CI::Reporter is an add-on to Test::Unit, RSpec and Cucumber that allows you to generate XML reports of your test, spec and/or feature runs. The resulting files can be read by a continuous integration system that understands Ant's JUnit report XML format, thus allowing your CI system to track test/spec successes and failures. == Installation CI::Reporter is available as a gem. To install the gem, use the usual gem command: gem install ci_reporter == Usage CI::Reporter works best with projects that use a +Rakefile+ along with the standard Rake::TestTask or Spec::Rake::SpecTask/RSpec::Core::RakeTask tasks for running tests or examples, respectively. In this fashion, it hooks into Test::Unit or +RSpec+ using environment variables recognized by these custom tasks to inject the CI::Reporter code into the test or spec runs. If you're using the Rails plugin, step 1 is unnecessary; skip to step 2. 1. To use CI::Reporter, simply add the following lines to your Rakefile: require 'rubygems' require 'ci/reporter/rake/rspec' # use this if you're using RSpec require 'ci/reporter/rake/cucumber' # use this if you're using Cucumber require 'ci/reporter/rake/test_unit' # use this if you're using Test::Unit require 'ci/reporter/rake/minitest' # use this if you're using MiniTest::Unit 2. Next, either modify your Rakefile to make the ci:setup:rspec, ci:setup:cucumber or ci:setup:testunit task a dependency of your test tasks, or include them on the Rake command-line before the name of the task that runs the tests or specs. rake ci:setup:testunit test Report files are written, by default, to the test/reports, features/reports or spec/reports subdirectory of your project. If you wish to customize the location, simply set the environment variable CI_REPORTS (either in the environment, on the Rake command line, or in your Rakefile) to the location where they should go. == Advanced Usage If you don't have control over the Rakefile or don't want to modify it, CI::Reporter has a substitute rake file that you can specify on the command-line. It assumes that the main project rake file is called +Rakefile+ and lives in the current directory. Run like so: rake -f GEM_PATH/stub.rake ci:setup:testunit test rake -f GEM_PATH/stub.rake ci:setup:minitest test rake -f GEM_PATH/stub.rake ci:setup:rspec spec rake -f GEM_PATH/stub.rake ci:setup:cucumber features If for some reason you can't use the above technique to inject CI::Reporter (e.g., you're not using Rake), you'll have to do one of these: 1. If you're using Test::Unit, ensure the ci/reporter/rake/test_unit_loader.rb file is loaded or required at some point before the tests are run. 2. If you're using +RSpec+, you'll need to pass the following arguments to the +spec+ command: --require GEM_PATH/lib/ci/reporter/rake/rspec_loader --format CI::Reporter::RSpec 3. If you're using Cucumber, you'll need to cheat slightly so that Cucumber's step definition autoloading will still work. Instead of calling the +cucumber+ script directly, run: ruby -r GEM_PATH/lib/ci/reporter/rake/cucumber_loader -S cucumber --format CI::Reporter::Cucumber There's a bit of a chicken and egg problem because rubygems needs to be loaded before you can require any CI::Reporter files. If you cringe hard-coding a full path to a specific version of the gem, you can also copy the +cucumber_loader+ file into your project and require it directly -- the contents are version-agnostic and are not likely to change in future releases. == Environment Variables * +CI_REPORTS+: if set, points to a directory where report files will be written. * +CI_CAPTURE+: if set to value "off", stdout/stderr capture will be disabled. == Source You can get the CI::Reporter source using Git, in any of the following ways: git clone git://git.caldersphere.net/ci_reporter.git git clone git://github.com/nicksieger/ci_reporter.git You can also download a tarball of the latest CI::Reporter source at http://github.com/nicksieger/ci_reporter/. == License This software is released under an MIT license. For details, see the LICENSE.txt file included with the distribution. The software is copyright (c) 2006-2010 Nick Sieger .