Reputation: 1768
I'm trying to use a resource file in unit tests and access it with Bundle.path
, but it returns nil.
This call in MyProjectTests.swift returns nil:
Bundle(for: type(of: self)).path(forResource: "TestAudio", ofType: "m4a")
Here is my project hierarchy. I also tried moving TestAudio.m4a
to a Resources
folder:
├── Package.swift
├── Sources
│ └── MyProject
│ ├── ...
└── Tests
└── MyProjectTests
├── MyProjectTests.swift
└── TestAudio.m4a
Here is my package description:
// swift-tools-version:4.0
import PackageDescription
let package = Package(
name: "MyProject",
products: [
.library(
name: "MyProject",
targets: ["MyProject"])
],
targets: [
.target(
name: "MyProject",
dependencies: []
),
.testTarget(
name: "MyProjectTests",
dependencies: ["MyProject"]
),
]
)
I am using Swift 4 and the Swift Package Manager Description API version 4.
Upvotes: 70
Views: 23685
Reputation: 9832
Swift 5.3+
See Apple Documentation: "Bundling Resources with a Swift Package"
Swift 5.3 includes Package Manager Resources SE-0271 evolution proposal with "Status: Implemented (Swift 5.3)".
Resources aren't always intended for use by clients of the package; one use of resources might include test fixtures that are only needed by unit tests. Such resources would not be incorporated into clients of the package along with the library code, but would only be used while running the package's tests.
- Add a new
resources
parameter intarget
andtestTarget
APIs to allow declaring resource files explicitly.SwiftPM uses file system conventions for determining the set of source files that belongs to each target in a package: specifically, a target's source files are those that are located underneath the designated "target directory" for the target. By default this is a directory that has the same name as the target and is located in "Sources" (for a regular target) or "Tests" (for a test target), but this location can be customized in the package manifest.
// Get path to DefaultSettings.plist file. let path = Bundle.module.path(forResource: "DefaultSettings", ofType: "plist") // Load an image that can be in an asset archive in a bundle. let image = UIImage(named: "MyIcon", in: Bundle.module, compatibleWith: UITraitCollection(userInterfaceStyle: .dark)) // Find a vertex function in a compiled Metal shader library. let shader = try mtlDevice.makeDefaultLibrary(bundle: Bundle.module).makeFunction(name: "vertexShader") // Load a texture. let texture = MTKTextureLoader(device: mtlDevice).newTexture(name: "Grass", scaleFactor: 1.0, bundle: Bundle.module, options: options)
Example
// swift-tools-version:5.3
import PackageDescription
targets: [
.target(
name: "Example",
dependencies: [],
resources: [
// Apply platform-specific rules.
// For example, images might be optimized per specific platform rule.
// If path is a directory, the rule is applied recursively.
// By default, a file will be copied if no rule applies.
// Process file in Sources/Example/Resources/*
.process("Resources"),
]),
.testTarget(
name: "ExampleTests",
dependencies: [Example],
resources: [
// Copy Tests/ExampleTests/Resources directories as-is.
// Use to retain directory structure.
// Will be at top level in bundle.
.copy("Resources"),
]),
Reported Issues & Possible Workarounds
Xcode
Bundle.module
is generated by SwiftPM (see Build/BuildPlan.swift SwiftTargetBuildDescription generateResourceAccessor()) and thus not present in Foundation.Bundle when built by Xcode.
A comparable approach in Xcode would be to:
Resources
reference folder to the Xcode project,copy
to put the Resource
into some *.bundle
directory,#ifdef XCODE_BUILD
compiler directive for the Xcode build to work with the resources.#if XCODE_BUILD
extension Foundation.Bundle {
/// Returns resource bundle as a `Bundle`.
