JUnit4 has @FixMethodOrder
annotation which allows to use alphabetical order of test methods execution. Is there analogous JUnit5 mechanism?
3 Answers
Edit: JUnit 5.4 is officially released now, so no need to use snapshots anymore.
This is now possible with JUnit 5.4.
https://junit.org/junit5/docs/current/user-guide/#writing-tests-test-execution-order
To control the order in which test methods are executed, annotate your test class or test interface with @TestMethodOrder and specify the desired MethodOrderer implementation. You can implement your own custom MethodOrderer or use one of the following built-in MethodOrderer implementations.
Alphanumeric: sorts test methods alphanumerically based on their names and formal parameter lists.
OrderAnnotation: sorts test methods numerically based on values specified via the @Order annotation.
-
It works for me, yet adding only
dependencies { testImplementation "org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-api:5.4.0-SNAPSHOT" testRuntimeOnly "org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-engine:5.4.0-SNAPSHOT" }
is enough Nov 30, 2018 at 5:59 -
I use maven pom.xml. At this moment I can see 5.4.0-M1 version. As I know Milestone Dependacies not good for developments. How do you guys get a different version? :O Jan 3, 2019 at 11:31
-
-
1@dmatej Currently you cannot. But you can add a comment if you need it as well: github.com/junit-team/junit5/issues/1948 Mar 10, 2020 at 15:19
No, not yet. For unit tests, execution order should be irrelevant. For more complex tests, JUnit is aiming to provide explicit support - test ordering would be part of that.
-
3From a technical perspective, it's true that execution order should be irrelevant, but from a human perspective, the number of times that the random order has tripped me up is too much. I want them to execute in the same order from test run to test run.– AdamJul 7, 2017 at 9:14
-
3I'd argue that if the non-deterministic order trips you up, then the code you're testing has implicit temporal dependencies that make it very hard to use. I'd make fixing that a high priority, which has the added benefit to stabilize the test suite. Jul 8, 2017 at 7:32
-
4Disagree, from the UI perspective. The human brain. E.g. I'm running a class of ten tests and 2 are failing, so my immediate training tells me to look at the two tests that are failing, in order from the top, like the 2nd one down and the 4th one down, when I run it again. But then when they don't come back in the same order, I have to (a) realise that there's not some bizarre non-deterministic bug causing random tests to fail, they're just not in the same order and (b) remember the usually dumb test names that failed and run it again to make sure they are actually failing consistently.– AdamJul 8, 2017 at 12:31
-
So technically I totally agree with you - running in random order is good - but for the sake of sanity, I'd like a little button on the IDE unit test dialog which allows me to impose order on the test run - preferably by order of appearance in code.– AdamJul 8, 2017 at 12:31
-
1Yes I use Intellij at the moment, and I like the re-run failed tests feature - but the 'run-in-code-order' is my ideal and I end up naming the test methods so their code order is also alphabetical.– AdamJul 10, 2017 at 8:16
With version 5.8.0 onwards, test classes can be ordered too.
src/test/resources/junit-platform.properties:
# ClassOrderer$OrderAnnotation sorts classes based on their @Order annotation
junit.jupiter.testclass.order.default=org.junit.jupiter.api.ClassOrderer$OrderAnnotation
Other Junit built-in class orderer implementations:
org.junit.jupiter.api.ClassOrderer$ClassName
org.junit.jupiter.api.ClassOrderer$DisplayName
org.junit.jupiter.api.ClassOrderer$Random
For other ways (beside junit-platform.properties file) to set configuration parameters refer here.
You can also provide your own orderer. It must implement ClassOrderer interface:
package foo;
public class MyOrderer implements ClassOrderer {
@Override
public void orderClasses(ClassOrdererContext context) {
Collections.shuffle(context.getClassDescriptors());
}
}
junit.jupiter.testclass.order.default=foo.MyOrderer
Note that @Nested
test classes cannot be ordered by a ClassOrderer.
Refer to JUnit 5 documentations and ClassOrderer api docs to learn more about ordering test classes.