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How to run a simple JUnit test from a Jazz build definition?


Mike Wulkan (761) | asked Jan 17 '07, 11:48 a.m.
When I generated a build definition from scratch a build.xml file was
generated that had the following template for running Junit tests...

<target name="test">

<!-- Update the build progress in Jazz by setting the
currentActivityLabel. -->
<buildResultPublisher currentActivityLabel="testing..."
buildResultUUID="${buildResultUUID}"
repositoryAddress=
"${repositoryAddress}"
userName="${userName}"
password="${password}" />

<!-- Pretend we're testing. -->
<sleep seconds="3" />

<!-- Example usage of the junitLogPublisher to publish a
JUnit log.
JUnit results published in this way are shown on the
JUnit tab
of the build result editor. -->

<junit>
<test name="AllTests" outfile=
"result">
<formatter type="xml" />
</test>
</junit>

<junitLogPublisher
filePath="result.xml"
buildResultUUID=
"${buildResultUUID}"
repositoryAddress=
"${repositoryAddress}"
userName="ADMIN"
password="ADMIN"
/>


</target>

All I did was change the name of the test to my project's JUnit test. But
when I run this I get...

test:

BUILD FAILED
C:\Documents and Settings\wulkan\Local Settings\Temp\Auction Project Team
build\build.xml:166: Could not create task or type of type: junit.

Ant could not find the task or a class this task relies upon.

This is common and has a number of causes; the usual
solutions are to read the manual pages then download and
install needed JAR files, or fix the build file:
- You have misspelt 'junit'.
Fix: check your spelling.
- The task needs an external JAR file to execute
and this is not found at the right place in the classpath.
Fix: check the documentation for dependencies.
Fix: declare the task.
- The task is an Ant optional task and the JAR file and/or libraries
implementing the functionality were not found at the time you
yourself built your installation of Ant from the Ant sources.
Fix: Look in the ANT_HOME/lib for the 'ant-' JAR corresponding to the
task and make sure it contains more than merely a
META-INF/MANIFEST.MF.
If all it contains is the manifest, then rebuild Ant with the needed
libraries present in ${ant.home}/lib/optional/ , or alternatively,
download a pre-built release version from apache.org
- The build file was written for a later version of Ant
Fix: upgrade to at least the latest release version of Ant
- The task is not an Ant core or optional task
and needs to be declared using <taskdef>.
- You are attempting to use a task defined using
<presetdef> or <macrodef> but have spelt wrong or not
defined it at the point of use

Remember that for JAR files to be visible to Ant tasks implemented
in ANT_HOME/lib, the files must be in the same directory or on the
classpath

Please neither file bug reports on this problem, nor email the
Ant mailing lists, until all of these causes have been explored,
as this is not an Ant bug.

Anyone have any idea what I am missing?

Mike Wulkan

5 answers



permanent link
James D'Anjou (2011511) | answered Jan 17 '07, 7:16 p.m.
There are many issues with running Junit tests from Ant. You can't
simply uncomment the Junit task in the example build.xml. If you were to
run a vanilla Ant script from within Eclipse you would see the same
problem. The Apache site has information on how to get it working.

See:
http://ant.apache.org/manual/OptionalTasks/junit.html for further
information.

Jim D'Anjou

wulkan@ca.ibm.com wrote:

When I generated a build definition from scratch a build.xml file was
generated that had the following template for running Junit tests...

target name="test"

!-- Update the build progress in Jazz by setting the
currentActivityLabel. --
buildResultPublisher currentActivityLabel="testing..."
buildResultUUID="${buildResultUUID}"

repositoryAddress="${repositoryAddress}"
userName="${userName}"
password="${password}" /

!-- Pretend we're testing. --
sleep seconds="3" /

!-- Example usage of the junitLogPublisher to publish a
JUnit log.
JUnit results published in this way are shown on
the JUnit tab
of the build result editor. --

junit
test name="AllTests"
outfile="result"
formatter type="xml" /
/test
/junit

junitLogPublisher
filePath="result.xml"

buildResultUUID="${buildResultUUID}"

repositoryAddress="${repositoryAddress}"
userName="ADMIN"
password="ADMIN"
/


/target

All I did was change the name of the test to my project's JUnit test.
But when I run this I get...

test:

BUILD FAILED
C:\Documents and Settings\wulkan\Local Settings\Temp\Auction Project
Team build\build.xml:166: Could not create task or type of type: junit.

Ant could not find the task or a class this task relies upon.