/// Requires Xcode copy phase to locate files into `ExecutableName.bundle`;
/// or `ExecutableNameTests.bundle` for test resources
static var module: Bundle = {
var thisModuleName = "CLIQuickstartLib"
var url = Bundle.main.bundleURL
for bundle in Bundle.allBundles where bundle.bundlePath.hasSuffix(".xctest") {
url = bundle.bundleURL.deletingLastPathComponent()
thisModuleName = thisModuleName.appending("Tests")
}
url = url.appendingPathComponent("\(thisModuleName).bundle")
guard let bundle = Bundle(url: url) else {
fatalError("Foundation.Bundle.module could not load resource bundle: \(url.path)")
}
return bundle
}()
/// Directory containing resource bundle
static var moduleDir: URL = {
var url = Bundle.main.bundleURL
for bundle in Bundle.allBundles where bundle.bundlePath.hasSuffix(".xctest") {
// remove 'ExecutableNameTests.xctest' path component
url = bundle.bundleURL.deletingLastPathComponent()
}
return url
}()
}
#endif
Upvotes: 68
Reputation: 317
I'm using:
extension Bundle {
func locateFirst(forResource: String, withExtension: String) -> URL? {
for b in Bundle.allBundles {
if let u = b.url(forResource: forResource, withExtension: withExtension) {
return u
}
}
return nil
}
}
And then just call locateFirst, which gives the first item. like:
let p12 = Bundle().locateFirst(forResource: "Certificates", withExtension: "p12")!
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 16519
Bundle.module started to work for me after right file structure and dependencies setup.
targets: [
// Targets are the basic building blocks of a package. A target can define a module or a test suite.
// Targets can depend on other targets in this package, and on products in packages this package depends on.
.target(
name: "Parser",
dependencies: []),
.testTarget(
name: "ParserTests",
dependencies: ["Parser"],
resources: [
.copy("Resources/test.txt")
]
),
]
private var testData: Data {
let url = Bundle.module.url(forResource: "test", withExtension: "txt")!
let data = try! Data(contentsOf: url)
return data
}
Upvotes: 36
Reputation: 5569
A made a simple solution that works for legacy swift and future swift:
ResourceHelper.projectRootURL(projectRef: #file, fileName: "temp.bundle/payload.json").path
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 9832
A Swift script approach for Swift 5.2 and earlier...
It is possible to use resources in unit tests with SwiftPM for both macOS and Linux with some additional setup and custom scripts. Here is a description of one possible approach:
The SwiftPM does not yet provide a mechanism for handling resources. The following is a workable approach for using test resources TestResources/
within a package; and, also provides for a consistent TestScratch/
directory for creating test files if needed.
Add test resources directory TestResources/
in the PackageName/
directory.
For Xcode use, add test resources to project "Build Phases" for the test bundle target.
+
add filesFor command line use, set up Bash aliases which include swift-copy-testresources.swift
Place an executable version of swift-copy-testresources.swift on an appropriate path which is included $PATH.
nano ~/bin/ swift-copy-testresources.swift
Bash Aliases
macOS: nano .bash_profile
alias swiftbuild='swift-copy-testresources.swift $PWD; swift build -Xswiftc "-target" -Xswiftc "x86_64-apple-macosx10.13";'
alias swifttest='swift-copy-testresources.swift $PWD; swift test -Xswiftc "-target" -Xswiftc "x86_64-apple-macosx10.13";'
alias swiftxcode='swift package generate-xcodeproj --xcconfig-overrides Package.xcconfig; echo "REMINDER: set Xcode build system."'
Ubuntu: nano ~/.profile
. Apppend to end. Change /opt/swift/current to where Swift is installed for a given system.
