Run NUnit tests in .NET Core
I did as Rob-Prouse suggested, with minor changes. It finally works now.
using System;
using System.Reflection;
using NUnitLite;
using NUnit.Common;
........
public class Program
{
public static void Main(string[] args)
{
var writter = new ExtendedTextWrapper(Console.Out);
new AutoRun(typeof(Program).GetTypeInfo().Assembly).Execute(args, writter, Console.In);
}
}
Update 4: The NUnit3TestAdapter v3.8 has been released, so it is no longer alpha.
Update 3:
With NUnit3TestAdapter v3.8.0-alpha1 it is possible now to run the tests using dotnet test
command. You just need to have these dependencies in your test project:
<PackageReference Include="nunit" Version="3.7.0" />
<PackageReference Include="NUnit3TestAdapter" Version="3.8.0-*" />
<PackageReference Include="Microsoft.NET.Test.Sdk" Version="15.*" />
You can try it out!
Update 2: Visual Studio 2017 and the move from project.json
to csproj
made the dotnet-test-nunit
test adapter obsolete, so we needed to release another updated adapter to run .NET Core tests. Please see Testing .NET Core with NUnit in Visual Studio 2017 if you are using VS2017 and the new .NET Core tooling. See the update below if you are using project.json
.
Update: NUnit now has support for dotnet test
, so you no longer have to use NUnitLite. See testing .NET Core RC2 and ASP.NET Core RC2 using NUnit 3.
NUnit console (and the underlying NUnit Engine) do not support running unit tests against .NET core yet. Hopefully we will get that support in NUnit 3.4.
In the meantime, you can use NUnitLite to switch your tests to a self-executing test runner.
I wrote a blog post on the process at Testing .NET Core using NUnit 3. A quick summary is;
- Create a .NET Core Console application for your test project.
- Reference NUnit and NUnitLite from your test project. You do not need the runner.
- Modify
main()
to execute the unit tests.
It should look like this;
using NUnitLite;
using System;
using System.Reflection;
namespace MyDnxProject.Test
{
public class Program
{
public int Main(string[] args)
{
var writter = new ExtendedTextWrapper(Console.Out);
new AutoRun(typeof(Program).GetTypeInfo().Assembly).Execute(args, writter, Console.In);
}
}
}
For more complete information, see my blog post.