Reputation: 12925
I've installed NUnit Test Adapter for VS2012 + 2013. When I first installed the Adapter tests were showing up, but they stopped showing up for some reason today. After building, rebuilding, cleaning, restarting, nothing shows up in Test Explorer. Why would this be happening? I'm using VS2013 Ultimate.
Upvotes: 153
Views: 135036
Reputation: 3231
If your test project is not x86, the tests will not be found until you tell the test runner the correct target platform.
Prior to Visual Studio 2022, this was the "Test/Test Settings/Default Processor Architecture" option.
In VS2022 you need to create a 'runsettings' file and set the test project to use it. In that file you can specify the Target Platform, like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8" ?>
<RunSettings>
<!-- Configurations that affect the Test Framework -->
<RunConfiguration>
<TargetPlatform>x64</TargetPlatform>
</RunConfiguration>
</RunSettings>
You still also need to include the Nunit3TestAdapter and Microsoft.NET.Test.Sdk nugets (and make sure the project actually built, and check the various other more obscure mistakes mentioned in other answers)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1608
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 320
Make sure your test class is public. I often make this mistake then I just look at the code for 5 minutes what is going on.
[Test]
public void YourTest()
{
...
}
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 3452
I use NUnit 3 and tried most of the other solutions I saw here. None of those worked for me.
Even though already selected, reselecting the "Playlist: All Tests" option in test explorer showed all hidden tests in my case. I need to do this after every rebuild.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 5119
Just to add my $.02 here, I ran into a similar issue just yesterday, where 168 of my tests were missing. I tried most everything in this post - most especially making sure my version(s) of NUnit were the same - all to no avail. I then remembered that I had my tests divided into playlists; and these do not update automatically as you add new tests. So, when I deleted the playlists, BAM!, all of my tests were back once more.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 129
Check whether you have stated [TestFixureSetUp] and [Test]
in the test class
sample:
namespace ClassLibrary1
{
public class SimpleCalculator
{
public Calculator _calculator;
[TestFixtureSetUp]
public void initialize()
{
_calculator = new Calculator();
}
[Test]
public void DivideTest()
{
int a = 10;
int b = 2;
int expectedValue = a/b;
int actualValue = _calculator.Divide(a, b);
Assert.AreEqual(expectedValue, actualValue, "Functionality not working properly!");
}
}
}
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 683
I had some msbuild.exe processes that were hung. I don't know if that was my problem or not, but it took me a lot of trail and error with reinstalling various NUnit adaptors before I found the hung processes.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 149
I had the same problem, when suddenly any test didn't appeared on Test Explorer window. I has the updated version of "NUnit3TestAdapter"
and after lots of searches and efforts, I found that I need set the following values in project properties: [In Solution Explorer window: right click on Project > Properties] Under Build tab, set Platform=x64, and set Platform target=x86 or Any CPU Build the project and all tests will be appear on Test Explorer window.
Important note: I came to a solution after seeing the next msg in the output window:
"Test run will use DLL(s) built for framework Framework45 and platform X86. Following DLL(s) will not be part of run: AutomationTests.dll is built for Framework Framework45 and Platform X64."
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 21
Make sure your tests are properly marked with the Test attribute. If all of the tests are marked with only the Explicit attribute, the TestAdapter doesn't recognize the fixture.
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 5720
If you are using VS 2017 and .net core ,as said here, you should add references to the test framework NUnit 3.6.1, to the test runner NUnit3TestAdapter 3.8.0-alpha1 and to the test SDK Microsoft.NET.Test.Sdk 15.0.0.
Upvotes: 9
Reputation: 13
I had this problem too but the cause was different. I'm using VS2017 with F# 4.0.
Firstly, the console in Visual Studio does not give you enough details why the tests could not be found; it will just fail to the load the DLL with the tests. So use NUnit3console.exe on the command line as this gives you more details.
