Hello,
I use GoogleTest to test the software on our team. It generates a JUNit compatible (I believe) XML Test Report. I already have the tests running automatically as a part of our Bamboo build, but I haven't figured out how to configure the JUnit Test Job properly to parse the generated XML.
Can somebody help me with a working example? I just need to know where to put the .XML file, and how to configure the job to properly see/parse it.
Thanks a ton,
Jim
Something like this should do the trick:
Set up a task that produces the results in XML format:
./SomeGTest --gtest_output=xml:SomeGTest.xml exit 0
And follow up with JUnit Test Parser task pointed to the XMLs you generate.
I understand that. What I'm confused with is the information to enter in to the JUnit Parser task. (Screenshot's not working for me)
Basically, I want to know two things:
Thanks,
Jim
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That is an Ant based syntax which means 'zero or more directories' which match the path.
Try it!
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I will. Last question. You say it's "relative to your build script". Where is that relative to your bamboo-home directory?
My bamboo home directory is "C:\Aristocrat\bamboo-home". Is "bin-test" right under that?
Thanks,
Jim
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Where is that relative to your bamboo-home directory?
It's relative to your build directory, not bamboo-home directory. If you don't use absolute paths for storing xml files (which you should), that's where the files will end up.
<tt>If you need to know the build direcotyr location, Bamboo makes it available via build.working.directory.
More information here: http://confluence.atlassian.com/display/BAMBOO/Using+Global%2C+Plan+or+Build-specific+Variables</tt>
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Here's what my Junit Parser Configuration looks like:
**/bin-test/Release/*.xml
(this path is relative to my build script....do NOT USE literal paths)
I hope this helps.
Ron
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What does the "**" mean? I haven't seen that syntax before. That's what was confusing me about the built-in example.
Jim
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