I'm just starting the computer science program at my college, and I'm having some issues with IntelliJ. When I try to run unit tests, I get the message
Process finished with exit code 1
Class not found: "edu.macalester.comp124.hw0.AreaTest"Empty test suite.
I also see a message entitled "No tests were found" on the left side of my screen. My test code is here:
package edu.macalester.comp124.hw0;
import org.junit.Test;
import static org.junit.Assert.*;
public class AreaTest {
@Test
public void testSquare() {
assertEquals(Area.getSquareArea(3.0), 9.0, 0.001);
}
@Test
public void testCircle() {
assertEquals(Area.getCircleArea(3.0), 28.2743, 0.001);
}
}
And my project code is here:
package edu.macalester.comp124.hw0;
import java.lang.Math;
public class Area {
/**
* Calculates the area of a square.
* @param sideLength The length of the side of a square
* @return The area
*/
public static double getSquareArea(double sideLength) {
// Has been replaced by correct formula
return sideLength * sideLength;
}
/**
* Calculates the area of a circle.
* @param radius The radius of the circle
* @return The area
*/
public static double getCircleArea(double radius) {
// Replaced by correct value
return radius * 2 * Math.PI;
}
}
How can I get my tests to work? I'm using the most recent version of IntelliJ IDEA CE.
mvn clean package
in the terminal. Unsure why IntelliJ imported the project incorrectly at the beginning.
tasks.whenTaskAdded { task -> if(task.name.contains("Test")) { task.enabled = false } }
Had the same message. I had to remove the Run/Debug configuration.
In my case, I ran the unit test as a local test before. After that I moved my test to the androidTest package and tried to run it again. Android Studio remembered the last run configuration so it tried to run it again as a local unit test which produced the same error.
After removing the config and running the test again it generated a new configuration and worked.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/VTLIq.png
I went to
File -> Invalidate Caches/Restart...
and then it worked for me.
I had the same issue. I rebuilded project, and it helped me.
Go to Build --> Rebuild Project
After then, if you are using Maven tool, I recommend use option Reimport All Maven Projects
If it not help, try another possible solutions:
Go to File-->Invalidate Caches/Restart--> Invalidate and Restart
or:
In your Maven project structure src/main/java right click on java directory and select option Mark directory as --> Sources Root Similarly do the same with test directory so: src/test/java right click on java directory and select option Mark directory as --> Test Sources Root
or:
Go to Run --> Edit Configurations and in section JUnit remove test configurations. Apply changes. After then try to run your tests. New configuration should be created automatically.
or:
Go to File --> Project Structure, select Modules, then select your proper module and go to the Paths tab. Check options: Radio button Use module compile output path should be selected. Output path should be inside your project. Also Test output path should be directory inside your project. For example it can look similarly: Output path: C:\path\to\your\module\yourModule \target\classes Test Output path: C:\path\to\your\module\yourModule \target\test-classes Exclude output paths should be deselected.
Build -> Rebuild Project
) was what worked for me. Thank you!
<project-root>/src/test/java
as test root, and the Build -> Rebuild Project
worked for me. Also when the classes containing tests were in package with package name starting with java.*
, I got Security Exception.
This might also happen, if your test folder has been imported as a separate module (a small square is shown on the folder icon in the project view). Remove the module by selecting the test folder in the project view and press DEL. Then start your test. If a popup dialog appears with an error message, that no module is selected, specify your root module from the dropdown.
In my case, I had everything else in the right place, but I was working on a java library with kotlin. I just forgot to apply the plugin:
apply plugin: 'kotlin-android'
And now it's working as expected now.
I had a similar problem after starting a new IntelliJ project. I found that the "module compile output path" for my module was not properly specified. When I assigned the path in the module's "compile output path" to the proper location, the problem was solved. The compile output path is assigned in the Project settings. Under Modules, select the module involved and select the Paths tab...
Paths tab in the Project Settings | Modules dialog
https://i.stack.imgur.com/y2DXW.jpg
...I sent the compiler output to a folder named "output" that is present in the parent Project folder.
So, my issue here was with folder names. I had called my code folder Classes 2016/2017, which IntelliJ didn't like. Simply remove the slash (or other offending character in path), re-import the project, and you'll be good to go!
In Android Studio 3.0 +, sometimes UI tests are somehow interpreted as unit tests and it doesn't ask for target deployment selection. You can go to Edit Configuration and mark it as an Integration test and it would start working
If the project has compilation issue then tests might not run. So firstly build project as Build -> Build Project. After successful compilation re-run the test.
If nothing works out then just close the project window and delete project and re-import as Gradle/Maven project which will set everything for you by overriding the existing IntelliJ created files.This will remove invalid cache created.
