Multi-project test dependencies with gradle

JavaGradleBuildDependenciesMulti Project

Java Problem Overview


I have a multi-project configuration and I want to use gradle.

My projects are like this:

  • Project A
    • -> src/main/java

    • -> src/test/java

  • Project B
    • -> src/main/java (depends on src/main/java on Project A)
    • -> src/test/java (depends on src/test/java on Project A)

My Project B build.gradle file is like this:

apply plugin: 'java'
dependencies {
  compile project(':ProjectA')
}

The task compileJava work great but the compileTestJava does not compile the test file from Project A.

Java Solutions


Solution 1 - Java

Deprecated - For Gradle 5.6 and above use this answer.

In Project B, you just need to add a testCompile dependency:

dependencies {
  ...
  testCompile project(':A').sourceSets.test.output
}

Tested with Gradle 1.7.

Solution 2 - Java

This is now supported as a first class feature in Gradle. Modules with java or java-library plugins can also include a java-test-fixtures plugin which exposes helper classes and resources to be consumed with testFixtures helper. Benefit of this approach against artifacts and classifiers are:

  • proper dependency management (implementation/api)
  • nice separation from test code (separate source set)
  • no need to filter out test classes to expose only utilities
  • maintained by Gradle

Example

:modul:one

modul/one/build.gradle
plugins {
  id "java-library" // or "java"
  id "java-test-fixtures"
}
modul/one/src/testFixtures/java/com/example/Helper.java
package com.example;
public class Helper {}

:modul:other

modul/other/build.gradle
plugins {
  id "java" // or "java-library"
}
dependencies {
  testImplementation(testFixtures(project(":modul:one")))
}
modul/other/src/test/java/com/example/other/SomeTest.java
package com.example.other;
import com.example.Helper;
public class SomeTest {
  @Test void f() {
    new Helper(); // used from :modul:one's testFixtures
  }
}

Further reading

For more info, see the documentation:
https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/java_testing.html#sec:java_test_fixtures

It was added in 5.6:
https://docs.gradle.org/5.6/release-notes.html#test-fixtures-for-java-projects

Solution 3 - Java

Simple way is to add explicit task dependency in ProjectB:

compileTestJava.dependsOn tasks.getByPath(':ProjectA:testClasses')

Difficult (but more clear) way is to create additional artifact configuration for ProjectA:

task myTestsJar(type: Jar) { 
  // pack whatever you need...
}

configurations {
  testArtifacts
}

artifacts {
   testArtifacts myTestsJar
}

and add the testCompile dependency for ProjectB

apply plugin: 'java'
dependencies {
  compile project(':ProjectA')
  testCompile project(path: ':ProjectA', configuration: 'testArtifacts')
}

Solution 4 - Java

I've come across this problem myself recently, and man is this a tough issues to find answers for.

The mistake you are making is thinking that a project should export its test elements in the same way that it exports its primary artifacts and dependencies.

What I had a lot more success with personally was making a new project in Gradle. In your example, I would name it

Project A_Test -> src/main/java

I would put into the src/main/java the files that you currently have in Project A/src/test/java. Make any testCompile dependencies of your Project A compile dependencies of Project A_Test.

Then make Project A_Test a testCompile dependency of Project B.

It's not logical when you come at it from the perspective of the author of both projects, but I think it makes a lot of sense when you think about projects like junit and scalatest (and others. Even though those frameworks are testing-related, they are not considered part of the "test" targets within their own frameworks - they produce primary artifacts that other projects just happen to use within their test configuration. You just want to follow that same pattern.

Trying to do the other answers listed here did not work for me personally (using Gradle 1.9), but I've found that the pattern I describe here is a cleaner solution anyway.

Solution 5 - Java

I know it's an old question but I just had the same problem and spent some time figuring out what is going on. I'm using Gradle 1.9. All changes should be in ProjectB's build.gradle

To use test classes from ProjectA in tests of ProjectB:

testCompile files(project(':ProjectA').sourceSets.test.output.classesDir)

To make sure that sourceSets property is available for ProjectA:

evaluationDependsOn(':ProjectA')

To make sure test classes from ProjectA are actually there, when you compile ProjectB:

compileTestJava.dependsOn tasks.getByPath(':ProjectA:testClasses')

Solution 6 - Java

Please read the update bellow.

