Death to haphazard monkey-patching! Extend Minitest through simple hooks.
gem install minitest-reporters
In your test_helper.rb
file, add the following lines:
require "minitest/reporters"
Minitest::Reporters.use!
This will swap out the Minitest runner to the custom one used by minitest-reporters and use the correct reporters for Textmate, Rubymine, and the console. If you would like to write your own reporter, just include Minitest::Reporter
and override the methods you'd like. Take a look at the provided reporters for examples.
Don't like the default progress bar reporter?
Minitest::Reporters.use! Minitest::Reporters::SpecReporter.new
Want to use multiple reporters?
Minitest::Reporters.use! [Minitest::Reporters::SpecReporter.new, Minitest::Reporters::JUnitReporter.new]
The following reporters are provided:
Minitest::Reporters::DefaultReporter # => Redgreen-capable version of standard Minitest reporter
Minitest::Reporters::SpecReporter # => Turn-like output that reads like a spec
Minitest::Reporters::ProgressReporter # => Fuubar-like output with a progress bar
Minitest::Reporters::RubyMateReporter # => Simple reporter designed for RubyMate
Minitest::Reporters::RubyMineReporter # => Reporter designed for RubyMine IDE and TeamCity CI server
Minitest::Reporters::JUnitReporter # => JUnit test reporter designed for JetBrains TeamCity
Minitest::Reporters::MeanTimeReporter # => Produces a report summary showing the slowest running tests
Minitest::Reporters::HtmlReporter # => Generates an HTML report of the test results
Options can be passed to these reporters at construction-time, e.g. to force
color output from DefaultReporter
:
Minitest::Reporters.use! [Minitest::Reporters::DefaultReporter.new(:color => true)]
Default Reporter
Spec Reporter
Progress Reporter
If you are using minitest-reporters with ActiveSupport 3.x, make sure that you require ActiveSupport before invoking Minitest::Reporters.use!
. Minitest-reporters fixes incompatibilities caused by monkey patches in ActiveSupport 3.x. ActiveSupport 4.x is unaffected.
Rails Backtrace Filtering and Custom Backtrace Filtering
Minitest lets you configures your own, custom backtrace filter via
Minitest.backtrace_filter=
. If you're using Rails, then by default
Minitest.backtrace_filter
is a filter designed specially for Rails.
But minitest-reporters overwrites Minitest.backtrace_filter
by default. That means it
will overwrite your custom filter and Rails' default filter. (You'll know this is
happening if you see overly long or otherwise unexpected backtraces.)
To avoid that, you must manually tell minitest-reporters which filter to use. In Rails,
do this in test_helper.rb
:
Minitest::Reporters.use!(
Minitest::Reporters::DefaultReporter.new,
ENV,
Minitest.backtrace_filter
)
The third parameter to .use!
, in this case Minitest.backtrace_filter
, should be a
filter object. In the above example, you're telling minitest-reporters to use the filter
that Rails has already set.
- Fork the project.
- Make your feature addition or bug fix.
- Add tests for it. This is important so I don't break it in a future version unintentionally.
- Commit, but do not mess with the
Rakefile
. If you want to have your own version, that is fine but bump the version in a commit by itself in another branch so I can ignore it when I pull. - Send me a pull request. Bonus points for git flow feature branches.
Minitest-reporters is licensed under the MIT License. See LICENSE
for details.