ant and junit 5 – outputting test duration and failure to the log

In JUnit 5, you use the junitlauncher Ant task rather than the junit Ant task. Unfortunately, this isn’t a drop in replacement. In addition to needing a workaround to set system properties, you also need a workaround to write the test results to the console log.

JUnit 4

With JUnit 4 and Ant, you got output that looked list this for each test run. In the console. Real time while the build was running. This was really useful.

[junit] Running com.javaranch.jforum.MissingHeadTagTest
[junit] Tests run: 1, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0, Time elapsed: 1.685 sec

The problem

JUnit 5 itself provides a number of built in options for this. However, Ant integration renders this “not very useful” for a few reasons.

    1. I want to use the legacy listeners. For example:
      <listener type="legacy-xml" sendSysOut="true" sendSysErr="true" />
      <listener type="legacy-plain"sendSysOut="true"sendSysErr="true"/>
      
      

      However, if I enabled sendSysOut and sendSysErr to them, all the listeners present redirect away from System.out. This means if I try to use the built it LoggingListener, it also redirects to the file and I don’t see it in the console. This means, I have to chose between the legacy listeners and seeing real time data.

    2. Ant seems to pass a fileset as individual tests. This means that running this code, prints a summary for each test rather than the whole thing at the end.
      <junitlauncher haltOnFailure="true" printsummary="true">
           <classpath refid="test.classpath" />
           <testclasses outputdir="build/test-report">
      	<fileset dir="build/test">
      	  <include name="**/*Tests.class" />
              </fileset>
      </junitlauncher>
      

      It looks like this. The summary tells me about each run, but not with the test names so not useful anyway.

      [junitlauncher] Test run finished after 117 ms
      [junitlauncher] [         3 containers found      ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 containers skipped    ]
      [junitlauncher] [         3 containers started    ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 containers aborted    ]
      [junitlauncher] [         3 containers successful ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 containers failed     ]
      [junitlauncher] [        15 tests found           ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 tests skipped         ]
      [junitlauncher] [        15 tests started         ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 tests aborted         ]
      [junitlauncher] [        15 tests successful      ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 tests failed          ]
      [junitlauncher] Test run finished after 14 ms
      [junitlauncher] [         2 containers found      ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 containers skipped    ]
      [junitlauncher] [         2 containers started    ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 containers aborted    ]
      [junitlauncher] [         2 containers successful ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 containers failed     ]
      [junitlauncher] [        10 tests found           ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 tests skipped         ]
      [junitlauncher] [        10 tests started         ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 tests aborted         ]
      [junitlauncher] [        10 tests successful      ]
      [junitlauncher] [         0 tests failed          ]
    3. If I use JUnit Launcher’s fail on error property, it fails on the first test rather than telling me about all of them. (I don’t use this feature anyway.)
    4. Custom extensions also have their system out/err redirected to the legacy listeners.

The solution

This feels like a hacky workaround. But I only have one project that uses Ant so I don’t have to worry about duplicate code. The legacy listeners are useful so I don’t want to get rid of them.

I wrote a custom listener that stores the results in memory for each test and writes it to disk after each test class runs. That way it gets all the data, not just the last one. And then Ant writes it out.

<target name="test.junit.launcher" depends="compile">
		<junitlauncher haltOnFailure="false" printsummary="false">
			<classpath refid="test.classpath" />
			<testclasses outputdir="build/test-report">
				<fileset dir="build/test">
					<include name="**/*Tests.class" />
				</fileset>
				<listener type="legacy-xml" sendSysOut="true" sendSysErr="true" />
				<listener type="legacy-plain" sendSysOut="true" sendSysErr="true" />
				<listener classname="com.example.project.CodeRanchListener" />
			</testclasses>
		</junitlauncher>
		<loadfile property="summary" srcFile="build/status-as-tests-run.txt" />
		        <echo>${summary}</echo>
	</target>

And the listener

package com.example.project;

import java.io.*;
import java.time.*;

import org.junit.platform.engine.*;
import org.junit.platform.engine.TestDescriptor.*;
import org.junit.platform.engine.TestExecutionResult.*;
import org.junit.platform.launcher.*;

public class MyListener implements TestExecutionListener {
	
	private StringWriter inMemoryWriter = new StringWriter();

	private int numSkippedInCurrentClass;
	private int numAbortedInCurrentClass;
	private int numSucceededInCurrentClass;
	private int numFailedInCurrentClass;
	private Instant startCurrentClass;

	private void resetCountsForNewClass() {
		numSkippedInCurrentClass = 0;
		numAbortedInCurrentClass = 0;
		numSucceededInCurrentClass = 0;
		numFailedInCurrentClass = 0;
		startCurrentClass = Instant.now();
	}

	@Override
	public void executionStarted(TestIdentifier testIdentifier) {
		if ("[engine:junit-jupiter]".equals(testIdentifier.getParentId().orElse(""))) {
			println("Ran " + testIdentifier.getLegacyReportingName());
			resetCountsForNewClass();
		}
	}

	@Override
	public void executionSkipped(TestIdentifier testIdentifier, String reason) {
		numSkippedInCurrentClass++;
	}

