26

Since I upgraded to VS2012 and Resharper 7, my previously working MS Tests are not running anymore.

enter image description here

The tests are run in an ASP.NET environment. I use the following Attributes:

    [TestMethod]
    [HostType("ASP.NET")]
    [AspNetDevelopmentServerHost("C:\\Projekte\\****\\Website", "/")]
    [UrlToTest("http://localhost:7924/")]

Any idea how to fix this?

6
  • I have the same issue. It was due to my website and test project are x64. I don't have solution for it. I currently use nunit as a workaround.
    – ldsenow
    Sep 14, 2012 at 1:09
  • 3
    I found out it might be Resharper's problem. I ran the tests from "Test -> Run" of VS and those tests were picked up. BTW, I changed the "Test -> Test Settings -> Default Processor Architecture" to x64. I think if you run them in the build server, it should be fine.
    – ldsenow
    Sep 14, 2012 at 1:20
  • 1
    This may help youtrack.jetbrains.com/issue/RSRP-326760
    – ldsenow
    Sep 14, 2012 at 1:31
  • 2
    I get this with nUnit and R#8 Oct 2, 2013 at 14:54
  • I am experiencing this same problem with VS2013, ReSharper 8.2, and DotCover 2.7 trying to run on against a x64 solution. None of the below worked for me. Any other solutions?
    – Cirem
    Jun 23, 2014 at 14:38

19 Answers 19

19

As odd as it is, using VS2012, using Resharper 8.0, using NUnit, I was receiving this error because of an entry in my app.config file. I added an EntityFramework connection string and this behavior started. Removing the entire connection strings section shows the test runner starts/works again. Viewing output shows the app.config is not valid - this was causing this specific behavior in the test runner - "Test wasn't run".

6
  • This was exactly it for me. I jacked up my database connection string (had changed the name). I fixed that and my tests run again. Thanks!
    – BClaydon
    Oct 24, 2013 at 22:59
  • Same here, Good Call.
    – Aaron
    Feb 7, 2014 at 1:10
  • 2
    That was it for me. Basically any error in the app config seems to cause this. Jul 29, 2014 at 14:51
  • 1
    I also had this issue with an error in machine.config. Nov 19, 2014 at 6:43
  • same here...removing app.config fixed it
    – Gluip
    Feb 21, 2015 at 10:06
6

I had the testproject set to AnyCPU and the project set explicitly to x86 when this happened. Setting the testproject to x86 solved it for me.

I'm using VS2012 R#8 and nUnit

1
  • Same with me, changed to x86 and it worked. but its disappointing that resharper is not giving correct error. Dec 26, 2014 at 5:54
4

Try running the Unit Tests using the MSTest Test Explorer. You might find more details in the output window of the root cause.

For me, it was a referenced assembly that was using a more recent version of NUnit than the one that was referenced in the test project. Using the same up-to-date version fixed the problem.

System.IO.FileLoadException: Could not load file or assembly 'nunit.framework, Version=2.6.3.13283, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=96d09a1eb7f44a77' or one of its dependencies. The located assembly's manifest definition does not match the assembly reference.

2

I'd same problem I just..

  • Changed methods access modifier from private to public.
  • Removed static keyword from methods.

That's it. It worked for me. But that is for C#.

0
2

In my case it was the NUnitTestAdapter nuget that needed to be removed.

1

Check that any references that you have in the test project are set to Copy Local True.

1

I had the same problem. Couldn't get the Visual Studio test runner to work, so I tried debugging a test instead. This threw a ConfigurationErrorsException, which didn't have much of a stack trace but contained the phrase "ClientSettingProvider". I searched my solution and found that something had added a appSetting key for "ClientSettingProvider.ServiceUri" to my app.config. I deleted this (along with an empty connectionStrings element) and rebuild everything - fixed the problem!

Double check your app.config and try deleting any empty elements or anything that looks fishy.

1

Another (silly) problem it might be; I accidentally had the project set to not build. Go to Build/"Configuration Manager", and ensure the project is set to build.

1

Using VS2010 and ReSharper 9.1 the issue was that the file LocalTestRun.testrunconfig was missing but was referenced in my .vsmdi file.

The test without VS were running properly but I always had the "Test wasn't run" error in ReSharper test UI.

So I simply restored my old LocalTestRun.testrunconfig file and everything run perfectly.

I probably could have updated my .vsmdi file to not reference the missing file... I did not test that.

The .vsmdi and LocalTestRun.testrunconfig files are managed by Visual Studio and are typically located beside you .sln.

1
  • Your answer would be more helpful if you added how to locate these files. Aug 29, 2023 at 14:37
0

On VS2012, Test Project don't work on Shared Folders like \XXXXXX\XXX I solved it copied the Test Project on local devices. Good Luck

0

I found that the settings file for the unit test may need checking as to which one is being pointed to by ReSharper. I had the same thing happening and it was down to my unit tests for the RS Harness pointing to the wrong file.

0

I had the same issue because the test class name had the characters '<' and '>' in it (also '(' and ')' caused this issue).
Removing those symbols fixed the problem.

I could use symbols in identifiers thanks to F#'s Unicode support.

0

I had the exact same issue and nothing helped.

eventually I saw that I had a mismatch in my namespaces of the unit project and the unit test project.

The namespace of my unit project is unit.project and the test project was named unit.project.tests but the default namespace of the test was the same as the unit, both was unit.project.

Once I've updated the namespaces to be different (one namespace for each project) everything worked!

0

I had a similar problem with NUnit test, which would not be executed, but R# would only mark them as "Test wasn't run".

Executing them with the native NUnit runner revealed, that the app.config file had an error (actually, 2 ConnectionString sections). Fixing this also made the tests running in R# test runner.

1
  • The question is specifically about MSTest. This still might be useful information for visitors having the problem with NUnit tests, but it should probably be a comment instead of an answer.
    – magnattic
    Nov 5, 2014 at 9:24
0

I kept getting "Test wasn't run" in Resharper.. I tried all the recommendations but nothing worked. What solved it for me was running Visual Studio as Administrator. (VS2013 w/ Resharper 8.1)

0

Just an excerpt from MSDN regarding Assert.Inconclusive:

The code generated by Visual Studio when creating unit tests includes an Inconclusive statement as a placeholder.

It happens if something is wrong with the solution, the most often a misconfiguration, like wrong or mismatched namespaces, inconsistent build targets etc, what leads to the fact that UnitTestExplorer is unable to use provided unit tests properly. So the general solution is to check latest changes and fix errors.

0

I had the same problem in C#: Unit tests run by ReSharper all just stopped with "Test wasn't run". No other information.

It turned out to be due to my custom section in App.Config. Removing that and it worked.

Configuration: Visual Studio C# 12, ReSharper 8.2.3

0

It could be also that Your solution contains multiple versions of i.e. nUnit installed in different projects. In my case this was the reason of the problems. After unifying the nUnit version in the solution, the problem was gone.

-2

Just to add to this, I had written over my app.config file with a new one that was missing some sections I needed. I added the sections back in, at which point I got this same error in resharper. Thanks to the comments above I compared it to an older version and found that I was missing the section names in the configSections.

1
  • Would you like to share with us what you did exactly? You finding what you were missing, not helping anyone...
    – ilter
    May 1, 2015 at 21:32

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.