#############
### SWIFT ###
#############
if [ -d "/opt/swift/current/usr/bin" ] ; then
PATH="/opt/swift/current/usr/bin:$PATH"
fi
alias swiftbuild='swift-copy-testresources.swift $PWD; swift build;'
alias swifttest='swift-copy-testresources.swift $PWD; swift test;'
Script: swift-copy-testresources.sh chmod +x
#!/usr/bin/swift
// FILE: swift-copy-testresources.sh
// verify swift path with "which -a swift"
// macOS: /usr/bin/swift
// Ubuntu: /opt/swift/current/usr/bin/swift
import Foundation
func copyTestResources() {
let argv = ProcessInfo.processInfo.arguments
// for i in 0..<argv.count {
// print("argv[\(i)] = \(argv[i])")
// }
let pwd = argv[argv.count-1]
print("Executing swift-copy-testresources")
print(" PWD=\(pwd)")
let fm = FileManager.default
let pwdUrl = URL(fileURLWithPath: pwd, isDirectory: true)
let srcUrl = pwdUrl
.appendingPathComponent("TestResources", isDirectory: true)
let buildUrl = pwdUrl
.appendingPathComponent(".build", isDirectory: true)
let dstUrl = buildUrl
.appendingPathComponent("Contents", isDirectory: true)
.appendingPathComponent("Resources", isDirectory: true)
do {
let contents = try fm.contentsOfDirectory(at: srcUrl, includingPropertiesForKeys: [])
do { try fm.removeItem(at: dstUrl) } catch { }
try fm.createDirectory(at: dstUrl, withIntermediateDirectories: true)
for fromUrl in contents {
try fm.copyItem(
at: fromUrl,
to: dstUrl.appendingPathComponent(fromUrl.lastPathComponent)
)
}
} catch {
print(" SKIP TestResources not copied. ")
return
}
print(" SUCCESS TestResources copy completed.\n FROM \(srcUrl)\n TO \(dstUrl)")
}
copyTestResources()
Test Utility Code
////////////////
// MARK: - Linux
////////////////
#if os(Linux)
// /PATH_TO_PACKAGE/PackageName/.build/TestResources
func getTestResourcesUrl() -> URL? {
guard let packagePath = ProcessInfo.processInfo.environment["PWD"]
else { return nil }
let packageUrl = URL(fileURLWithPath: packagePath)
let testResourcesUrl = packageUrl
.appendingPathComponent(".build", isDirectory: true)
.appendingPathComponent("TestResources", isDirectory: true)
return testResourcesUrl
}
// /PATH_TO_PACKAGE/PackageName/.build/TestScratch
func getTestScratchUrl() -> URL? {
guard let packagePath = ProcessInfo.processInfo.environment["PWD"]
else { return nil }
let packageUrl = URL(fileURLWithPath: packagePath)
let testScratchUrl = packageUrl
.appendingPathComponent(".build")
.appendingPathComponent("TestScratch")
return testScratchUrl
}
// /PATH_TO_PACKAGE/PackageName/.build/TestScratch
func resetTestScratch() throws {
if let testScratchUrl = getTestScratchUrl() {
let fm = FileManager.default
do {_ = try fm.removeItem(at: testScratchUrl)} catch {}
_ = try fm.createDirectory(at: testScratchUrl, withIntermediateDirectories: true)
}
}
///////////////////
// MARK: - macOS
///////////////////
#elseif os(macOS)
func isXcodeTestEnvironment() -> Bool {
let arg0 = ProcessInfo.processInfo.arguments[0]
// Use arg0.hasSuffix("/usr/bin/xctest") for command line environment
return arg0.hasSuffix("/Xcode/Agents/xctest")
}
// /PATH_TO/PackageName/TestResources
func getTestResourcesUrl() -> URL? {
let testBundle = Bundle(for: CxSQLiteFrameworkTests.self)
let testBundleUrl = testBundle.bundleURL
if isXcodeTestEnvironment() { // test via Xcode
let testResourcesUrl = testBundleUrl
.appendingPathComponent("Contents", isDirectory: true)
.appendingPathComponent("Resources", isDirectory: true)
return testResourcesUrl
}
else { // test via command line
guard let packagePath = ProcessInfo.processInfo.environment["PWD"]
else { return nil }
let packageUrl = URL(fileURLWithPath: packagePath)
let testResourcesUrl = packageUrl
.appendingPathComponent(".build", isDirectory: true)
.appendingPathComponent("TestResources", isDirectory: true)
return testResourcesUrl
}
}
func getTestScratchUrl() -> URL? {
let testBundle = Bundle(for: CxSQLiteFrameworkTests.self)
let testBundleUrl = testBundle.bundleURL
if isXcodeTestEnvironment() {
return testBundleUrl
.deletingLastPathComponent()
.appendingPathComponent("TestScratch")
}
else {
return testBundleUrl
.deletingLastPathComponent()
.deletingLastPathComponent()
.deletingLastPathComponent()
.appendingPathComponent("TestScratch")
}
}
func resetTestScratch() throws {
if let testScratchUrl = getTestScratchUrl() {
let fm = FileManager.default
do {_ = try fm.removeItem(at: testScratchUrl)} catch {}
_ = try fm.createDirectory(at: testScratchUrl, withIntermediateDirectories: true)
}
}
#endif
Linux
During the swift build
and swift test
the process environment variable PWD
provides a path the package root …/PackageName
. The PackageName/TestResources/
files are copied to $PWD/.buid/TestResources
. The TestScratch/
directory, if used during test runtime, is created in $PWD/.buid/TestScratch
.
