Skip to content

This is the simplest possible setup for Cucumber-JVM using Java.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

AndrzejProchyra/cucumber-java-skeleton

 
 

Repository files navigation

Cucumber-Java Skeleton

Build Status

This is the simplest possible build script setup for Cucumber using Java. There is nothing fancy like a webapp or browser testing. All this does is to show you how to install and run Cucumber!

There is a single feature file with one scenario. The scenario has three steps, two of them pending. See if you can make them all pass!

Get the code

Git:

git clone https://github.com/cucumber/cucumber-java-skeleton.git
cd cucumber-java-skeleton

Subversion:

svn checkout https://github.com/cucumber/cucumber-java-skeleton/trunk cucumber-java-skeleton
cd cucumber-java-skeleton

Or simply download a zip file.

Use Maven

Open a command window and run:

./mvnw test

This runs Cucumber features using Cucumber's JUnit runner. The @RunWith(Cucumber.class) annotation on the RunCucumberTest class tells JUnit to kick off Cucumber.

Use Gradle

Open a command window and run:

 ./gradlew test --rerun-tasks --info

This runs Cucumber features using Cucumber's JUnit runner. The @RunWith(Cucumber.class) annotation on the RunCucumberTest class tells JUnit to kick off Cucumber.

Overriding options

The Cucumber runtime parses command line options to know what features to run, where the glue code lives, what plugins to use etc. When you use the JUnit runner, these options are generated from the @CucumberOptions annotation on your test.

Sometimes it can be useful to override these options without changing or recompiling the JUnit class. This can be done with the cucumber.options system property. The general form is:

Using Maven:

mvn -Dcucumber.options="..." test

Using Gradle:

gradlew -Dcucumber.options="..." test

Let's look at some things you can do with cucumber.options. Try this:

-Dcucumber.options="--help"

That should list all the available options.

IMPORTANT

When you override options with -Dcucumber.options, you will completely override whatever options are hard-coded in your @CucumberOptions or in the script calling cucumber.api.cli.Main. There is one exception to this rule, and that is the --plugin option. This will not override, but add a plugin. The reason for this is to make it easier for 3rd party tools to automatically configure additional plugins by appending arguments to a cucumber.properties file.

Run a subset of Features or Scenarios

Specify a particular scenario by line (and use the pretty plugin, which prints the scenario back)

-Dcucumber.options="classpath:skeleton/belly.feature:4 --plugin pretty"

This works because Maven puts ./src/test/resources on your classpath. You can also specify files to run by filesystem path:

-Dcucumber.options="src/test/resources/skeleton/belly.feature:4 --plugin pretty"

You can also specify what to run by tag:

-Dcucumber.options="--tags @bar --plugin pretty"

Running only the scenarios that failed in the previous run

-Dcucumber.options="@target/rerun.txt"

This works as long as you have the rerun formatter enabled.

Specify a different formatter:

For example a JUnit formatter:

-Dcucumber.options="--plugin junit:target/cucumber-junit-report.xml"

About

This is the simplest possible setup for Cucumber-JVM using Java.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Makefile 48.0%
  • Java 42.6%
  • Gherkin 9.4%