This is common and has a number of causes; the usual
solutions are to read the manual pages then download and
install needed JAR files, or fix the build file:
- You have misspelt 'junit'.
Fix: check your spelling.
- The task needs an external JAR file to execute
and this is not found at the right place in the classpath.
Fix: check the documentation for dependencies.
Fix: declare the task.
- The task is an Ant optional task and the JAR file and/or libraries
implementing the functionality were not found at the time you
yourself built your installation of Ant from the Ant sources.
Fix: Look in the ANT_HOME/lib for the 'ant-' JAR corresponding to the
task and make sure it contains more than merely a
META-INF/MANIFEST.MF.
If all it contains is the manifest, then rebuild Ant with the needed
libraries present in ${ant.home}/lib/optional/ , or alternatively,
download a pre-built release version from apache.org
- The build file was written for a later version of Ant
Fix: upgrade to at least the latest release version of Ant
- The task is not an Ant core or optional task
and needs to be declared using <taskdef>.
- You are attempting to use a task defined using
presetdef> or <macrodef> but have spelt wrong or not
defined it at the point of use

Remember that for JAR files to be visible to Ant tasks implemented
in ANT_HOME/lib, the files must be in the same directory or on the
classpath

Please neither file bug reports on this problem, nor email the
Ant mailing lists, until all of these causes have been explored,
as this is not an Ant bug.

Anyone have any idea what I am missing?

Mike Wulkan

permanent link
Mike Wulkan (761) | answered Jan 18 '07, 12:41 p.m.
Jim D'Anjou wrote:
There are many issues with running Junit tests from Ant. You can't
simply uncomment the Junit task in the example build.xml. If you were to
run a vanilla Ant script from within Eclipse you would see the same
problem. The Apache site has information on how to get it working.

See:
http://ant.apache.org/manual/OptionalTasks/junit.html for further
information.

Jim D'Anjou


Well I think I have managed to track down the solution.

1) First you have to copy the junit.jar from your eclipse junit plugin
into the $ANT_HOME/lib directory on the build machine. You can find the
location of the $ANT_HOME directory in the build definition properties
(see anthome.png attachment).


2) You have to add your builds working directory path to the <junit> step:

<classpath> <pathelement path="${classpath}"/>
<pathelement location="working-dir"/> </classpath>

The full <junit> step looks like:

<junit>
<classpath>
<pathelement path="${classpath}"/>
<pathelement location="working-dir"/>
</classpath>
<test name="com.ibm.sample.AllTests" outfile="result">
<formatter type="xml" />
</test>
</junit>

Mike Wulkan

permanent link
Steven Wasleski (17633) | answered Jan 18 '07, 5:22 p.m.
JAZZ DEVELOPER
Mike Wulkan wrote:

1) First you have to copy the junit.jar from your eclipse junit plugin
into the $ANT_HOME/lib directory on the build machine. You can find the
location of the $ANT_HOME directory in the build definition properties
(see anthome.png attachment).


Mike,

Did you try just bringing over the junit plugin as a whole instead? It
would seem more clean to add a plugin to the build system rather than to
perform surgery on a plugin that is already there. I would hope that
Eclipse Ant support would handle the classpath issues for that
configuration.

Just a thought,
Steve

permanent link
Mike Wulkan (761) | answered Jan 19 '07, 10:02 a.m.
Steve Wasleski wrote:
Mike Wulkan wrote:

1) First you have to copy the junit.jar from your eclipse junit plugin
into the $ANT_HOME/lib directory on the build machine. You can find
the location of the $ANT_HOME directory in the build definition
properties (see anthome.png attachment).


Mike,

Did you try just bringing over the junit plugin as a whole instead? It
would seem more clean to add a plugin to the build system rather than to
perform surgery on a plugin that is already there. I would hope that
Eclipse Ant support would handle the classpath issues for that
configuration.

Just a thought,
Steve

I didn't try that specifically, but I did try just adding a
<pathelement location="..." > statement to point to the JUnit.jar.
According to the ANT documentation that should have worked but it
didn't. The only thing that worked was actually putting the jar in the
Ant Home directory itself.

I'll try your suggestion though.

All this begs the question as to why the sample buld.xml file produced
by the build definition wizard falls so short of actually working. If
it is going to generate a template for running JUnit tests, then that
template should either work out-of-the-box, or at least have enough
instructions in the comments to tell the user what needs to be done to
get it to work.

Thanks,
Mike

permanent link
Ryan Manwiller (1.3k1) | answered Jan 22 '07, 9:02 a.m.
JAZZ DEVELOPER
The commented out junit and javac task invocations where not meant to be
"uncommented and run". The generated sample build file will be updated so
it doesn't give this impression.

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