@greguintow/jest-junit
v16.0.0
Published
A jest reporter that generates junit xml files
Downloads
139
Readme
jest-junit
A Jest reporter that creates compatible junit xml files
Note: as of jest-junit 11.0.0 NodeJS >= 10.12.0 is required.
Installation
yarn add --dev jest-junit
Usage
In your jest config add the following entry:
{
"reporters": [ "default", "jest-junit" ]
}
Then simply run:
jest
For your Continuous Integration you can simply do:
jest --ci --reporters=default --reporters=jest-junit
Usage as testResultsProcessor (deprecated)
The support for testResultsProcessor
is only kept for legacy reasons and might be removed in the future.
You should therefore prefer to configure jest-junit
as a reporter.
Should you still want to, add the following entry to your jest config:
{
"testResultsProcessor": "jest-junit"
}
Then simply run:
jest
For your Continuous Integration you can simply do:
jest --ci --testResultsProcessor="jest-junit"
Configuration
jest-junit
offers several configurations based on environment variables or a jest-junit
key defined in package.json
or a reporter option.
Environment variable and package.json configuration should be strings.
Reporter options should also be strings exception for suiteNameTemplate, classNameTemplate, titleNameTemplate that can also accept a function returning a string.
| Environment Variable Name | Reporter Config Name| Description | Default | Possible Injection Values
|---|---|---|---|---|
| JEST_SUITE_NAME
| suiteName
| name
attribute of <testsuites>
| "jest tests"
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_OUTPUT_DIR
| outputDirectory
| Directory to save the output. Relative path outside of project root (e.g. in monorepos) has to be prefixed with <rootDir>
literal, e.g. <rootDir>/../coverage
| process.cwd()
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_OUTPUT_NAME
| outputName
| File name for the output. | "junit.xml"
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_OUTPUT_FILE
| outputFile
| Fullpath for the output. If defined, outputDirectory
and outputName
will be overridden | undefined
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_UNIQUE_OUTPUT_NAME
| uniqueOutputName
| Create unique file name for the output leveraging the outputName
as a prefix if given ${outputName}-${uuid}.xml
or a default of junit.xml-${uuid}.xml
if outputName
is not specified, overrides outputName
| false
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_SUITE_NAME
| suiteNameTemplate
| Template string for name
attribute of the <testsuite>
. | "{title}"
| {title}
, {filepath}
, {filename}
, {displayName}
| JEST_JUNIT_CLASSNAME
| classNameTemplate
| Template string for the classname
attribute of <testcase>
. | "{classname} {title}"
| {classname}
, {title}
, {suitename}
, {filepath}
, {filename}
, {displayName}
| JEST_JUNIT_TITLE
| titleTemplate
| Template string for the name
attribute of <testcase>
. | "{classname} {title}"
| {classname}
, {title}
, {filepath}
, {filename}
, {displayName}
| JEST_JUNIT_ANCESTOR_SEPARATOR
| ancestorSeparator
| Character(s) used to join the describe
blocks. | " "
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_ADD_FILE_ATTRIBUTE
| addFileAttribute
| Add file attribute to the output (validated on CIRCLE CI and GitLab CI). Must be a string. | "false"
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_FILE_PATH_PREFIX
| filePathPrefix
| Prefix to add to the test suite file path. The value will be prefixed using path.join
. Useful in case of monorepo | ""
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_INCLUDE_CONSOLE_OUTPUT
| includeConsoleOutput
| Adds console output to any testSuite that generates stdout during a test run. | false
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_INCLUDE_SHORT_CONSOLE_OUTPUT
| includeShortConsoleOutput
| Adds short console output (only message value) to any testSuite that generates stdout during a test run. | false
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_REPORT_TEST_SUITE_ERRORS
| reportTestSuiteErrors
| Reports test suites that failed to execute altogether as error
. Note: since the suite name cannot be determined from files that fail to load, it will default to file path.| false
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_NO_STACK_TRACE
| noStackTrace
| Omit stack traces from test failure reports, similar to jest --noStackTrace
| false
| N/A
| JEST_USE_PATH_FOR_SUITE_NAME
| usePathForSuiteName
| DEPRECATED. Use suiteNameTemplate
instead. Use file path as the name
attribute of <testsuite>
| "false"
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_TEST_CASE_PROPERTIES_JSON_FILE
| testCasePropertiesFile
| Name of the custom testcase properties file | "junitProperties.js"
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_TEST_CASE_PROPERTIES_DIR
| testCasePropertiesDirectory
| Location of the custom testcase properties file | process.cwd()
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_TEST_SUITE_PROPERTIES_JSON_FILE
| testSuitePropertiesFile
| Name of the custom testsuite properties file | "junitTestCaseProperties.js"
| N/A
| JEST_JUNIT_TEST_SUITE_PROPERTIES_DIR
| testSuitePropertiesDirectory
| Location of the custom testsuite properties file | process.cwd()
| N/A
You can configure these options via the command line as seen below:
JEST_SUITE_NAME="Jest JUnit Unit Tests" JEST_JUNIT_OUTPUT_DIR="./artifacts" jest
Or you can also define a jest-junit
key in your package.json
. All are string values.
