347d91f86b
For ssot epic
180 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
180 lines
5.7 KiB
Markdown
---
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type: reference
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---
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# JUnit test reports
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> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/45318) in GitLab 11.2.
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Requires GitLab Runner 11.2 and above.
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## Overview
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It is very common that a [CI/CD pipeline](pipelines.md) contains a
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test job that will verify your code.
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If the tests fail, the pipeline fails and users get notified. The person that
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works on the merge request will have to check the job logs and see where the
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tests failed so that they can fix them.
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You can configure your job to use JUnit test reports, and GitLab will display a
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report on the merge request so that it's easier and faster to identify the
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failure without having to check the entire log.
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## Use cases
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Consider the following workflow:
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1. Your `master` branch is rock solid, your project is using GitLab CI/CD and
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your pipelines indicate that there isn't anything broken.
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1. Someone from you team submits a merge request, a test fails and the pipeline
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gets the known red icon. To investigate more, you have to go through the job
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logs to figure out the cause of the failed test, which usually contain
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thousands of lines.
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1. You configure the JUnit test reports and immediately GitLab collects and
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exposes them in the merge request. No more searching in the job logs.
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1. Your development and debugging workflow becomes easier, faster and efficient.
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## How it works
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First, GitLab Runner uploads all JUnit XML files as artifacts to GitLab. Then,
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when you visit a merge request, GitLab starts comparing the head and base branch's
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JUnit test reports, where:
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- The base branch is the target branch (usually `master`).
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- The head branch is the source branch (the latest pipeline in each merge request).
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The reports panel has a summary showing how many tests failed and how many were fixed.
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If no comparison can be done because data for the base branch is not available,
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the panel will just show the list of failed tests for head.
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There are three types of results:
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1. **Newly failed tests:** Test cases which passed on base branch and failed on head branch
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1. **Existing failures:** Test cases which failed on base branch and failed on head branch
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1. **Resolved failures:** Test cases which failed on base branch and passed on head branch
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Each entry in the panel will show the test name and its type from the list
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above. Clicking on the test name will open a modal window with details of its
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execution time and the error output.
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![Test Reports Widget](img/junit_test_report.png)
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## How to set it up
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NOTE: **Note:**
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For a list of supported languages on JUnit tests, check the
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[Wikipedia article](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JUnit#Ports).
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To enable the JUnit reports in merge requests, you need to add
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[`artifacts:reports:junit`](yaml/README.md#artifactsreportsjunit)
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in `.gitlab-ci.yml`, and specify the path(s) of the generated test reports.
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In the following examples, the job in the `test` stage runs and GitLab
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collects the JUnit test report from each job. After each job is executed, the
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XML reports are stored in GitLab as artifacts and their results are shown in the
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merge request widget.
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NOTE: **Note:**
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If you also want the ability to browse JUnit output files, include the
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[`artifacts:paths`](yaml/README.md#artifactspaths) keyword. An example of this is shown in the Ruby example below.
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### Ruby example
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Use the following job in `.gitlab-ci.yml`. This includes the `artifacts:paths` keyword to provide a link to the JUnit output file.
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```yaml
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## Use https://github.com/sj26/rspec_junit_formatter to generate a JUnit report with rspec
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ruby:
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stage: test
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script:
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- bundle install
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- rspec spec/lib/ --format RspecJunitFormatter --out rspec.xml
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artifacts:
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paths:
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- rspec.xml
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reports:
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junit: rspec.xml
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```
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### Go example
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Use the following job in `.gitlab-ci.yml`:
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```yaml
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## Use https://github.com/jstemmer/go-junit-report to generate a JUnit report with go
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golang:
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stage: test
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script:
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- go get -u github.com/jstemmer/go-junit-report
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- go test -v 2>&1 | go-junit-report > report.xml
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artifacts:
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reports:
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junit: report.xml
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```
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### Java examples
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There are a few tools that can produce JUnit reports in Java.
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#### Gradle
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In the following example, `gradle` is used to generate the test reports.
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If there are multiple test tasks defined, `gradle` will generate multiple
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directories under `build/test-results/`. In that case, you can leverage glob
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matching by defining the following path: `build/test-results/test/**/TEST-*.xml`:
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```yaml
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java:
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stage: test
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script:
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- gradle test
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artifacts:
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reports:
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junit: build/test-results/test/**/TEST-*.xml
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```
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#### Maven
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For parsing [Surefire](https://maven.apache.org/surefire/maven-surefire-plugin/)
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and [Failsafe](https://maven.apache.org/surefire/maven-failsafe-plugin/) test
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reports, use the following job in `.gitlab-ci.yml`:
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```yaml
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java:
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stage: test
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script:
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- mvn verify
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artifacts:
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reports:
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junit:
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- target/surefire-reports/TEST-*.xml
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- target/failsafe-reports/TEST-*.xml
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```
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### C/C++ example
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There are a few tools that can produce JUnit reports in C/C++.
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#### GoogleTest
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In the following example, `gtest` is used to generate the test reports.
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If there are multiple gtest executables created for different architectures (`x86`, `x64` or `arm`),
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you will be required to run each test providing a unique filename. The results
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will then be aggregated together.
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```yaml
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cpp:
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stage: test
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script:
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- gtest.exe --gtest_output="xml:report.xml"
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artifacts:
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reports:
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junit: report.xml
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```
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## Limitations
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Currently, the following tools might not work because their XML formats are unsupported in GitLab.
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|Case|Tool|Issue|
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|---|---|---|
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|`<testcase>` does not have `classname` attribute|ESlint, sass-lint|<https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab-ce/issues/50964>|
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