I am using NUnit to test my c# code and have so far been keeping unittests (fast running ones) and integration tests (longer running) seperate and in separate project files. I use nunit for doing both the unittests and the integration tests. I just noticed the category attribute http://www.nunit.org/index.php?p=category&r=2.2 that nunit provides so that tests can be categorized. This begs the question weather I should mix them together and simply use the category attribute to distinguish between them?
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if it is not too difficult to separate them, do so now unit tests should be run early and often (e.g. every time you change something, before check-in, after check-in), and should complete in a short time-span. integration tests should be run periodically (daily, for example) but may take significant time and resources to complete therefore it is best to keep them separate |
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I find that using separate projects for unit test and integration tests tends to create a little too many top level artifacts in the projects. Even though we're TDD and all, I still think the code being developed should be deserving at least half of the top-level of my project structure. |
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Yes I keep them together & use the category code, and I also use the checkboxes in nUnit (View->Tree->Show Checkboxes). You could also mock out your integration testing if you have oodles of time :) |
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seperate them if possible, because integration tests normally take much longer than UnitTests. Maybe your project grows and you end up with very much tests, all which take a short amount of time - except the integration tests - and you want to run your UnitTests as often as possible... |
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I don't think it really matters that much but separating them sounds like a better idea, since isolation, automation will be so easier. And category feature is nice but not that good from usability point of view. |
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The original motivation behind [Category] was to solve the problem you mention. It was also intended to create broader test suites but that is kind of what you are doing. Do be careful with [Category]. Not all test runners support it the same way the NUnit gui does (or did, I haven't upgraded in a while). In the past some runners would ignore the attribute if it was on the class itself or just ignore it all together. Most seem to work now. |
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I would keep with whatever method you're currently using. It's more of an opinion thing, and you wouldn't want to have to re-tool your whole testing method. |
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