Question

I have a xUnit.net Test as follows:

static class MyTestClass
{
    [Fact]
    static void MyTestMethod() 
    {
    }
}

The xUnit plugin for VS 2012 says:

No tests found to run.

TestDriven.net runs it fine but mentions something about Ad hoc:

1 passed, 0 failed, 0 skipped (see 'Task List'), took 0.47 seconds (Ad hoc)

TeamCity, xunit.gui.exe and xunit.console.exe and Visual Studio also can't find TestMethod

(I've got xunit.runner.visualstudio installed and VS is seeing some tests.)

What gives?

Was it helpful?

Solution

TL;DR your Test Classes must be public (but your Test Methods can be private and/or static)


For reasons of efficiency, the xUnit authors have opted to not use BindingFlags.NonPublic when searching for Test Classes in the runner (the MSIL metadata tables don't index private(/internal) classes to the same degree hence there is a significant performance difference in the relative efficiency that Reflection can thus achieve).

As a result of the above, the fact that your class is private means it doesn't get picked up.

The fact that the Test Method is private and static is fine - xUnit by design since 1.0 has supported both those aspects.

Note that the Visual Studio xUnit Runner extension, xunit.console.exe (and the GUI), the xunit MSBuild task, Resharper and CodeRush are all consistent in honouring this (although arguably they [especially the latter two] could do more to flag when a Test Class (i.e. class [potentially indirectly] containing Fact-derived annoations) is private).

The reason TestDriven.net runs your test is that the Author of TestDriven.net has put great effort into making it Just Work. It internally uses a special Test Runner wrapper/shim (termed the Adhoc Runner) to run your test. Be aware that the method is actually not being run via the xUnit.net runner and hence any attributes you put on your test that have side effects will not be triggered.

Notably NUnit (and I'm pretty sure MSTest) do use private reflection [and hence pick up tests in private classes] which is probably why it never seemed an important thing for you to worry about before.

Note: A side effect / trick enabled by this is that you can make a Test Class private as a quick way of Skipping all tests in a Test Class [and any nested classes]. (Sadly the cases on this planet of this being used unintentionally vastly outnumber the intentional cases of this though!)

OTHER TIPS

This answer is for VS 2013, but the steps are essentially the same for VS 2012. This applies for running via ReSharper's unit test functionality.

  1. Install the xUnit.net runner for Visual Studio 2013 (be careful running Visual Studio as an Administrator, or the tests may not run when running the IDE as a non-Admin):

    a. From within Visual Studio 2013, go to Tools -> Extensions and Updates -> Online

    b. Search for xUnit.net runner for Visual Studio 2012 and 2013

    c. Then download (install) it. If upgrading to VS 2013 from VS 2012, it is suggested that this be uninstalled, and then re-installed.

    d. Restart Visual Studio.

  2. If ReSharper is installed, install the xUnit.net test runner plugin :

    (NOTE: Since ReSharper 2016.1, xunit support is built in to ReSharper, meaning the xunit plugin is no longer required.)

    a. In Visual Studio 2013, Navigate: Resharper -> Extension Manager.

    b. On the left, select Online.

    c. Search for “xunit.net”. Select the “xUnit.net Test Support”. Click Install.

    d. Restart Visual Studio 2013.

  3. “Clean” the solution

    a. In the IDE, in Solution Explorer, right-click the solution, and choose “Clean”.

    b. Re-compile.

    c. Now, when right-clicking a [Fact] attribute, select Resharper’s “Run Unit Tests” (as opposed to the default “Run Tests”)

Troubleshooting running with XUnit:

  • If problems running the [Fact] tests with XUnit persist, it might be necessary to manually remove the xUnit package from any/all of the following folders (review content for the xunit DLLs, then delete xUnit folder if found):

    • C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 12.0\Common7\IDE\Extensions\

    • C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\Microsoft\VisualStudio\12.0\Extensions\

  • As for ReSharper, try un-installing and re-installing the xunitcontrib library (xUnit.net Test Support). I have noticed once when un-installing, some error messages flashing past. I grabbed a screen-shot at one point, and it listed:

    • Access to the path C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\JetBrains\ReSharper\vAny\packages\xunitcontrib.1.3.0\ReSharper\v8.1\plugins\xunit.dll is denied.
    • ... and the same for the other DLLs in that directory

To resolve this, delete the C:\Users\<username>\AppData\Local\JetBrains\ReSharper\vAny\packages\xunitcontrib.1.3.0\ directory after uninstalling from Visual Studio, then run Visual Studio as a non-administrator, and re-install via ReSharper (Resharper -> Extension Manager)

From http://xunit.github.io/docs/getting-started-desktop.html#run-tests-visualstudio:

If you're having problems discovering or running tests, you may be a victim of a corrupted runner cache inside Visual Studio. To clear this cache, shut down all instances of Visual Studio, then delete the folder %TEMP%\VisualStudioTestExplorerExtensions. Also make sure your project is only linked against a single version of the Visual Studio runner NuGet package (xunit.runner.visualstudio).

I had the same issue in VS2017 RC, .NET core 1.1 project. Updating xunit.runner worked for me,

Install-Package xunit.runner.visualstudio

(As referred to by @Kyle in the comments on the other answer) The same No tests found to run message can result from using NuGet to get xUnit.dll and ending up with version 2.0.0 (which is currently marked as prerelease as some core functionality like discovering of v1 tests etc. has yet to be implemented in that branch).

The resolution in this case is to select Stable Only versions (as opposed to Include Prerelease) in the NuGet package manager.

In my case, in order to see any tests, I had to complete the following steps:

(All installed through NuGet Package Manager)

  1. Install xUnit v2.0.50727
  2. Install xUnit.extensions v2.0.50727
  3. Navigate to the following link and follow the steps outlined in the documentation: http://xunit.github.io/docs/running-tests-in-vs.html

I'm using Visual Studio 2013 Premium. (Resharper NOT installed)

For me, the combination of my test class and test method names were too long; xUnit appears to have some cap on this combination.

Shortening the name of just the test method allowed xUnit to discover that single test. Shortening the name of the entire class allowed xUnit to discover all tests in the class.

Threshold of class name + method name appears to be 172 characters.

I've been having this issue with .NET Core for a while now where a test class or a test method is not being discovered. The following fix works for me:

  1. Open a command prompt window.
  2. Change to the project directory.
  3. Build the project running the following command:

    dotnet build
    

NOTE: Building from Visual Studio.NET will not work! <<<<<<<<<<< IMPORTANT!

  1. Run the tests: Test --> Run --> Test All - CTRL+R +A (this will discover the new test(s) - but not run the the new test(s).
  2. Run the tests again.
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