π Go library for ingesting JUnit XML reports
You can fetch this library by running the following
go get -u github.com/joshdk/go-junit
This library has a number of ingestion methods for convenience.
The simplest of which parses raw JUnit XML data.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<testsuites>
<testsuite name="JUnitXmlReporter.constructor" errors="0" skipped="1" tests="3" failures="1" time="0.006" timestamp="2013-05-24T10:23:58">
<properties>
<property name="java.vendor" value="Sun Microsystems Inc." />
<property name="compiler.debug" value="on" />
<property name="project.jdk.classpath" value="jdk.classpath.1.6" />
</properties>
<testcase classname="JUnitXmlReporter.constructor" name="should default path to an empty string" time="0.006">
<failure message="test failure">Assertion failed</failure>
</testcase>
<testcase classname="JUnitXmlReporter.constructor" name="should default consolidate to true" time="0">
<skipped />
</testcase>
<testcase classname="JUnitXmlReporter.constructor" name="should default useDotNotation to true" time="0" />
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
xml := []byte(`<?xml β¦`)
suites, err := junit.Ingest(xml)
You can then inspect the contents of the ingested suites.
for _, suite := range suites {
fmt.Println(suite.Name)
for _, test := range suite.Tests {
fmt.Printf(" %s\n", test.Name)
if test.Error != nil {
fmt.Printf(" %s: %v\n", test.Status, test.Error)
} else {
fmt.Printf(" %s\n", test.Status)
}
}
}
And observe some output like this.
JUnitXmlReporter.constructor
should default path to an empty string
failed: Assertion failed
should default consolidate to true
skipped
should default useDotNotation to true
passed
Additionally, you can ingest an entire file.
suites, err := junit.IngestFile("test-reports/report.xml")
Or a list of multiple files.
suites, err := junit.IngestFiles([]string{
"test-reports/report-1.xml",
"test-reports/report-2.xml",
})
Or any .xml
files inside of a directory.
suites, err := junit.IngestDir("test-reports/")
Due to the lack of implementation consistency in software that generates JUnit XML files, this library needs to take a somewhat looser approach to ingestion. As a consequence, many different possible JUnit formats can easily be ingested.
A single top level testsuite
tag, containing multiple testcase
instances.
<testsuite>
<testcase name="Test case 1" />
<testcase name="Test case 2" />
</testsuite>
A single top level testsuites
tag, containing multiple testsuite
instances.
<testsuites>
<testsuite>
<testcase name="Test case 1" />
<testcase name="Test case 2" />
</testsuite>
</testsuites>
(Despite not technically being valid XML) Multiple top level testsuite
tags, containing multiple testcase
instances.
<testsuite>
<testcase name="Test case 1" />
<testcase name="Test case 2" />
</testsuite>
<testsuite>
<testcase name="Test case 3" />
<testcase name="Test case 4" />
</testsuite>
In all cases, omitting (or even duplicated) the XML declaration tag is allowed.
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
Found a bug or want to make go-junit better? Please open a pull request!
To make things easier, try out the following:
-
Running
go test -v
will run the test suite to verify behavior. -
Running
golangci-lint run
will report any linting issues using golangci/golangci-lint.
This code is distributed under the MIT License, see LICENSE.txt for more information.
Created by Josh Komoroske β