Reputation: 7863
I have an executable JAR which contains all dependencies and test classes. I've confirmed that the main() method is called when I execute the jar. I'm trying to add code to main() so that I can run a specific TestNG test class. From the documentation on TestNG.org this appears to be the way to do it:
TestListenerAdapter tla = new TestListenerAdapter();
TestNG testng = new TestNG();
testng.setTestClasses(new Class[] { com.some.path.tests.MyTests.class });
testng.addListener(tla);
testng.run();
My folder structure is typical:
/src/main/java/Main.java
/src/test/java/com/some/path/tests/MyTests.java
However when I try to compile it I get this error:
java: /src/main/java/Main.java:46: package com.some.path.tests does not exist
Is there anyway I can alter my project so that testng.setTestClasses() in main() can access the test class?
Upvotes: 5
Views: 20377
Reputation: 10311
You can load your usual xml in main using org.testng.xml.Parser
and org.testng.xml.XmlSuite
String xmlFileName = "testng.xml";
List<XmlSuite> suite;
try
{
suite = (List <XmlSuite>)(new Parser(xmlFileName).parse());
testng.setXmlSuites(suite);
testng.run();
}
catch (ParserConfigurationException e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
catch (SAXException e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
catch (IOException e)
{
e.printStackTrace();
}
Upvotes: 7
Reputation: 7863
I used the following in my main() method and it worked.
CommandLineOptions options = new CommandLineOptions();
JCommander jCommander = new JCommander(options, args);
XmlSuite suite = new XmlSuite();
suite.setName("MyTestSuite");
suite.setParameters(options.convertToMap());
List<XmlClass> classes = new ArrayList<XmlClass>();
classes.add(new XmlClass("com.some.path.tests.MyTests"));
XmlTest test = new XmlTest(suite);
test.setName("MyTests");
test.setXmlClasses(classes);
List<XmlSuite> suites = new ArrayList<XmlSuite>();
suites.add(suite);
TestNG testNG = new TestNG();
testNG.setXmlSuites(suites);
testNG.run();
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 13831
If that is your folder structure, and not just a type, it's wrong. The package name is represented as a folder structure, not one folder with the package name.
So it should be src/test/java/com/some/path/tests/MyTests.java
Also, make sure your test classes are actually in the Jar file. If you're using maven to build the Jar, your test classes will not be included by default.
Upvotes: 1