.build/
├── debug -> x86_64-unknown-linux/debug
...
├── TestResources
│ └── SomeTestResource.sql <-- (copied from TestResources/)
├── TestScratch
│ └── SomeTestProduct.sqlitedb <-- (created by running tests)
└── x86_64-unknown-linux
└── debug
├── PackageName.build/
│ └── ...
├── PackageNamePackageTests.build
│ └── ...
├── PackageNamePackageTests.swiftdoc
├── PackageNamePackageTests.swiftmodule
├── PackageNamePackageTests.xctest <-- executable, not Bundle
├── PackageName.swiftdoc
├── PackageName.swiftmodule
├── PackageNameTests.build
│ └── ...
├── PackageNameTests.swiftdoc
├── PackageNameTests.swiftmodule
└── ModuleCache ...
macOS CLI
.build/
|-- TestResources/
| `-- SomeTestResource.sql <-- (copied from TestResources/)
|-- TestScratch/
| `-- SomeTestProduct.sqlitedb <-- (created by running tests)
...
|-- debug -> x86_64-apple-macosx10.10/debug
`-- x86_64-apple-macosx10.10
`-- debug
|-- PackageName.build/
|-- PackageName.swiftdoc
|-- PackageName.swiftmodule
|-- PackageNamePackageTests.xctest
| `-- Contents
| `-- MacOS
| |-- PackageNamePackageTests
| `-- PackageNamePackageTests.dSYM
...
`-- libPackageName.a
macOS Xcode
PackageName/TestResources/
files are copied into the test bundle Contents/Resources
folder as part of the Build Phases. If used during tests, TestScratch/
is placed alongside the *xctest
bundle.
Build/Products/Debug/
|-- PackageNameTests.xctest/
| `-- Contents/
| |-- Frameworks/
| | |-- ...
| | `-- libswift*.dylib
| |-- Info.plist
| |-- MacOS/
| | `-- PackageNameTests
| `-- Resources/ <-- (aka TestResources/)
| |-- SomeTestResource.sql <-- (copied from TestResources/)
| `-- libswiftRemoteMirror.dylib
`-- TestScratch/
`-- SomeTestProduct.sqlitedb <-- (created by running tests)
I also posted a GitHubGist of this same approach at 004.4'2 SW Dev Swift Package Manager (SPM) With Resources Qref
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 740
starting on Swift 5.3, thanks to SE-0271, you can add bundle resources on swift package manager by adding resources
on your .target
declaration.
example:
.target(
name: "HelloWorldProgram",
dependencies: [],
resources: [.process(Images), .process("README.md")]
)
if you want to learn more, I have written an article on medium, discussing this topic. I don't specifically discuss .testTarget
, but looking on the swift proposal, it looks alike.
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 829
SwiftPM (5.1) does not support resources natively yet, however...
When unit tests are running, the repository can be expected to be available, so simply load the resource with something derived from #file
. This works with all extant versions of SwiftPM.
let thisSourceFile = URL(fileURLWithPath: #file)
let thisDirectory = thisSourceFile.deletingLastPathComponent()
let resourceURL = thisDirectory.appendingPathComponent("TestAudio.m4a")
In cases other than tests, where the repository will not be around at runtime, resources can still be included, albeit at the expense of the binary size. Any arbitrary file can be embedded into Swift source by expressing it as base 64 data in a string literal. Workspace is an open‐source tool that can automate that process: $ workspace refresh resources
. (Disclaimer: I am its author.)
Upvotes: 37
Reputation: 1768
I found another solution looking at this file.
It's possible to create a bundle with a path, for example:
let currentBundle = Bundle.allBundles.filter() { $0.bundlePath.hasSuffix(".xctest") }.first!
let realBundle = Bundle(path: "\(currentBundle.bundlePath)/../../../../Tests/MyProjectTests/Resources")
It's a bit ugly, but if you want to avoid a Makefile, it works.
Upvotes: 2