NUnit 3.0
NUnit is a unit-testing framework for all .Net languages. Initially ported from JUnit, the current production release, version 2.6, is the seventh major release of this xUnit based unit testing tool for Microsoft .NET. It is written entirely in C# and has been completely redesigned to take advantage of many .NET language features, for example custom attributes and other reflection related capabilities. NUnit brings xUnit to all .NET languages.
This repository is for the upcoming 3.0 version of the framework. The vision is that the NUnit 3.0 Extended Testing Platform will be a world-class platform for individuals and teams using a test-centric approach to .NET software development.
If you are interested in helping with NUnit development, we welcome bug reports, enhancements and pull requests. A great place to start is by reading the Developer FAQ and then checking the outstanding issues.
License
NUnit 3.0 is under the MIT license. All previous versions were released under the NUnit license. Both of these licenses allow the use of NUnit in free and commercial applications and libraries without restrictions.
Contributors
The NUnit 3.0 team is led by Charlie Poole and Rob Prouse. Terje Sandstrom maintains the Visual Studio adapters and Neil Colvin keeps the CF version of the framework on track.
Other members of the NUnit team are;
- Simone Busoli
- Andreas Schlapsi
- Igor Ziselman
- Vladimir Kloz
- Matthew Moore
- Andrew Gray
- Chris Smith
- Sergey Popov
- elksson
- Nikolay Pianikov
NUnit would also not be possible without the numerous contributions from the community. A complete list of contributors since NUnit migrated to Git can be found on GitHub.
Earlier versions of NUnit were developed by Charlie Poole, James W. Newkirk, Alexei A. Vorontsov, Michael C. Two and Philip A. Craig.
We would also like to thank the following people for their contributions and support: Jamie Cansdale, Cvetomir Todorov, Doug de la Torre, David White, Ethan Smith, Al Gonzalez, Ron Jeffries and Rob Jeffries. A special acknowledgment needs to be sent to Kent Beck and Erich Gamma because without their efforts none of this would have been possible.