You can also just invalidate the cache.
File -> Invalidate Caches/Restart
I had the same problem and rebuilding/invalidating cache etc. didn't work. Seems like that's just a bug in Android Studio...
A temporary solution is just to run your unit tests from the command line with:
./gradlew test
See: https://developer.android.com/studio/test/command-line.html
I had the same question when I import some jar
from Maven, and subsequently, cause the empty-test-suite
error.
In my case, it was because the maven resetting the module files. Which I resolved by clearing my default configuration:
Open Project structure with shift-ctrl-alt-s shortcut
https://i.stack.imgur.com/okjwu.png
Look at the Modules > Sources and fill the Sources package or test Package.
Deleting .idea
and re-importing the SBT project solved this issue for me.
Reimport project or module can solve the issue. I made this issue by renaming package name when developing. But the out path and test output path is the old path. So intellij can't find the class from the old path. So the easiest way is correcting the out path and test output path.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/tK9vz.png
I had the same issue (Android Studio 3.2 Canary 4) and I tried most of suggestions described in other answers - without any success. Note this happened after I moved the file from test
to androidTest
folder. It was still shown in run configurations as test instead of instrumented test.
I finally end up with creating a new file:
Create new instrumented test class with different name. Copy all the code from your class. Run it. Delete the old class. Rename new class to desired name.
Interestingly, I've faced this issue many times due to different reasons. For e.g. Invalidating cache and restarting has helped as well.
Last I fixed it by correcting my output path in File -> Project Structure -> Project -> Project Compiler Output to : absolute_path_of_package/out
for e.g. : /Users/random-guy/myWorkspace/src/DummyProject/out
This will also happen when your module- and/or project-jdk aren't properly configured.
In my case, IntelliJ didn't compile the test sources for a strange reason. I simply modified the build configuration and added the maven goal clean test-compile
in the Before launch
section
In my case there was a problem with test name :).
If name was: dummyNameTest
then get no tests where found, but in case testDummyName
everything was ok
In your Maven project structure src/main/java right click on java directory and select option Mark directory as --> Sources Root
Similarly do the same with test directory so: src/test/java right click on java directory and select option Mark directory as --> Test Sources Root
Worked for me :-)
I had the same issue. In my case i had some test classes in a package/folder outside of the main folder. But when i checked the Run configuration, it was always trying to look for classes inside the main folder (and not my packages outside of main) . So if that is the case , you either have to move your packages to where the Run configuration is pointing to. Or change the run configuration to point to your packages.
Does your test require an Android device (emulator or hardware)? If so, it's called an "instrumented test" and resides in "module-name/src/androidTest/java/". If not, it's called a "local unit test" and resides in "module-name/src/test/java"
https://developer.android.com/training/testing/start/index.html
I got the same error because I had written a local unit test, but it was placed in the folder for instrumented tests. Moving the local unit test to the "src/test/java" folder fixed it for me.
Was getting same error. My device was not connected to android studio. When I connected to studio. It works. This solves my problem.
It's probably because the folder is not set as test source, which can be done via Module Settings > Modules.
For me the project was compiled outside the project. I just change the path. For changing the path (i'm using mac).
Go to File --> Project Structure
Go to Module on left side.
Select Paths, select radio button(use module compile output path)
Provide output path and Test output path which is inside your project
Deselect Exclude output paths.
Go to File --> Click on Invalidate Cache and restart
In my case, the problem was fixed by going into my build.gradle
and changing
dependencies {
testImplementation 'junit:junit:4.12'
}
to
dependencies {
testCompile 'junit:junit:4.12'
}
I tried all solutions but none of them helped. At the end i run test in debug mode and.... it started to work. Maybe some maven's cache was cleared up. It is difficult to say. It works. Try mvn test -X
Just click your mouse right button on the file in Projects windows and select
"Run YourTest".
Everything just starts OK now, probably because faulty run configuration is being rebuild anew.
This can happen (at least once for me ;) after installing the new version of IntelliJ and the IntelliJ plugins have not yet updated.
You may have to manually do the Check for updates…
from IntelliJ Help menu.
follow the below steps in Intellij (with screenshots for better understanding):
go to Files --> Project structure
https://i.stack.imgur.com/QKQfY.jpg
navigate to modules and now select the module, in which your Junit test file present and select "Use module compile output path" radio button. Mention the respective classes folder path, similar to the screenshot attached.
https://i.stack.imgur.com/xpZDP.jpg
Do apply and Okay. This worked for me!
Same issue here using IDEA 15.0.6, and nothing helped except when I renamed the package the test class was in. Afterwards I renamed it back to its original name and it still worked, so the rename action might have cleared some cache.
Success story sharing
File > Cashes / Restart