views:

83

answers:

5

I've been running my Grails unit tests by typing grails test-app :unit, which runs all unit tests. Is there a way to specify a single test?

Edit: So far, everyone is basically saying the same thing, but when I do that, no tests are run. Any more thoughts?

Conclusion: OK, I was using the name of the test class, rather than the name of the class being tested. Once I tried Foo instead of FooTests it worked perfectly.

+2  A: 

yes there is

grails test-app -unit YourController.testSomething

where YourController is your controller and testSomething is the test method.

You should see something like

Tests PASSED - view reports in

hvgotcodes
Hmm . . . not working for me. It tries to run the tests, but says passed, not finding it.
FarmBoy
@farmboy edited my answer...
hvgotcodes
+1  A: 
grails test-app -unit com.package.YourController.testSomething

you need to include the package name when you run the test

Aaron Saunders
I guessed that, still didn't work. Does it make a difference if it is a service class, and not generated, like a controller?
FarmBoy
+1  A: 

Given a test class foo.BarTests you can run just the tests in that class using the following command:

grails test-app :unit foo.Bar

Or run a single test method within that class using:

grails test-app :unit foo.Bar.testMethod

Note that you do not include the word "Tests" when specifying the name of test class.

John Wagenleitner
+1  A: 

What version are you on? I believe this feature was introduced in 1.2 release.

http://www.grails.org/1.2+Release+Notes

Deepak Mittal
I'm on version 1.3.1
FarmBoy
+3  A: 

Possibilities of things that might be wrong with your setup:

  • Your command order is incorrect. What works for me is:

    grails test-app -unit Foo (where my test class is FooTests.groovy)

  • You aren't explicitly importing grails.test.GrailsUnitTestCase.

    I had some problems with it recognizing my tests when I didn't import this. When I was extending GroovyTestCase, things seemed to work normally.

Working Example

Here's a sample set of tests that work for me. Perhaps you can spot some differences between them and your tests?

Note: These are all run with the testing plugin installed

test/unit/FooTests.groovy

import grails.test.GrailsUnitTestCase
class FooTest extends GrailsUnitTestCase {
    void testFoo() {
        assert true
    }

    void testBar() {
        assert true
    }
}

test/unit/BarTests.groovy

import grails.test.GrailsUnitTestCase
class BarTest extends GrailsUnitTestCase {
    void testFoo() {
        assert true
    }

    void testBar() {
        assert true
    }
}

test/unit/my/pkg/BazTests.groovy

package my.pkg

import grails.test.GrailsUnitTestCase

class BazTest extends GrailsUnitTestCase {
    void testFoo() {
        assert true
    }

    void testBar() {
        assert true
    }
}

command: all unit tests

$ grails test-app -unit
...

Starting unit test phase ...

-------------------------------------------------------
Running 6 unit tests...
Running test my.pkg.BazTest...PASSED
Running test FooTest...PASSED
Running test BarTest...PASSED
Tests Completed in 847ms ...
-------------------------------------------------------
Tests passed: 6
Tests failed: 0
-------------------------------------------------------

...
Tests PASSED - view reports in target/test-reports

command: Foo unit tests

$ grails test-app -unit Foo
...

Starting unit test phase ...

-------------------------------------------------------
Running 1 unit test...
Running test FooTest...PASSED
Tests Completed in 815ms ...
-------------------------------------------------------
Tests passed: 2
Tests failed: 0
-------------------------------------------------------

...
Tests PASSED - view reports in target/test-reports

command: my.pkg.Baz unit tests

$ grails test-app -unit my.pkg.Baz
...

Starting unit test phase ...

-------------------------------------------------------
Running 2 unit tests...
Running test my.pkg.BazTest...PASSED
Tests Completed in 842ms ...
-------------------------------------------------------
Tests passed: 2
Tests failed: 0
-------------------------------------------------------

...
Tests PASSED - view reports in target/test-reports

I tried these in Grails 1.2.3 and Grails 1.3.4, both behaved the same.

Rob Hruska