I've got a couple of AndroidTestCase subclasses in separate packages of my project:
However, whenever I run Android Tests configuration from Android Studio, I see that my regular app is starting as well. I see that the onCreate method is fired up inside my Application class (which is really bad since I am loading some additional resources there).
Why is Android Studio/gradle running my app as well? Can I programatically detect if I am inside test or regular configuration? Can I stop my regular app from being booted before running tests?
In addition, when I am running tests in debug mode it doesn't stop on breakpoints placed inside the application's onCreate method. Why is this happening?
Edit:
Body of test class doesn't really matter, it can be something like:
public class SimpleTest extends AndroidTestCase {
public void testSample()
{
assertEquals(true, false);
}
}
Executing only this simple test fires up onCreate method inside application class.
Gradle console prints out:
Executing tasks: [:app:assembleDebug, :app:assembleDebugTest]
I guess that first task creates instance of my Application class - is it expected behavior?
Why is Android Studio/gradle running my app as well?
Can I stop my regular app from being booted before running tests?
AndroidTestCase is extension of JUnit TestCase which is aware of your android application. In case you don't need to test your android application and want to test plain java only you should use JUnit framework. Create regular JUnit tests, do not use android classes there and run JUnit test configuration like this:
You should treat AndroidTestCase as instrumentation tests which will build android app and run that tests on it. This is usefull with combination of Espresso and Robotium. Both are working on top of base android test classes and both will build and run your application before testing it. Real device or emulator is needed.
Use plain JUnit tests or Robolectric to test java on your desktop JVM.
Can I programatically detect if I am inside test or regular configuration?
You can use power of gradle to provide such info with autogenerated BuildConfig file.
At your build.gradle
android {
defaultConfig {
testPackageName "com.foo.test"
}
}
At your code:
BuildConfig.PACKAGE_NAME.equals("com.foo.test")
The AndroidTestCase is an unit test that unfortunately runs on the device (either virtual or real).
I think what you want to have is a UnitTestFramework that runs in the JVM (local on your machine). The TestFramework Robolectric can do this.
I have started a gitHub project to show how to setup the gradle test file and the project structure if you want to have UnitTests and InstrumentationTests side by side. If you want to look its AndroidGradleTests
Related
Hi I am trying to run a basic JUnit test in Android Studio. When I click run it is terminated every time before getting results. I never get pass or fail and the system does not try any other test cases.
Here are the pictures. I would like to know why it isn't working so I can keep practicing.
You can try a couple of things
Decorate your test class with #SmallTest
// #RunWith is required only if you use a mix of JUnit3 and JUnit4.
#RunWith(AndroidJUnit4::class)
#SmallTest
class ExampleInstrumentedTest {
}
Try to run your test from the command line:
./gradlew connectedAndroidTest
I have an app to which I want to force the locale whenever the app is opened. So I will use Locale.setDefault(myCountryLocale). in the application's onCreate() method
Unit Tests don't start that class, so I want to be able to set the same locale whenever tests are started. Either by an extension or gradle script to setup the locale so that tests don't fail if whoever runs them uses another locale.
I know this is kinda old post but I faced this problem.
You can extends RunListener class and override the testRunStarted this code block will run only once before all your tests.
This listener will be added to you test manifest like this
<instrumentation
android:name="androidx.test.runner.AndroidJUnitRunner"
android:targetPackage="YOUR_APP_PACKAGE">
<meta-data
android:name="listener"
android:value="YOUR_LISTENER_PACKAGE" />
</instrumentation>
I have written multiple test methods in a single android instrumented test class, when I am trying to run a single test method it will run all methods exists in that class.
I want to run only one.
Earlier I was able to run all, but somehow configuration settings have been changed
class HistoryTest{
#Test
fun openHistoryTest{
}
#Test
fun closeHistoryTest{
}
#Test
fun editHistoryTest{
}
}
I want to run a specific single test method say openHistoryTest.
Currently getting an error - the command line is too long shorten the command line for test "testname"
I updated Android Studio to canary and can run the whole class or a single method as instrumental test. Currently using AS 3.6 Canary 12.
Still doesn't work on Android Studio 3.5. I can't run each method as an
instrumental test, only the whole class.
I'm trying to come to terms with the new unit test feature of Android Studio.
