Reputation: 21015
I'm working with MS-Test for my unit tests writing. most of my tests have a duration of less than 0.1 seconds. I want to somehow tell VS "ignore the tests that take a long time to run when i'm running the tests manually, and when you run them on the build do not ignore them.
I know that in nunit there is an "explicit" attribute that will run the test only if you select him explicitly. I think that might help but not sure.
Help please
Upvotes: 6
Views: 1375
Reputation: 11731
You should set up the tests so they run on your server after the commit is made, then notify the developer (perhaps by email?) of any that fail.
This way the tests get run, regardless of their duration, but no programmer time is wasted.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 28537
Thinking about this question in a language-agnostic, framework-agnostic manner yields that what you ask for is somewhat a conundrum:
The test tool will have no idea about the execution time of any of the unit tests until they are run; because this is dependant on not just the test tool and the tests themselves, but also on the application under test. The stop-gap solution to this would be to do things such as setting a time limit. If you do this, then that begs the question, when a test times out, should it be passed, failed, or perhaps fall into some other (third) category? ... Conundrum!
Thus to avoid this, I put forward that you should adopt a different strategy where you as the developer decide which subsets of the entire set of tests you wish to run in different situations. For example:
When running your tests, you can then choose which of these subsets of tests to run, perhaps configuring it in some form of a script.
I use this approach to great effect in automated testing (integrated into a continuous integration system). I do this by having a script that, depending on the input parameters, would decide either to execute just the smoke tests plus the minimal tests; or alternatively the smoke tests, the minimal tests and the comprehensive tests (i.e. all of them).
HTH
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 6472
Yes like this
<TestMethod(), Timeout(1000)>
Public Sub OutputWebservice_SubmitOutputJob_SubmitEmailJobHF001()
End Sub
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 31548
You can use the Timeout
attribute, and specify the timeout in milliseconds. If the timeout passes, the test fails.
Upvotes: 0