I feel dumb for even having to ask this, but I can't find an answer anywhere. I'm trying to write simple unit tests that test static methods from my Android app and I've already added
// Required -- JUnit 4 framework
testCompile 'junit:junit:4.12'
testCompile "org.mockito:mockito-core:1.9.5"
To my app build.gradle file, but org.junit.test annotations or anything related to Junit4 will NOT resolve. There is no "Unit Test" build variant either.
Can anybody assist me? Thanks.
looks like you have not download dependencies:
try run "gradle build"
or sync gradle project if your IDE has this option
Related
I'am a beginner in AndroidStudio. My first hello world app is stucked in gradle resolving dependencies (app:_debugAndroidTestApk)... it tooks a lot of time doing that so I want to know what is doing.
Also I found in build.gradle that there are two lines I do not know what they are for:
androidTestCompile ...
testCompile ...
Can someone explain in a very basic way what this is all about?
testCompile is the configuration for unit tests, which test data and behavior (located in src/test)
androidTestCompile is used to run tests on your API and any instrumentation tests (located in src/androidTest). These tests run on a physical device or emulator.
This error has been faced a lot before and asked here. According to the answers, i had to put my instrumentation tests under androidTest folder. So after that, in my case, am still unable to import the AndroidJunit4 class and the pop-up suggestion dialog has now a new option : Setup JDK wich i am surprised with. Anyway i have followed the option and chosen the proper JDK but the problem is still there and the dialog still suggests the same option.
Does anyone know what is the problem here ?
EDIT : My gradle dependencies:
dependencies {
compile fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar'])
compile 'com.android.support:appcompat-v7:23.4.0'
compile 'com.android.support:support-annotations:23.4.0'
compile 'com.android.support:design:23.4.0'
compile 'com.parse.bolts:bolts-tasks:1.3.0'
compile 'com.parse:parse-android:1.13.1'
androidTestCompile 'junit:junit:4.12'
androidTestCompile 'com.android.support:support-annotations:23.4.0'
androidTestCompile 'com.android.support.test:runner:0.5'
androidTestCompile 'com.android.support.test:rules:0.5'
androidTestCompile('com.android.support.test.espresso:espresso-core:2.2.2', {
exclude group: 'com.android.support', module: 'support-annotations'
})
}
I was banging my head against the wall and/or any object i see in front of me in order to make my SQLite function unit tested. No matter what I do, how strictly follow the suggestions provided my many wise people all over the internet did not work.
I then had to go to preschool and start over to realize my stupid mistake. I learned that AndroidJUnit4 can only be used with Instrumentation Test and JUnit must be used for local tests. That being said, the folder must be src/androidTest/java. I had my test class directly under androidTest folder, hence I had to face that nasty error. However, the moment I moved it under src/androidTest/java everything went very clear like "I can see clearly now the rain is gone".
Take a look at this article which says...
Run Instrumented Unit Tests To run your instrumented tests, follow
these steps:
Be sure your project is synchronized with Gradle by clicking Sync
Project in the toolbar. Run your test in one of the following ways:
To run a single test, open the Project window, and then right-click a
test and click Run . To test all methods in a class, right-click a
class or method in the test file and click Run . To run all tests in a
directory, right-click on the directory and select Run tests . The
Android Plugin for Gradle compiles the instrumented test code located
in the default directory (src/androidTest/java/), builds a test APK
and production APK, installs both APKs on the connected device or
emulator, and runs the tests. Android Studio then displays the results
of the instrumented test execution in the Run window.
Therefore folks, for instrumentation test the folder must be (do not forget the case)
src/androidTest/java
and for local tests the folder must be
src/test/java
You can then have your package folder(s) to match your app package
Hope, this helps for the community!
I want to setup my project for unit testing.
I tried to follow the instructions on Android's page:
// Unit testing dependencies
testCompile 'junit:junit:4.12'
// Set this dependency if you want to use Mockito
testCompile 'org.mockito:mockito-core:1.10.19'
// Set this dependency if you want to use Hamcrest matching
androidTestCompile 'org.hamcrest:hamcrest-library:1.1'
However, when doing that and creating a test, I get:
"Cannot resolve symbol 'junit'"
"Cannot resolve symbol 'mockito'"
In Vogel's tutorial, a lot more dependencies are required, and I want the bare minimum.
Also, using Vogel's tutorial, I get:
Warning:Conflict with dependency 'com.android.support:support-annotations'. Resolved versions for app (22.2.1) and test app (22.2.0) differ.
So my question is: How can I get the dependencies from Android's page to work?
The support-annotations issue is a known one. You can find the info in their issue tracker. To workaround it, in the main (app, not module) build.gradle file, section allprojects add
configurations.all {
resolutionStrategy.force 'com.android.support:support-annotations:22.2.0'
}
(see answer #11 in the same link).