I've followed the instructions on http://tools.android.com/tech-docs/unit-testing-support. The description there explicitly mentions the 'Method ... not mocked' error and suggests to put the following into the build.gradle:
android {
// ...
testOptions {
unitTests.returnDefaultValues = true
}
}
This works in so far as the tests run when started from the command line with
gradlew test --continue
but not when I run the test class from Android Studio with rightclick -> run. This way, I get the same error again:
java.lang.RuntimeException: Method setUp in android.test.AndroidTestCase not mocked. See https://sites.google.com/a/android.com/tools/tech-docs/unit-testing-support for details.
at android.test.AndroidTestCase.setUp(AndroidTestCase.java)
at org.junit.internal.runners.JUnit38ClassRunner.run(JUnit38ClassRunner.java:86)
at org.junit.runner.JUnitCore.run(JUnitCore.java:137)
at com.intellij.junit4.JUnit4IdeaTestRunner.startRunnerWithArgs(JUnit4IdeaTestRunner.java:74)
at com.intellij.rt.execution.junit.JUnitStarter.prepareStreamsAndStart(JUnitStarter.java:211)
at com.intellij.rt.execution.junit.JUnitStarter.main(JUnitStarter.java:67)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke0(Native Method)
at sun.reflect.NativeMethodAccessorImpl.invoke(NativeMethodAccessorImpl.java:57)
at com.intellij.rt.execution.application.AppMain.main(AppMain.java:134)
Any ideas on how to solve this?
EDIT: The content of the test class doesn't really matter because the setUp of the test fails, I tried with the most simple class:
public class ContactFormToolTest extends AndroidTestCase {
public void testSOmething(){
assertEquals(false, true);
}
}
Also tried overriding setUp, makes no difference.
From: https://sites.google.com/a/android.com/tools/tech-docs/unit-testing-support#TOC-Method-...-not-mocked.-
The android.jar file that is used to run unit tests does not contain
any actual code - that is provided by the Android system image on real
devices. Instead, all methods throw exceptions (by default). This is
to make sure your unit tests only test your code and do not depend on
any particular behaviour of the Android platform (that you have not
explicitly mocked e.g. using Mockito). If that proves problematic, you
can add the snippet below to your build.gradle to change this
behavior:
android {
// ...
testOptions {
unitTests.returnDefaultValues = true
}
}
The new Unit Tests feature in Android Studio fakes the entire Android SDK so that you can run fast, Java-only tests, without needing to install your application on an Android device (this is similar to Robolectric). The general idea is that you mock all the responses from the Android SDK calls.
AndroidTestCase is used to run a test with the real Android SDK.
So, your issue is that you are trying to run an AndroidTestCase that depends on the Android SDK, but your test runner is launching the Unit Tests environment, which uses a fake Android SDK instead of a real one.
You need to choose one approach. If you want a pure unit test, then you probably should use a JUnit 4 test class instead of an AndroidTestCase. More instructions here:
https://developer.android.com/training/testing/unit-testing/local-unit-tests.html#build
As of SDK version 24, AndroidTestCase is deprecated
This class was deprecated in API level 24.
Use InstrumentationRegistry instead. New tests should be written using
the Android Testing Support Library.
You are supposed to use the Espresso framework for UI testing. There is a tutorial.
I've written a unit test that simply extends TestCase and I have the following:
public class MetricParserTests extends TestCase {
#Override
protected void setUp() throws Exception {
super.setUp();
}
#Override
protected void tearDown() throws Exception {
super.tearDown();
}
public void testFailure() {
fail("This needs to fail");
}
}
When I run my tests using ant test or adb shell am instrument I get the following results:
... [exec] OK (1 tests) ...
I'd expect to see a failure on the command line.
I believe I know what the issue is. I was able to reproduce the issue and solve it. The command you use does not rebuild and re-install your test project onto a device. When you call ant test it will just execute the tests which are already installed on that device.
What you need to call is the three commands in your test project's directory:
ant debug
ant installd
ant test
Then all tests will be rebuild and re-installed and latest tests will be executed. If you don't call debug and installd, the changes you did to the tests do not get applied.
I haven't had recent experience in Android testing, but here is what I have found...
You can use normal JUnit tests if your code is totally decoupled from Android (see here
for an example). This would run on your JVM using the JUnit runner.
However, if you are trying to run these tests on an Android device (either via ant, or the command line tools) then you need to create a full android test project (See here).
To test "on device" your test cases need to extend one of the Android test classes like ActivityInstrumentationTestCase2<T>
and are run using the InstrumentationTestRunner in the Dalvik VM on the Android device.
Using an IDE or the command-line tools to create a test project should create a sample test for you to work from.
This blog post linked from the comments of the post above is a good source of information, as is the Android Testing Fundamentals doc.
The method testFailure() does not have a #Test annotation. Is that correct?