In my case, it was because the test adapter was looking for a newer version of the F# Core DLL (4.4.1.0) (F# 4.1) whereas I'm still using 4.4.0.0 (F# 4.0). So I just added this to the app.config of the test project:-
<dependentAssembly>
<assemblyIdentity name="FSharp.Core" publicKeyToken="b03f5f7f11d50a3a" culture="neutral" />
<bindingRedirect oldVersion="0.0.0.0-65535.65535.65535.65535" newVersion="4.4.0.0" />
</dependentAssembly>
i.e. redirect to the earlier F# core.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1
I started a new solution with a test project in it, and compared it against my original, problem project. The original, for some reason, had an app.config in it. I excluded that file from the project and saw my tests reappear in the test explorer.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 8219
One other cause to this problem is if you open a project from a mapped drive - Visual Studio handles such projects properly, but apparently Nunit doesn't support them.
Copying the project to a physical fixed the issue.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 4320
I had a working setup (for NUnit2 and NUnit3 depending on the solution, and multiple versions of Visual Studio between 2012 and 2017), and it suddenly stopped working one day: no tests detected in any solution or version of VS.
In my case, it helped to delete %localappdata%\Temp\VisualStudioTestExplorerExtensions
. After a restart of VS, everything worked as before.
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 21
I had a similar issue where the tests where not being discovered. I had the correct version of NUnit, versions matched up between NUnit and adapter, and the tests where tagged correctly. I was running VS 2017 Enterprise not as an administrator. After starting VS as administrator the tests appeared.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 39
I had to uninstall then re-install the xunit.runner.visualstudio nuget package. I tried this after trying all the above suggestions, so may be it was a mixture of things.
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 8219
If you are using the TestCaseSource
attribute, ensure the source exists and respects the documentation, otherwise your tests will not be discovered.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 1873
I experienced the problem mentioned by op
My case was that I was handed an old project and the tests were actually part of the system under test. I assume they were using the external test runner.
this task chain resolved the issue for me
i was able to successfully run the Nunit tests.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 537
I also found that when I uninstalled nunit v3.2.1, the nunit framework reference for v3.2.1 was still in my project in solution explorer. Solution Explorer > ProjectName > References
If you right click it will show the version. Remove this Then Right click on References > Add Reference.
Search for the version 2.x version and add then rebuild solution.
That worked for me!
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 363
In my situation the 'NUnit3 Test Adapter' has been disabled. To re-enable it go to menu
Tools->Extensions and Updates...
On the left side select 'Installed'->'All'.
On the upper right corner search for 'nunit'.
If you have 'NUnit3 Test Adapter' installed, with the found item you can enable/disable it.
Upvotes: 26
Reputation: 961
Using NUnitTestAdapter.WithFramework makes sure there are little/no inconsistencies across versions of NUnit and NUnit Adapter (i.e. "it just works")
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 3003
If you're using a NUnit3+ version, there is a new Test Adapter available.
Go to "Tools -> Extensions and Updates -> Online" and search for "NUnit3 Test Adapter" and then install.
Upvotes: 185
Reputation: 311
Check for NUnit versions mismatch. The currently available NUnit Test Adapter only works for NUnit version 2.6.4 and below. To downgrade NUnit from version 3.x go to Package Manager Console > update-package NUnit -version 2.6.4
http://jeremybytes.blogspot.co.ke/2015/11/review-of-unit-testing-makes-me-faster.html
Upvotes: 30
Reputation: 516
My test assembly is 64-bit. From the menu bar at the top of visual studio 2012, I was able to select 'Test' -> 'Test Settings' -> 'Default Processor Architecture' -> 'X64'. After a 'Rebuild Solution' from the 'Build' menu, I was able to see all of my tests in test explorer. Hopefully this helps someone else in the future =D.
Upvotes: 58
Reputation: 8200
This answer seems pretty basic but wasn't completely obvious to me at first. If you (re)build the solution it only builds the projects that are configured to build in the Build -> Configuration Manager
This was my issue, I must have inadvertently changed a build configuration settings or something that caused my test projects not to build (when they previously were). So the Test Explorer
window was looking at dlls that were out of date. It became clear to me this was the case after doing a Clean
and seeing most of my tests disappear and not come back after a rebuild
...further inspection of bin
folder showed that these projects weren't being built at all.
Upvotes: 10
Reputation: 5424
If your test project is set to target a 64bit platform, the tests won't show up in the NUnit Test Adapter.
Upvotes: 90