- Test Explorer for .NET Core
- .NET Core is installed
- NUnit and MSTest requires a dotnet sdk version of >= 2.2.104 and running dotnet tooling in English (see #77 for details).
- Small update to make nunit and mstest work with .Net 5
Open a .NET Core test project, or set dotnet-test-explorer.testProjectPath
to the folder path of .NET Core test project. Then, you will see all the tests in Test Explorer. More information on how to set the testProjectPath can be found below under Settings.
The settings are available via File / Preferences / Settings
. Navigate to extensions and .NET Core test explorer.
dotnet-test-explorer.testProjectPath
Glob pattern that points to path of .NET Core test project(s). A common pattern is "**/*Tests.csproj"
.
Given the folder structure
- root
- testProjectOne
- testproject1.Tests.csproj
- testProjectTwo
- testproject2.Tests.csproj
- testProjectOne
the glob pattern "+(testProjectOne|testProjectTwo)" or "**/*Tests.csproj" should add both of the test projects.
dotnet-test-explorer.autoWatch
If true, starts dotnet watch test after test discovery is completed
dotnet-test-explorer.testArguments
Additional arguments that are added to the dotnet test command. These can for instance be used to collect code coverage data ("/p:CollectCoverage=true /p:CoverletOutputFormat=lcov /p:CoverletOutput=../../lcov.info"
) or pass test settings ("--settings:./myfilename.runSettings"
)
Press the stop button in the top menu. This also works as a reset of sorts so if the extension has managed to end up in a weird state where it thinks a test is running even though it is not or that the debugger is running even though it is not the stop button can solve these types of issues as well.
Text from the dotnet test output as well as debug info is written to the Output/Test explorer terminal window. To view the log you can access it simply by clicking the view log icon.
To debug a test, right click the test and choose to Debug test. The option to run and debug test that appear in the code lens are provided by the omnisharp plugin and has nothing to do with this extension.
The debugger might get stuck before loading your test assembly code. If this happens you can continue the debug process (F5) and it should load the rest of the assemblies and stop and the desired breakpoint.
-
Run all tests, default Alt+R Alt+A
-
Rerun last command, default Alt+R Alt+R
-
Run test(s) in context, default Alt+R Alt+C
This is because of limitations in the omnisharp extensions. We can only navigate to symbols which are in the currently selected workspace.
Try and change the setting dotnet-test-explorer.pathForResultFile to point to a folder you have access right too. CodeLens functionality also requires the C# extension)
This requires you to run dotnet SDK version 2.2.104 or higher. The extension tries to run the commands with the English cli but if things are not working as expected anyway it may be due to the cli language (see #77 for details).
See #201
See #56
See #179
By default, anonymous telemetry data collection is turned on to understand user behavior to improve this extension. To disable it, update the settings.json as below:
{
"dotnet-test-explorer.enableTelemetry": false
}
See Change Log here
If you find any bug or have any suggestion/feature request, please submit the issues to the GitHub Repo.
Thanks to all the contributors!
Special thanks to Stefan Forsberg (@stefanforsberg) for maintaining the project and implementing so many cool features! Also thanks to Janaka Abeywardhana (@janaka) for maintaining the project!