The XCTest library is designed to provide a common framework for writing unit tests in Swift, for Swift packages and applications.
This version of XCTest implements the majority of unit testing APIs included in XCTest from Xcode 7 and later. Its goal is to enable your project's tests to run on all the platforms Swift supports without having to rewrite them.
Your tests are organized into a simple hierarchy. Each XCTestCase
subclass has a set of test
methods, each of which should test one part of your code.
For general information about using XCTest, see:
The Swift Package Manager integrates directly with XCTest to provide a streamlined experience for unit testing SwiftPM packages. If you are using XCTest within a SwiftPM package, unit test files are located within the package's Tests
subdirectory, and you can build and run the full test suite in one step by running swift test
.
For more information about using XCTest with SwiftPM, see its documentation.
When used by itself, without SwiftPM, this version of XCTest does not use the external xctest
CLI test runner included with Xcode to run tests. Instead, you must create your own executable which links libXCTest.so
, and in your main.swift
, invoke the XCTMain
function with an array of the tests from all XCTestCase
subclasses that you wish to run, wrapped by the testCase
helper function. For example:
XCTMain([
testCase(TestNSString.allTests),
testCase(TestNSArray.allTests),
testCase(TestNSDictionary.allTests),
])
The XCTMain
function does not return, and will cause your test executable to exit with either 0
for success or 1
for failure. Certain command line arguments can be used to modify the test runner behavior:
$ ./FooTests Tests.FooTestCase/testFoo # Run a single test method
$ ./FooTests Tests.FooTestCase # Run all the tests in FooTestCase
$ ./FooTests Tests.FooTestCase/testFoo,Tests.FooTestCase/testBar # Run multiple test methods
$ ./FooTests --list-tests
Listing 4 tests in FooTests.xctest:
Tests.FooTestCase/testFoo
Tests.FooTestCase/testBar
Tests.BarTestCase/test123
$ ./FooTests --dump-tests-json
{"tests":[{"tests":[{"tests":[{"name":"testFoo"},{"name":"testBar"}],"name":"Tests.FooTestCase"},{"tests":[{"name":"test123"}],"name":"Tests.BarTestCase"}],"name":"Tests.xctest"}],"name":"All tests"}
To contribute, you'll need to be able to build this project and run its test suite. The easiest way to do so is via the Swift build script.
First, follow the instructions in the Swift README to build Swift from source. Confirm you're able to build the Swift project using utils/build-script -R
.
Once you are able to build the Swift project, build XCTest and run its tests:
$ cd swift-corelibs-xctest
$ ../swift/utils/build-script --preset corelibs-xctest
This project is only guaranteed to build with the very latest commit on the Swift and swift-corelibs-foundation main
branches. You may update to the latest commits using the Swift utils/update-checkout
script:
$ ../swift/utils/update-checkout
To browse files in this project using Xcode, use XCTest.xcworkspace
. You may build the project using the SwiftXCTest
scheme. Run the SwiftXCTestFunctionalTests
scheme to run the tests.
However, in order to successfully build the project in Xcode, you must use an Xcode toolchain with an extremely recent version of Swift. The Swift website provides Xcode toolchains to download, as well as instructions on how to use Xcode with those toolchains. Swift development moves fairly quickly, and so even a week-old toolchain may no longer work.
If none of the toolchains available to download are recent enough to build XCTest, you may build your own toolchain by using the
utils/build-toolchain
script in the Swift repository.Keep in mind that the build script invocation in "Contributing to XCTest" above will always work, regardless of which Swift toolchains you have installed. The Xcode workspace exists simply for the convenience of contributors. It is not necessary to successfully build this project in Xcode in order to contribute.