	@Override
	public void executionFinished(TestIdentifier testIdentifier, TestExecutionResult testExecutionResult) {
		if ("[engine:junit-jupiter]".equals(testIdentifier.getParentId().orElse(""))) {
			int totalTestsInClass = numSucceededInCurrentClass + numAbortedInCurrentClass
					+ numFailedInCurrentClass + numSkippedInCurrentClass;
			Duration duration = Duration.between(startCurrentClass, Instant.now());
			double numSeconds = duration.getNano() / (double) 1_000_000_000;
			String output = String.format("Tests run: %d, Failures: %d, Aborted: %d, Skipped: %d, Time elapsed: %f sec",
					totalTestsInClass, numFailedInCurrentClass, numAbortedInCurrentClass,
					numSkippedInCurrentClass, numSeconds);
			println(output);

		}
		// don't count containers since looking for legacy JUnit 4 counting style
		if (testIdentifier.getType() == Type.TEST) {
			if (testExecutionResult.getStatus() == Status.SUCCESSFUL) {
				numSucceededInCurrentClass++;
			} else if (testExecutionResult.getStatus() == Status.ABORTED) {
				println("  ABORTED: " + testIdentifier.getDisplayName());
				numAbortedInCurrentClass++;
			} else if (testExecutionResult.getStatus() == Status.FAILED) {
				println("  FAILED: " + testIdentifier.getDisplayName());
				numFailedInCurrentClass++;
			}
		}
	}
	
	private void println(String str) {
		inMemoryWriter.write(str + "\n");
	}
	
	/*
	 * Append to file on disk since listener can't write to System.out (becuase legacy listeners enabled)
	 */
	private void flushToDisk() {
		try (FileWriter writer = new FileWriter("build/status-as-tests-run.txt", true)) {
			writer.write(inMemoryWriter.toString());
		} catch (IOException e) {
			throw new UncheckedIOException(e);
		}
	}

	@Override
	public void testPlanExecutionFinished(TestPlan testPlan) {
		flushToDisk();
	}
}

 

another agile game virtual/remote team style – circle connections

Last year, I wrote about Virtual/remote friendly agile games. Yesterday at the NYC Scrum user group, we played an agile game about circle connections. The game was:

  1. Stand in a circle with the people at your table.
  2. Everyone picks two people (but don’t say who they are)
  3. Keep moving until everyone is equidistant from their two partners.

The idea is to show how chaos lessens and equilibrium is achieved. Ok.  Physical movement. Can we make that virtual? Actually yes!

Using a tool like togetherjs’s drawing tool, you can see everyone’s cursor. So all team members can move around the cursor to meet the equidistant requirement.

Not just any collaborative editing tool will do. It needs to be one like the drawing tool which displays all the mouse cursors!

We also played a game where we built towers with newspaper. That one I don’t think I can make remote team friendly!

ant and junit5 – simulating sysproperty

In JUnit 5, you use the junitlauncher Ant task rather than the junit Ant task. Unfortunately, this isn’t a drop in replacement. For example, junitlauncher doesn’t offer the option to fork and run the JUnit tests. As a result, it also doesn’t have the nested sysproperty tag so you can pass system properties. This is a problem.

For the CodeRanch, we set a system property for the default file encoding. Since developers are around the world, we can’t assume everyone “just has” the encoding set.

Disclaimer

Since JUnit 5 functionality for Ant was introduced this year, I’m hoping what I did in this post is a short term workaround.

Option 1 – pass to Ant

You can pass the the properties to Ant itself as described on Stack Overflow. For example:

__JAVA_OPTIONS=-Dfile.encoding=ISO8859_1

pros:

  • simple

cons:

  • subpar – all the developers need to remember to do this. The reason we had it in Ant in the first place is so folks wouldn’t need to remember
  • for some use cases, the desired system properties could be derived and not know when calling Ant

Option 2- Nashorn Code

Since JUnit 5 is being run in the same process as Ant itself, you need to set the system property in memory. Luckily, Ant allows you to run scripting in various languages. I chose Nashorn because it is built into Java. (There are other variants of this; see below)

<script language="javascript">
  <![CDATA[
    var imports = new JavaImporter(java.lang.System);
    imports.System.setProperty('file.encoding', 'ISO8859_1')
  ]]>
</script>

Pros

  • Short and simple
  • Nashorn is deprecated for removal starting Java 11. This means at some point, it can be removed. (I’m hopeful that the Ant task itself will support system properties by then.

Cons

  • Requires Java 8 or higher
  • The System property is set for the remainder of the build (you could write another code block to null it out after the test if this is a problem)

Variants of option 2

If you are running Ant with a version of Java below Java 8, you could use this technique, but use Rhino instead. I didn’t test this, but I think the code is


importClass(java.lang.System);
System.setProperty('file.encoding', 'ISO8859_1')


JUnit 5 itself uses Java 8 so nobody would be in the situation of pre-Java 8 and trying to use this blog post.

If you are running Ant with a version of Java where Nashorn has been removed, you could use Groovy or Jython as the embedded language. The code is simpler. I didn’t chose this because it requires adding another jar to the Ant directory. I prefer to minimize these set up extensions. Especially for a feature like this which is likely to be temporary.

System.setProperty('file.encoding', 'ISO8859_1')