A Gradle plugin that allows for the execution of JUnit 5 tests in Android environments using Android Gradle Plugin 8.0.0 or later.
This plugin configures the unit test tasks for each build variant of a project to run on the JUnit Platform. Furthermore, it provides additional configuration options for these tests through a DSL and facilitates the usage of JUnit 5 for instrumentation tests.
Instructions on how to write tests with the JUnit 5 framework can be found in their User Guide. To get a first look at its features, a small showcase project can be found here.
To get started, declare the plugin in your app
module's build script alongside the latest version. Snapshots of the development version are available through Sonatype's snapshots
repository.
Kotlin
plugins {
id("de.mannodermaus.android-junit5") version "1.11.2.0"
}
dependencies {
// (Required) Writing and executing Unit Tests on the JUnit Platform
testImplementation("org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-api:5.11.2")
testRuntimeOnly("org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-engine:5.11.2")
// (Optional) If you need "Parameterized Tests"
testImplementation("org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-params:5.11.2")
// (Optional) If you also have JUnit 4-based tests
testImplementation("junit:junit:4.13.2")
testRuntimeOnly("org.junit.vintage:junit-vintage-engine:5.11.2")
}
Groovy
plugins {
id "de.mannodermaus.android-junit5" version "1.11.2.0"
}
dependencies {
// (Required) Writing and executing Unit Tests on the JUnit Platform
testImplementation "org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-api:5.11.2"
testRuntimeOnly "org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-engine:5.11.2"
// (Optional) If you need "Parameterized Tests"
testImplementation "org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-params:5.11.2"
// (Optional) If you also have JUnit 4-based tests
testImplementation "junit:junit:4.13.2"
testRuntimeOnly "org.junit.vintage:junit-vintage-engine:5.11.2"
}
If you prefer to use the legacy way to declare the dependency instead, remove the version()
block from above and declare the plugin in your root project's build script like so:
Kotlin
// In the root project's build.gradle.kts:
buildscript {
dependencies {
classpath("de.mannodermaus.gradle.plugins:android-junit5:1.11.2.0")
}
}
// In the app module's build.gradle.kts:
plugins {
id("de.mannodermaus.android-junit5")
}
Groovy
// In the root project's build.gradle:
buildscript {
dependencies {
classpath "de.mannodermaus.gradle.plugins:android-junit5:1.11.2.0"
}
}
// In the app module's build.gradle:
apply plugin: "de.mannodermaus.android-junit5"
More information on Getting Started can be found on the wiki.
The latest version of this plugin requires:
- Android Gradle Plugin
8.0.0
or above - Gradle
8.0
or above
You can use JUnit 5 to run instrumentation tests on emulators and physical devices, too. Because the framework is built on Java 8 from the ground up, these instrumentation tests will only run on devices running Android 8.0 (API 26) or newer – older phones will skip the execution of these tests completely, marking them as "ignored".
Before you can write instrumentation tests with JUnit Jupiter, make sure that your module is using the androidx.test.runner.AndroidJUnitRunner
(or a subclass of it) as its testInstrumentationRunner
. Then, simply add a dependency on junit-jupiter-api
to the androidTestImplementation
configuration in your build script and the plugin will automatically configure JUnit 5 tests for you:
Kotlin
dependencies {
androidTestImplementation("org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-api:5.11.2")
}
Groovy
dependencies {
androidTestImplementation "org.junit.jupiter:junit-jupiter-api:5.11.2"
}
By enabling JUnit 5 for instrumentation tests, you will gain access to ActivityScenarioExtension
(among other things), which helps with the orchestration of Activity
classes. Check the wiki for more info.
An optional artifact with more helper extensions is available for specific use cases. It contains the following APIs:
GrantPermissionExtension
for granting permissions before each test
Can you think of more? Let's discuss in the issues section!
Kotlin
junitPlatform {
instrumentationTests.includeExtensions.set(true)
}
Groovy
junitPlatform {
instrumentationTests.includeExtensions.set(true)
}
To test @Composable
functions on device with JUnit 5, first enable support for instrumentation tests as described above.
Then, add the Compose test dependency to your androidTestImplementation
configuration
and the plugin will autoconfigure JUnit 5 Compose support for you!
Kotlin
dependencies {
// Compose test framework
androidTestImplementation("androidx.compose.ui:ui-test-android:$compose_version")
// Needed for createComposeExtension() and createAndroidComposeExtension()
debugImplementation("androidx.compose.ui:ui-test-manifest:$compose_version")
}
Groovy
dependencies {
// Compose test framework
androidTestImplementation "androidx.compose.ui:ui-test-android:$compose_version"
// Needed for createComposeExtension() and createAndroidComposeExtension()
debugImplementation "androidx.compose.ui:ui-test-manifest:$compose_version"
}
The wiki includes a section on how to test your Composables with JUnit 5.
By default, the plugin will make sure to use a compatible version of the instrumentation test libraries when it sets up the artifacts automatically. However, it is possible to choose a custom version instead via its DSL:
Kotlin
junitPlatform {
instrumentationTests.version.set("1.6.0")
}
Groovy
junitPlatform {
instrumentationTests.version.set("1.6.0")
}
At this time, Google hasn't shared any immediate plans to bring first-party support for JUnit 5 to Android. The following list is an aggregation of pending feature requests:
- InstantTaskExecutorRule uses @RestrictTo(RestrictTo.Scope.LIBRARY_GROUP) -- why? (issuetracker.google.com)
- Add support for JUnit 5 (issuetracker.google.com)
- JUnit 5 support (github.com/android/android-test)
Since JUnit 5 has replaced the @Rule
mechanism with Extensions, the following artifacts help bridge the gap until Android officially transitions to JUnit 5.
Replaces InstantTaskExecutorRule
in JUnit 5.
Kotlin
dependencies {
testImplementation("io.github.neboskreb:instant-task-executor-extension:1.0.0")
}
Groovy
dependencies {
testImplementation 'io.github.neboskreb:instant-task-executor-extension:1.0.0'
}
For more details see instant-task-executor-extension on GitHub.
This repository contains multiple modules, divided into two sub-projects. The repository's root directory contains build logic shared across the sub-projects, which in turn use symlinks to connect to the common build scripts in their parent folder.
instrumentation
: The root folder for Android-based modules, namely the instrumentation libraries & a sample application. After cloning, open this project in Android Studio.plugin
: The root folder for Java-based modules, namely the Gradle plugin for JUnit 5 on Android, as well as its test module. After cloning, open this project in IntelliJ IDEA.
For users that cannot match the current minimum version requirement of the Android Gradle Plugin requested by this plugin, refer to the table below to find a suitable alternative version. Note that no active development will go into these legacy versions, so please consider upgrading to at least Android Gradle Plugin 8.0.0 before filing an issue with the latest one.
Your AGP Version | Suggested JUnit5 Plugin Version |
---|---|
>= 8.0.0 |
1.11.2.0 |
7.0.0 - 7.4.2 |
1.10.0.0 |
4.0.0 - 4.2.2 |
1.8.2.1 |
3.5.0 - 3.6.4 |
1.7.1.1 |
< 3.5.0 |
none; you should really update your build env, bro |
Copyright 2017-2024 Marcel Schnelle
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
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Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
See also the full License text.