{
...
"jest-junit": {
"suiteName": "jest tests",
"outputDirectory": ".",
"outputName": "junit.xml",
"uniqueOutputName": "false",
"classNameTemplate": "{classname}-{title}",
"titleTemplate": "{classname}-{title}",
"ancestorSeparator": " › ",
"usePathForSuiteName": "true"
}
}
Or you can define your options in your reporter configuration.
// jest.config.js
{
reporters: [
"default",
[ "jest-junit", { suiteName: "jest tests" } ]
]
}
Configuration Precedence
If using the usePathForSuiteName
and suiteNameTemplate
, the usePathForSuiteName
value will take precedence. ie: if usePathForSuiteName=true
and suiteNameTemplate="{filename}"
, the filepath will be used as the name
attribute of the <testsuite>
in the rendered jest-junit.xml
).
Examples
Below are some example configuration values and the rendered .xml
to created by jest-junit
.
The following test defined in the file /__tests__/addition.test.js
will be used for all examples:
describe('addition', () => {
describe('positive numbers', () => {
it('should add up', () => {
expect(1 + 2).toBe(3);
});
});
});
Example 1
The default output:
<testsuites name="jest tests">
<testsuite name="addition" tests="1" errors="0" failures="0" skipped="0" timestamp="2017-07-13T09:42:28" time="0.161">
<testcase classname="addition positive numbers should add up" name="addition positive numbers should add up" time="0.004">
</testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
Example 2
Using the classNameTemplate
and titleTemplate
:
JEST_JUNIT_CLASSNAME="{classname}" JEST_JUNIT_TITLE="{title}" jest
renders
<testsuites name="jest tests">
<testsuite name="addition" tests="1" errors="0" failures="0" skipped="0" timestamp="2017-07-13T09:45:42" time="0.154">
<testcase classname="addition positive numbers" name="should add up" time="0.005">
</testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
Example 3
Using the ancestorSeparator
:
JEST_JUNIT_ANCESTOR_SEPARATOR=" › " jest
renders
<testsuites name="jest tests">
<testsuite name="addition" tests="1" errors="0" failures="0" skipped="0" timestamp="2017-07-13T09:47:12" time="0.162">
<testcase classname="addition › positive numbers should add up" name="addition › positive numbers should add up" time="0.004">
</testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
Example 4
Using the suiteNameTemplate
:
JEST_JUNIT_SUITE_NAME ="{filename}" jest
<testsuites name="jest tests">
<testsuite name="addition.test.js" tests="1" errors="0" failures="0" skipped="0" timestamp="2017-07-13T09:42:28" time="0.161">
<testcase classname="addition positive numbers should add up" name="addition positive numbers should add up" time="0.004">
</testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
Example 5
Using classNameTemplate
as a function in reporter options
// jest.config.js
{
reporters: [
"default",
[
"jest-junit",
{
classNameTemplate: (vars) => {
return vars.classname.toUpperCase();
}
}
]
]
}
renders
<testsuites name="jest tests">
<testsuite name="addition" tests="1" errors="0" failures="0" skipped="0" timestamp="2017-07-13T09:42:28" time="0.161">
<testcase classname="ADDITION POSITIVE NUMBERS" name="addition positive numbers should add up" time="0.004">
</testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
Adding custom testsuite properties
New feature as of jest-junit 11.0.0!
Create a file in your project root directory named junitProperties.js:
module.exports = () => {
return {
key: "value",
};
};
Will render
<testsuites name="jest tests">
<testsuite name="addition" tests="1" errors="0" failures="0" skipped="0" timestamp="2017-07-13T09:42:28" time="0.161">
<properties>
<property name="key" value="value" />
</properties>
<testcase classname="addition positive numbers should add up" name="addition positive numbers should add up" time="0.004">
</testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
Adding custom testcase properties
Create a file in your project root directory named junitTestCaseProperties.js:
module.exports = (testResult) => {
return {
"dd_tags[test.invocations]": testResult.invocations,
};
};
Will render
<testsuites name="jest tests">
<testsuite name="addition" tests="1" errors="0" failures="0" skipped="0" timestamp="2017-07-13T09:42:28" time="0.161">
<testcase classname="addition positive numbers should add up" name="addition positive numbers should add up" time="0.004">
<properties>
<property name="dd_tags[test.invocations]" value="1" />
</properties>
</testcase>
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
WARNING: Properties for testcases is not following standard JUnit XML schema.
However, other consumers may support properties for testcases like DataDog metadata through <property>
elements