npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

jest-junit

v16.0.0

Published

A jest reporter that generates junit xml files

Downloads

21,133,898

Readme

Actions Status

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-${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