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Maven

warning

Features described in this document are being deprecated as part of the transition to Test Workflows - Read More.

Testkube allows you to run Maven-based tasks which could be also tests. For example, we can easily run JUnit tests in Testkube now.

  • Default command for this executor: mvn
  • Default arguments for this executor command: --settings <settingsFile> <goalName> -Duser.home <mavenHome>

Parameters in <> are calculated at test execution:

  • <settingsFile> - Will be calculated based on the contents of the --variables-file argument; when missing, this will be skipped.
  • <goalName> - Will be set to test if the test type is maven/test, integration-test in the case of maven/integration-test, and it will be empty on test type maven/project.
  • <mavenHome> - Will be set to /home/maven, unless the user of the image has been changed.

See more at "Redefining the Prebuilt Executor Command and Arguments" on the Creating Test page.

🎓What is Maven?
  • Maven is a build automation tool used primarily for Java projects.
  • Paired with JUnit, a testing framework that is built in the Maven project format, you can build and run unit tests for your projects.

Test Environment

We'll try to add a simple JUnit test to our cluster and run it. Testkube Maven Executor handles mvn and mvnw binaries. Because Maven projects are quite complicated in terms of directory structure. We'll need to load them from a Git directory.

You can find example projects in the repository here: https://github.com/kubeshop/testkube-executor-maven/tree/main/examples.

Let's create a simple test which will check if an env variable is set to true:

package hello.maven;

import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.*;

class LibraryTest {
@Test void someLibraryMethodReturnsTrue() {
String env = System.getenv("TESTKUBE_MAVEN");
assertTrue(Boolean.parseBoolean(env), "TESTKUBE_MAVEN env should be true");
}
}

The default Maven executor:

apiVersion: executor.testkube.io/v1
kind: Executor
metadata:
name: maven-executor
namespace: testkube
spec:
image: kubeshop/testkube-maven-executor:0.1.4
types:
- maven/project
- maven/test
- maven/integration-test

As we can see, there are several types. The Maven executor handles the second part after / as a task name, so maven/test will run mvn test and so on.

One exception from this rule is project which is a generic one and forces you to pass additional arguments during test execution. For example:

kubectl testkube run maven-example-project --args='runMyCustomTask' 

Create a New Maven-based Test

kubectl testkube create test --git-uri https://github.com/kubeshop/testkube-executor-maven.git --git-path examples/hello-maven --type maven/test --name maven-example-test --git-branch main

Unless the kubectl testkube run test maven-example-test... does not overwrite it, this is equal to creating the following command in the hello-maven folder:

$ mvn test -Duser.home /home/maven 

Running a Test

Let's pass the env variable to our test run:

kubectl testkube run test maven-example-test -f -v TESTKUBE_MAVEN=true

# ...... after some time

Test execution completed with success in 16.555s 🥇

Watch the test execution until complete:
$ kubectl testkube watch execution 62d148db0260f256c1a1e993


Use the following command to get test execution details:
$ kubectl testkube get execution 62d148db0260f256c1a1e993

Getting Test Results

Now we can watch/get test execution details:

kubectl testkube get execution 62d148db0260f256c1a1e993

Output:

# ....... a lot of Maven logs

Downloaded from central: https://repo.maven.apache.org/maven2/org/junit/platform/junit-platform-launcher/1.7.2/junit-platform-launcher-1.7.2.pom (3.0 kB at 121 kB/s)
[INFO]
[INFO] -------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] T E S T S
[INFO] -------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] Running hello.maven.LibraryTest
[INFO] Tests run: 1, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0, Time elapsed: 0.052 s - in hello.maven.LibraryTest
[INFO]
[INFO] Results:
[INFO]
[INFO] Tests run: 1, Failures: 0, Errors: 0, Skipped: 0
[INFO]
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] BUILD SUCCESS
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------
[INFO] Total time: 9.851 s
[INFO] Finished at: 2022-07-18T09:06:15Z
[INFO] ------------------------------------------------------------------------

Status Test execution completed with success 🥇

Using Different Commands and Arguments

Updating the commands and arguments is possible on both test and execution level.

As an example, during a debug session, you could pass pwd in as the command in order to find out the current path:

kubectl testkube run test maven-example-test --command "pwd" --args-mode "override" --args "-L"

If you check the execution logs, you will see that the path "/data/repo" is printed out. No Gradle command will be executed in this case, but you will notice that the rest of the preparations, like cloning the repo, have been done.

Using Different JDKs

In the Java world, usually you want to have control over your Runtime environment. Testkube can easily handle that for you! We're building several Java images to handle constraints which Maven can put in its build file.

To use a different executor you can use one of our pre-built ones (for Java 8,11,17,18) or build your own Docker image based on a Maven executor.

Let's assume we need JDK18 for our test runs. To handle that issue, create a new Maven executor:

content of maven-jdk18-executor.yaml

apiVersion: executor.testkube.io/v1
kind: Executor
metadata:
name: maven-jdk18-executor
namespace: testkube
spec:
image: kubeshop/testkube-maven-executor:0.1.0-jdk18 # <-- we're building jdk
types:
- maven:jdk18/project # <-- just create different test type with naming convention "framework:version/type"
- maven:jdk18/test
- maven:jdk18/integration-test

Tip: Look for recent executor versions here https://hub.docker.com/repository/registry-1.docker.io/kubeshop/testkube-maven-executor/tags?page=1&ordering=last_updated.

And add it to your cluster:

kubectl apply -f maven-jdk18-executor.yaml 

Now, create a new test with a type which our new executor can handle e.g.: maven:jdk18/test

 # create test
kubectl testkube create test --git-uri https://github.com/kubeshop/testkube-executor-maven.git --git-path examples/hello-maven-jdk18 --type maven:jdk18/test --name maven-jdk18-example-test --git-branch main

# and run it
kubectl testkube run test maven-jdk18-example-test -f -v TESTKUBE_MAVEN=true

Summary

Testkube simplifies running Java tests based on Maven and simplifies the merging of Java based tests into your global testing ecosystem.