I took a look at the powershell script you referenced. I see two obvious reasons why tests might not run:
# Get list of folders with Test DLLs in them matching pattern *Tests\bin
$testFolders = Get-ChildItem -Recurse -Force $rootDirectory |
Where-Object { ($_.PSIsContainer -eq $true) -and (($_.FullName -like "*Tests\bin\" + $vsConfigName) -or ($_.FullName -like "*Tests\bin\x64\" + $vsConfigName)) }
If no folders match the pattern in this gci then no tests will be run.
#grab the testing DLLs from the folder which match pattern *Tests.dll
$testDlls = Get-ChildItem -Force $folder.FullName -File |
Where-Object { $_.Name -like "*Tests.dll" }
Similarly if no dlls match the pattern no test will be run.
Besides that the script should really have a try catch around it, then you can throw if you either don't find any test folders or any test dlls. I've edited the code sample you referenced to show this:
#rootDirectory is the base directory to search for Test Projects. (Most likely your solution directory)
#configName is a string name that the code coverage output files will be placed in
#filters is a list of dotCover filters to be added to the /Filters argument
#vsConfigName is the configuration folder to find the Test DLLs in
Param([string]$rootDirectory,[string]$configName,[string]$filters,[string]$vsConfigName)
$vstestconsolepath = "C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 11.0\Common7\IDE\CommonExtensions\Microsoft\TestWindow\vstest.console.exe"
$dotcoverpath = "C:\BuildAgent\tools\dotCover\dotCover.exe"
$dotcovertargetexecutable = "/TargetExecutable=" + $vstestconsolepath
$dotcoveroutput = "/Output=" + $configName + "/coverage.dcvr"
$dotcoverfilters = "/Filters=" + $filters
try
{
# Get list of folders with Test DLLs in them matching pattern *Tests\bin
$testFolders = Get-ChildItem -Recurse -Force $rootDirectory | Where-Object { ($_.PSIsContainer -eq $true) -and (($_.FullName -like "*Tests\bin\" + $vsConfigName) -or ($_.FullName -like "*Tests\bin\x64\" + $vsConfigName)) } | Select-Object
if ($testFolder -eq $null)
{
throw [Exception] "No test folders found."
}
foreach ($folder in $testFolders)
{
#look for Fakes DLLs. If we find one we can't do code coverage on this test assembly
$fakesDLLs = Get-ChildItem -Recurse -Force $folder.FullName -File | Where-Object { $_.Name -like "*Fakes.dll" } | Select-Object
#grab the testing DLLs from the folder which match pattern *Tests.dll
$testDlls = Get-ChildItem -Force $folder.FullName -File | Where-Object { $_.Name -like "*Tests.dll" } | Select-Object
foreach ($dll in $testDlls)
{
if ($fakesDLLs.length -eq 0)
{
$arr += @($dll.FullName)
}
else
{
$fakesArr += @($dll.FullName)
}
}
}
if ($arr -eq $null)
{
throw [Exception] "No test dlls found."
}
...
}
catch [Exception]
{
Write-Host($_.Exception.GetType().FullName)
Write-Host($_.Exception.Message)
Write-Host($_.Exception.StackTrace)
exit 1
}
Of course you don't necessarily need to go that far, you could just exit 1
rather than throwing with the try catch. And of course you shouldn't really throw Exception
but that's off topic.