I would like to share couple shell utilities that I have collected. These are for fast Maven multi modules reporting from your unit tests results, without having you to run entire Maven site reports, which can take a LONG time to generate if you have a large project! They should work on Linux or Window's Cygwin shell.
# Show failed tests among all the surefire results.
function failedtests() {
for DIR in $(find . -maxdepth 3 -type d -name "surefire-reports") ; do
ruby -ne 'puts "#$FILENAME : #$&" if $_ =~ /(Failures: [1-9][0-9]*.*|Errors: [1-9][0-9]*.*)/' $DIR/*.txt
done
}
# Show the top tests that took the longest time to run from maven surefire reports
function slowtests() {
FILES=''
for DIR in $(find . -maxdepth 3 -type d -name "surefire-reports") ; do
FILES="$FILES $DIR/*.txt"
done
head -q -n 4 $FILES \
| ruby -ne 'gets; print $_.chomp + " "; gets; print gets' \
| ruby -ane 'printf "%8.03f sec: ", $F[-2].to_f; puts $_' \
| sort -r \
| head -10
}
When developing with Maven, you often want to see a summary of failed tests, and you want those surefire TXT file content to see what's going on. The failedtests
function will give you a list of all the failed tests filenames in all modules; and then you can cat each one to investigate.
With slowtests
function you may quickly see the top 10 most time consuming tests from your project!
Enjoy!
Updated (2013/01/30)
I found out that thehead
command on MacOSX doesn't have the "-q" option and it always prints the "==> filename <==" lines. How annoying! To work around this, you can use this ruby command replacement instead:
# Replace this
head -q -n 4 $FILES \
# With this
ruby -e 'ARGV.each{ |n| File.open(n) {|f| 4.times{ puts f.readline}} }' $FILES \
It's a tad longer, but it's PORTABLE!
Many thanks mate!
ReplyDeleteI find those very useful.
Interesting stuff ! Thanks
ReplyDeleteVery realy and informative content.
ReplyDeleteAC tractor