kyua report-junit —
Generates a JUnit report with the results of a
test suite run
kyua report-junit |
[--output
path]
[--results-file
file] |
The
kyua report-junit command provides a simple
mechanism to generate JUnit reports of the execution of a test suite. The
command processes a results file and then generates a single XML file that
complies with the JUnit XSchema.
The JUnit output is static and self-contained, so it can easily be plugged into
any continuous integration system, like Jenkins.
The following subcommand options are recognized:
-
--output
directory
- Specifies the file into which to store the JUnit
report.
-
--results-file
path, -s
path
- Specifies the results file to operate on. Defaults to
‘LATEST’, which causes kyua
report-junit to automatically load the latest results file from the
current test suite.
The following values are accepted:
- ‘LATEST’
- Requests the load of the latest results file available
for the test suite rooted at the current directory.
- Directory
- Requests the load of the latest results file available
for the test suite rooted at the given directory.
- Test suite name
- Requests the load of the latest results file available
for the given test suite.
- Results identifier
- Requests the load of a specific results file.
- Explicit file name (aka
everything else)
- Load the specified results file.
See Results files for
more details.
Because of limitations in the JUnit XML schema, not all the data collected by
Kyua can be properly represented in JUnit reports. However, because test data
are extremely useful for debugging purposes, the
kyua
report-junit command shovels these data into the JUnit output. In
particular:
- The test case metadata values are prepended to the test
case's standard error output.
- Test cases that report expected failures as their
results are recorded as passed. The fact that they failed as expected is
recorded in the test case's standard error output along with the
corresponding reason.
Results files contain, as their name implies, the results of the execution of a
test suite. Each test suite executed by
kyua-test(1) generates a new results file, and
such results files can be loaded later on by inspection commands such as
kyua-report(1) to analyze their contents.
Results files support identifier-based lookups and also path name lookups. The
differences between the two are described below.
The default naming scheme for the results files provides simple support for
identifier-based lookups and historical recording of test suite runs. Each
results file is given an identifier derived from the test suite that generated
it and the time the test suite was run. Kyua can later look up results files
by these fields.
The identifier follows this pattern:
<test_suite>.<YYYYMMDD>-<HHMMSS>-<uuuuuu>
where ‘test_suite’ is the path to the root of the test suite that
was run with all slashes replaced by underscores and
‘YYYYMMDD-HHMMSS-uuuuuu’ is a timestamp with microsecond
resolution.
When using the default naming scheme, results files are stored in the
~/.kyua/store/ subdirectory and each file holds a
name of the form:
~/.kyua/store/results.<identifier>.db
Results files are simple SQLite databases with the schema described in the
/usr/share/kyua/store/schema_v?.sql files. For
details on the schema, please refer to the heavily commented SQL file.
The
kyua report-junit command always returns 0.
Additional exit codes may be returned as described in
kyua(1).
If one runs the following command twice in a row:
kyua test -k /usr/tests/Kyuafile
the two executions will generate two different files with names like:
~/.kyua/store/results.usr_tests.20140731-150500-196784.db
~/.kyua/store/results.usr_tests.20140731-151730-997451.db
Taking advantage of the default naming scheme, the following commands would all
generate a report for the results of the
latest
execution of the test suite:
cd /usr/tests && kyua report-junit
cd /usr/tests && kyua report-junit --results-file=LATEST
kyua report-junit --results-file=/usr/tests
kyua report-junit --results-file=usr_tests
kyua report-junit --results-file=usr_tests.20140731-151730-997451
But it is also possible to explicitly load data for older runs or from
explicitly-named files:
kyua report-junit \
--results-file=usr_tests.20140731-150500-196784
kyua report-junit \
--results-file=~/.kyua/store/results.usr_tests.20140731-150500-196784.db
kyua(1),
kyua-report(1),
kyua-report-html(1)