Similar problems described by JustACluelessNewbie occurs in IntelliJ IDEA. Problem is that dependency testCompile project(':core').sourceSets.test.output actually means: "depend on classes generated by gradle build task". So if you open clean project where classes are not generated yet IDEA won't recognise them and reports error.

To fix this problem you have to add a dependency on test source files next to dependency on compiled classes.

// First dependency is for IDEA
testCompileOnly files { project(':core').sourceSets.test.java.srcDirs }
// Second is for Gradle
testCompile project(':core').sourceSets.test.output

You can observe dependencies recognised by IDEA in Module Settings -> Dependencies (test scope).

Btw. this is not nice solution so refactoring is worth considering. Gradle itself does have special subproject containing test-support classes only. See https://docs.gradle.org/current/userguide/test_kit.html

Update 2016-06-05 More I am thinking about proposed solution less I like it. There are few problems with it:

  1. It creates two dependencies in IDEA. One points to test sources another to compiled classes. And it is crucial in which order these dependencies are recognised by IDEA. You can play with it by changing dependency order in Module settings -> Dependencies tab.
  2. By declaring these dependencies you are unnecessarily polluting dependency structure.

So what's the better solution? In my opinion it's creating new custom source set and putting shared classes into it. Actually authors of Gradle project did it by creating testFixtures source set.

To do it you just have to:

  1. Create source set and add necessary configurations. Check this script plugin used in Gradle project: https://github.com/gradle/gradle/blob/v4.0.0/gradle/testFixtures.gradle

  2. Declare proper dependency in dependent project:

    dependencies {
        testCompile project(path: ':module-with-shared-classes', configuration: 'testFixturesUsageCompile')
    }
    
  3. Import Gradle project to IDEA and use the "create separate module per source set" option while importing.

Solution 7 - Java

New testJar based (trnsitive dependancies supported) solution available as gradle plugin:

https://github.com/hauner/gradle-plugins/tree/master/jartest

https://plugins.gradle.org/plugin/com.github.hauner.jarTest/1.0

From documentation

> In case you have a multi-project gradle build you may have test > dependencies between sub-projects (which probably is a hint that your > projects are not well structured). > > For example assume a project where the sub-project Project B depends > on Project A and B does not only have a compile dependency on A but > also a test dependency. To compile and run the tests of B we need some > test helper classes from A. > > By default gradle does not create a jar artifact from the test build > output of a project. > > This plugin adds a testArchives configuration (based on testCompile) > and a jarTest task to create a jar from the test source set (with the > classifier test added to name of the jar). We can then depend in B on > the testArchives configuration of A (which will also include the > transitive dependencies of A). > > In A we would add the plugin to build.gradle: > > apply plugin: 'com.github.hauner.jarTest' > > In B we reference the > testArchives configuration like this: > >

dependencies {
    ...
    testCompile project (path: ':ProjectA', configuration: 'testArchives') 
}

Solution 8 - Java

The Fesler's solution haven't worked for me, when i tried it to build an android project (gradle 2.2.0). So i had to reference required classes manually :

android {
    sourceSets {
        androidTest {
            java.srcDir project(':A').file("src/androidTest/java")
        }
        test {
            java.srcDir project(':A').file("src/test/java")
        }
    }
}

Solution 9 - Java

I'm so late to the party (it is now Gradle v4.4) but for anyone else who finds this:

Assuming:

~/allProjects
|
|-/ProjectA/module-a/src/test/java
|
|-/ProjectB/module-b/src/test/java

Go to the build.gradle of project B (the one that needs some test classes from A) and add the following:

sourceSets {
    String sharedTestDir = "${projectDir}"+'/module-b/src/test/java'
    test {
        java.srcDir sharedTestDir
    }
}

or (assuming your project is named ProjectB)

sourceSets {
    String sharedTestDir = project(':ProjectB').file("module-b/src/test/java")
    test {
        java.srcDir sharedTestDir
    }
}

Voila!

Solution 10 - Java

Creating test-jar For Gradle 6.6.x

I know that there are many sources telling you, that is not OK, fe:

But this is so damn simple and I just don't like the idea of having common test classes separately in testFixtures folder.

