Basically, it consists of three parts:
- preparing set of tests
- running tests
- making reports
Preparing set of tests means that your framework should collect all tests which you want to run. You can specify these tests (usually classes with test methods which satisfy some convention or marked with certain annotation or implement marker interface) in a separate file (java or xml), or you can find them dynamically (making a search over classpath).
If you choose the dynamic searching, then you'll probably have to use some libraries which can analyse java bytecode. Otherwise you'll have to load all the classes in your classpath, and this a) requires much time and b) will execute all static initializers of loaded classes and can cause unexpected tests results.
Running tests can vary significantly depending on features of your framework. The simplest way is just calling test methods inside a try/catch block, analysing and saving results (you have to analyze 2 situations - when the assertion exception was thrown and when it was not thrown).
Making reports is all about printing analyzed results in xml/html/wiki or whatever else format.