from the containing scope.
Is there any easy way to configure log4j so that in unit tests I only print the stacktrace of the failing tests without having noise in the output on the shell?
Right now when I execute tests I can see the output printed by the classes I am testing. I want to avoid that since it's not bringing any value for passing tests
I would recommend to have log4j.properties file under src/test/resources with content:
log4j.rootLogger=OFF
As result all your production classes will not log but the jUnit or testNG will print the failed tests as you expect.
In your unit test, set the log level to the level at which stacktraces are being logged:
Logger.getRootLogger().setLevel(Level.WARNING);
Can we use JUnit to test java batch jobs? Since Junit runs locally and java batch jobs run on the server, i am not sure how to start a job (i tried using using the JobOperator class) from JUnit test cases.
If JUnit is not the right tool, how can we unit test java batch code.
I am using using IBM's implementation of JSR 352 running on WAS Liberty
JUnit is first of all an automation and test monitor framework. Meaning: you can use it to drive all kinds of #Test methods.
From an conceptual point, the definition of unit tests is pretty vague; if you follow wikipedia, "everything you do to test something" can be seen as unit test. Following that perspective, of course, you can "unit test" batch code that runs on a batch framework.
But: most people think that "true", "helpful" unit tests do not require the presence of any external thing. Such tests can be run "locally" at build time. No need for servers, file systems, networking, ...
Keeping that in mind, I think there are two things you can work with:
You can use JUnit to drive "integration" or "functional tests". Meaning: you can define test suites that do the "full thing" - define batches, have them processed to check for expected results in the end. As said, that would be integration tests that make sure the end-to-end flow works as expected.
You look into"normal" JUnit unit-testing. Meaning: you focus on those aspects in your code that are "un-related" to the batch framework (in other words: look out for POJOs) and unit-test those. Locally; maybe with mocking frameworks; without relying on a real batch service running your code.
Building on the answer from #GhostCat, it seems you're asking how to drive the full job (his bullet 1.) in your tests. (Of course unit testing the reader/processor/writer components individually can also be useful.)
Your basic options are:
Use Arquillian (see here for a link on getting started with Arquillian and Liberty) to run your tests in the server but to let Arquillian handle the tasks of deploying the app to the server and collecting the results.
Write your own servlet harness driving your job through the JobOperator interface. See the answer by #aguibert to this question for a starting point. Note you'll probably want to write your own simple routine polling the JobExecution for one of the "finished" states (COMPLETED, FAILED, or STOPPED) unless your jobs have some other means of making the submitter aware.
Another technique to keep in mind is the startup bean. You can run your jobs simply by starting the server with a startup bean like:
#Startup
#Singleton
public class StartupBean {
JobOperator jobOp = BatchRuntime.getJobOperator();
// Drive job(s) on startup.
jobOp.start(...);
This can be useful if you have a way to check the job results separate from using the JobOperator interface (for which you need to be in the server). Your tests can simply poll and check for the job results. You don't even have to open an HTTP port, and the server startup overhead is only a few seconds.
I want to add some hints to my build, to run certain tests "first" without re-running them later.
Simply add Class names to a "priority" string in an input parameter to my test task, or
Have JUnit's testers smart enough to remember/persist failing test class names, so that the next time around the builder runs those first.
What is the most idiomatic way of doing this in Ant?
The following tools might help you to achieve the desired JUnit test execution order, but they depend on Eclipse usage:
Continuous Testing for Eclipse (CT-Eclipse)
JUnit Max
infinitest
I have not used any of those tools, and I have no Ant-only solution.
You might consider these related posts:
Run JUnit automatically when building Eclipse project
Starting unit tests automatically after saving a file