So in module A:

task jarTests(type: Jar, dependsOn: testClasses) {
    classifier = 'tests'
    from sourceSets.test.output
}
configurations {
    tests {
        extendsFrom testRuntime
    }
}
artifacts {
    tests jarTests
}

And in module B:

testImplementation project(':moduleA')
testImplementation project(path: ':moduleA', configuration: 'tests')

And it just works!

Solution 11 - Java

Here if you are using Kotlin DSL, you should create your task like that according to Gradle documentation.

Like some previous answer, you need to create a special configuration inside the project that will share its tests class, so that you don't mix test and main classes.

Simple steps
  1. In project A you would need to add in your build.gradle.kts :
configurations {
    create("test")
}

tasks.register<Jar>("testArchive") {
    archiveBaseName.set("ProjectA-test")
    from(project.the<SourceSetContainer>()["test"].output)
}

artifacts {
    add("test", tasks["testArchive"])
}
  1. Then in your project B in the dependencies, you will need to add in your build.gradle.kts:
dependencies {
    implementation(project(":ProjectA"))
    testImplementation(project(":ProjectA", "test"))
}

Solution 12 - Java

If you want to use artifact dependencies to have:

  • ProjectB's source classes depend on Project A's source classes
  • ProjectB's test classes depend on Project A's test classes

then ProjectB's dependencies section in build.gradle should look something like this:

dependencies {

  compile("com.example:projecta:1.0.0")

  testCompile("com.example:projecta:1.0.0:tests")

}

For this to work ProjectA needs to build a -tests jar and include it in the artifacts it produces.

ProjectA's build.gradle should contain configuration like this:

task testsJar(type: Jar, dependsOn: testClasses) {
    classifier = 'tests'
    from sourceSets.test.output
}

configurations {
    tests
}

artifacts {
    tests testsJar
    archives testsJar
}

jar.finalizedBy(testsJar)

When ProjectA's artifacts are published to your artifactory they will include a -tests jar.

The testCompile in ProjectB's dependencies section will bring in the classes in the -tests jar.


If you want to includeFlat ProjectA's source and test classes in ProjectB for development purposes then the dependencies section in ProjectB's build.gradle would look like this:

dependencies {

  compile project(':projecta')

  testCompile project(path: ':projecta', configuration: 'tests')

}

Solution 13 - Java

If you have mock dependencies which you need to share between tests, you can create new project projectA-mock and then add it as test dependency to ProjectA and ProjectB:

dependencies {
  testCompile project(':projectA-mock')
}

This is clear solution to share mock dependencies, but if you need to run tests from ProjectA in ProjectB use other solution.

Solution 14 - Java

The solution mentioned by Nikita for Android + Kotlin looks like this:

task jarTests(type: Jar, dependsOn: "assembleDebugUnitTest") {
    getArchiveClassifier().set('tests')
    from "$buildDir/tmp/kotlin-classes/debugUnitTest"
}

configurations {
    unitTestArtifact
}

artifacts {
    unitTestArtifact jarTests
}

Gradle for project that is going to use dependencies:

testImplementation project(path: ':shared', configuration: 'unitTestArtifact')

Solution 15 - Java

Some of the other answers caused errors one way or another - Gradle did not detect test classes from other projects or Eclipse project had invalid dependencies when imported. If anyone has the same problem, I suggest going with:

testCompile project(':core')
testCompile files(project(':core').sourceSets.test.output.classesDir)

The first line forces the Eclipse to link the other project as dependency, so all sources are included and up to date. The second allows Gradle to actually see the sources, while not causing any invalid dependency errors like testCompile project(':core').sourceSets.test.output does.

Solution 16 - Java

If you are struggling to adapt the solution to the Gradle Kotlin DSL this is the equivalent:

configurations {
    register("testClasses") {
        extendsFrom(testImplementation.get())
    }
}
val testJar = tasks.register<Jar>("testJar") {
    archiveClassifier.set("test")
    from(sourceSets.test)
}
artifacts.add("testClasses", testJar) 

Solution 17 - Java

in project B:

dependencies {
  testCompile project(':projectA').sourceSets.test.output
}

Seems to work in 1.7-rc-2

Attributions

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