About the extra dependencies, you are going to need dexmaker and dexmaker-mockito for using mockito for your tests in devices/emulator, as they run on a Dalvik VM that expects .dex files, while mockito generates .class files. Unit testing as in the newest unit testing added to Android Studio, runs in your local JVM so it should probably run without dexmaker, but I cannot confirm this as of yet.
Apologies for what may seem an idiotic post.
How do you run Mockito on the newest version of Android Studio SDK?
and can you run multiple tests using Mockito using the Android Studio platform?
I've used Mockito on Eclipse and ran as much as 6 tests in the same window. But I'm trying to figure out how to do this on the Android Studio platform and I cannot find any website or tutorial with an answer.
Android Studio 1.1 now has built-in support for unit testing. From Unit testing support - Android Tools Project Site:
Unit tests run on a local JVM on your development machine. Our gradle plugin will compile source code found in src/test/java and execute it using the usual Gradle testing mechanisms. At runtime, tests will be executed against a modified version of android.jar where all final modifiers have been stripped off. This lets you use popular mocking libraries, like Mockito.
You will have to specify your testing dependencies in the build.gradle file of your android module. For example:
dependencies {
testCompile 'junit:junit:4.12'
testCompile "org.mockito:mockito-core:1.9.5"
}
The page also contains a step-by-step guide for setting up Android Studio for unit testing, including creating a separate directory for unit tests:
Create a directory for your testing source code, i.e. src/test/java. You can do this from the command line or using the Project view in the Project tool window. The new directory should be highlighted in green at this point. Note: names of the test source directories are determined by the gradle plugin based on a convention.
I'm currently working on a project using junit 4.12 and Mockito 2.0.5 beta for unit testing in Android Studio 1.1, and haven't had any issues:
dependencies {
// ...
testCompile 'junit:junit:4.12'
testCompile "org.mockito:mockito-core:2.0.5-beta"
}
As far as running multiple tests at the same time, do you mean test cases? Test classes? Test suites? Please clarify, and I'll update my answer, if needed.
Open your app/build.gradle file in your application and add mockito to the dependencies, if dependencies isn't there you can go ahead and create it.
dependencies {
compile fileTree(dir: 'libs', include: ['*.jar'])
androidTestCompile 'org.mockito:mockito-core:1.10.8'
androidTestCompile 'com.google.dexmaker:dexmaker-mockito:1.1'
}
Then in your unit tests, just create a mock object as you normally would:
http://site.mockito.org/#how
Unit tests should be under the app/src/androidTest/ folder.
I can verify that the accepted answer is correct however just to further to the answer, there will be an androidTest folder alongside your main folder. Normally you would use the androidTest folder for instrumentation tests. Just make sure that under the build variants panel, the Test Artifact: is selected to be "Unit Tests" otherwise the testCompile in build.gradle will not work. It took me a while to figure this part of out.
Hope it helps.
I have been struggling with unit-test-android problem for quite a long time. I have seen this, this and that, finally I found the gradle-android-test-plugin and even got it working. I can now run the tests with gradlew test command.
But, writing those tests in IDE (Android Studio or IntelliJ 13) is far from comfortable, because it does not see the junit & Robolectric dependencies added with testCompile dependency.
Is there any way to add these dependencies to the IDE classpath but still avoid to package them in the production app (thus, AFAIU compile dependency cannot be used)?
I had the same problem with IntelliJ 14.1.3 today. The solution was to run the steps outlined here. Basically:
Add JUnit and other dependencies via testCompile 'junit:junit:4.+', etz
Put test sources in src/test/java/...
To make the IDE find the test-dependencies (gradle will find them fine), open the "Build Variants"-view and set "Test Artifact" to "Unit Test". In "Project Structure", the testing dependencies should show up in your module with the "Test"-scope
The commandline to run a test is testXxx, where Xxx is the build-type (debug/release/etz).
The important step here is the one in the "Build Variants" view. After you change it to "Unit Test", it will index and your libraries and full auto-completion are available.
For my Android test dependencies, I use instrumentTestCompile instead of testCompile. This works for me when running my tests in Android Studio. Hope this helps.
You can use the built-in idea plugin. That should set up test dependencies for you. You'll need to import the plugin:
apply plugin: 'idea'
Then run gradle idea, to generate module file (*.iml) and re-load your project. Note you'll have to be using non-directory based idea configuration for this to work.
In IntelliJ IDEA you need to configure couple things in your build.gradle
// add idea plugin
apply plugin: 'idea'
// make sure `configurations.testCompile` is added to idea.module
idea {
module {
scopes.TEST.plus += [ configurations.testCompile ]
}
}
For more info see:
http://www.gradle.org/docs/current/dsl/org.gradle.plugins.ide.idea.model.IdeaModule.html
Any dependency included with testCompile will be automatically imported into IDEA.