XCode 5 unit testing: starts my app

前端 未结 7 1743
挽巷
挽巷 2020-11-29 23:04

When I run my tests in XCode 5, the main window of my OS X app appears on the screen for a couple of seconds while running the tests. Why? Even if I uncomment all my tests i

相关标签:
7条回答
  • 2020-11-29 23:35

    With XCTest, application files DO NOT need to be included within XCTest targets. The XCTest bundle is linked against the application which makes those files available during runtime.

    To make this work, ensure the compiler option "Symbols hidden by default" is set to NO Within the Application target.

    Here is a blog post with screenshots for clarity: http://zmcartor.github.io/code/2014/02/24/slim-xctest-targets

    The advantage of this approach is test target builds much much faster.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-29 23:38

    You are running application test, not logic test. This means an instance of your app will be started and then run the unit tests. This allow you to perform some integration test that require your app is running.

    Here is the guide to setup application test and logic test.

    If you want to change it to logic test (so it run faster and don't need to start your app first):

    1. go to build settings for your unit test target
    2. search Bundle
    3. remove Bundle Loader and Test Host

    enter image description here

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-29 23:41

    On XCode5, the app does start. This answer shows how to change its delegate when running unit tests so that it exits right away: https://stackoverflow.com/a/20588035/239408

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-29 23:44

    If the tests are for code that can run on desktop and mobile, you can run them without a simulator or hosting them within your app.

    The trouble is that you cannot use the scheme chooser for your normal target (desktop or iOS) to run the test.

    The following worked for me in Xcode6.

    File > New Target...
    

    Select Cocoa Testing Bundle from the OS X category.

    enter image description here

    Take care to select None from the target drop-down.

    Specify new test target

    Click Finish. Add the relevant files to the new target as described above.

    Now create a scheme to run the test.

    Click the schemes chooser top-right and choose New Scheme..., click the drop-down and navigate down the list to the new target. Now you can choose the scheme from the schemes chooser, and use ⌘U to run the tests.

    enter image description here

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-29 23:47

    Thats right, you have to delete the "Bundle Loader" and "Test Host" from your build settings.

    But you have to add the necessary implementation files to your unit test target. The necessary files are what you want to use in your unit test cases. You need to do this because in logic tests XCode wont compile the whole application. So some of your files will be missing.

    This is en error message if you have left out a file:

    Undefined symbols for architecture i386:
      "_OBJC_CLASS_$_Module", referenced from:
          objc-class-ref in Lobic Network.o
          objc-class-ref in Logic_Unit.o
    ld: symbol(s) not found for architecture i386
    clang: error: linker command failed with exit code 1 (use -v to see invocation)
    

    You can add the missing files by selecting the implementation file and bringing up the file inspector. There will be a section named "Target Membership" and there you can set the files target membership to your unit test also.

    0 讨论(0)
  • 2020-11-29 23:48

    I just wasted a morning on this.

    Project was created in XCode 4 and used SenTesting.

    Tried migrating tests on XCode 5/XCTTest

    Had same issue - app ran in simulator and test never started after trying everything (change from app to logic tests, change to XCTest, remove SenTesting)

    gave up created a clean XCode 5 project.

    Added all my files in and tests ran ok.

    May still have issues with Storyboard as these were built with XCode 4.

    Drastic but it works so keep it as last resort.

    0 讨论(0)
提交回复
热议问题