MoreUnit assists you in writing unit tests!
Searching for MoreUnit for Eclipse? Here it is!
Otherwise, please find our latest version here!
- Because some people moved from Eclipse to IntelliJ (we did) but miss MoreUnit.
- Because IntelliJ "Go To Test" does not support all programing languages.
- Because sometimes you write your production code with a language, and your tests with another one.
- Because not all tests are named "*Test".
- Works for all IntelliJ-based IDEs (AppCode, IDEA, PhpStorm, PyCharm, RubyMine, WebStorm, etc.)
- Jump form your production code to you test code, and vice-versa. To access the command:
- From the main menu: "Navigate" > "Jump to Test" or "Jump to Test Subject".
- From the contextual menu: "Go To" > "Jump to Test" or "Jump to Test Subject".
- From the "Find Action..." pop-up window: "Jump to Test / Test Subject".
- (It is advised to assign it a binding!)
- Should several candidates be found, a list is displayed for selection.
- Supported naming patterns:
- lower/upper CamelCase or word separated with hyphens, underscores or even spaces
- "test", "tests", "spec" or "should" suffixes (case insensitive, except for CamelCase style)
- "test", "tests" or "spec" prefixes (case insensitive, except for CamelCase style)
- Writing tests for your Java code in Scala? Your test code does not have to be written in the same language as you production code!
- Practicing TDD, having integration tests? You likely don't always have a one-to-one relationship
between your test and production files...
MoreUnit lets you simply jump to the last opened test file (respectively to the last opened production file). To access the command:- From the main menu: "Navigate" > "Jump to Last Opened Test" or "Jump to Last Opened Test Subject".
- From the contextual menu: "Go To" > "Jump to Last Opened Test" or "Jump to Last Opened Test Subject".
- From the "Find Action..." pop-up window: "Jump to Last Opened Test / Test Subject".
- (You should assign it a binding as well!)
- Work in progress, see the backlog...
- Works for all IntelliJ-based IDEs
- Generic support for all languages first, additions for specific languages can then follow
- Zero configuration
- KISS in general
- TDD only
- Continuous delivery: every significant bunch of commits will be deployed as soon as pushed (OK, we miss the publication part for now, but it's coming, see the FAQ)
Q: Why is there no default key binding?
A: It's almost impossible to find a binding that would not conflict with another existing one, or such a binding wouldn't be practical anyway. So we prefer to let you choose the one that suits you.
Q: I can't see MoreUnit in the plugins list, how am I supposed to install it?
A: We did not setup automatic publication to the IntelliJ plugin repository yet, but we're working on it. Meanwhile, you can download MoreUnit from the [Releases page] (https://github.com/MoreUnit/org.moreunit.intellij.plugin/releases).
Many thanks to:
- When several candidate files are found, order them by pertinence.
- When several candidate files are found, remember your last choice and pre-select it.
- When no candidate file is found, propose to create one at the right place.
- When a wizard already exists to create a test file (Groovy, Java, Scala), delegate the previous action to it.
- Allow for customizing content of files created via the previous action, using IntelliJ templates.
- When a production file gets renamed/moved, rename/move its associated test file(s) in mirror.
- Find tests even when test files contain some additional variable parts in their name. For instance,
MyClassWhenFooTest
may be a valid file name for a test ofMyClass
. - (Maybe) allow for restricting test search scope if performance problems arise.
- (Maybe) allow for specifying custom naming patterns.
Java 8 && Maven 3.2
- Check that the project builds:
./build.sh
(will download IntelliJ CE as a Maven dependency, then test the code and package the plugin) - Download sources of IntelliJ Community Edition into
../idea-ce/
:git clone git://git.jetbrains.org/idea/community.git ../idea-ce
- Checkout the tag corresponding to your IntelliJ version. Example:
cd ../idea-ce && git checkout tags/idea/139.1117.1
- Open the project within IntelliJ.
- To use the predefined run configurations ("Launch Plugin" and "Launch Test"), you will first
have to define a SDK named "IDEA CE" from your IntelliJ installation and from the sources
present in
../idea-ce
(please refer to the [official documentation] (http://www.jetbrains.org/display/IJOS/Writing+Plug-ins) for details). That should give you a SDK configuration looking like [this example] (ide/preferences/options/jdk.table.xml) (under${INTELLIJ_PREFERENCES}/options/jdk.table.xml
).
Every push triggers a build on Travis CI. Notifications are sent by email to subscribers when builds fail or get fixed.
Travis configuration can be found in .travis.yml.
We're committed to publish every piece of code as soon as it has been written. That said, not every commit deserves a publication: reformatting code or fixing a typo in an internal documentation shouldn't trigger a deployment, and sometimes we would like to have only one delivery for some related commits. Also, it would be nice not to pollute our users with several versions a day!
For this reason, a version gets created and published only when a tag following the pattern vX.Y.Z
is pushed (with X, Y, Z ~= [0-9]+).
The build script will detect that and will update the plugin version from the tag before building.
Then, Travis will create a release on Github by attaching the resulting JAR to the version tag.
The missing part here is the publication to the JetBrains plugin repository, but we're working on it.
This process is a bit uncommon as there is a risk that a tagged version won't pass the build. Usually, release processes involve first building the version, and then tagging the code. We chose that way nonetheless for its simplicity. To prevent any surprise from arising, it is advised to first push the code un-tagged and then, once Travis says everything is OK, to apply the tag and push it. (That also means that such a version will be built a second time in order to be released, which isn't compatible with a strict definition of "continuous delivery".)
And of course, any code that gets pushed should first have passed all tests locally ;-)
# list previous versions for examples:
git tag -l -n99 v*
# tag current version (your default editor will open):
git tag -a vX.Y.Z
# in the editor, write:
Version X.Y.Z
Release notes in Markdown style, ideally as simple bullet points, for instance:
New features:
- feature 1
- feature 2
Bug fixes:
- fix 1
Q: IntelliJ seems to ignore changes I made to plugin.xml
, for instance when using the "Launch
Plugin" run configuration.
A: The problem is: src/main/resources/plugin.xml
must be processed by Maven first, since the IDEA
project is configured to use target/classes/META-INF/plugin.xml
. The predefined run configurations
("Launch Plugin" and "Launch Test") both include a run of mvn process-resources -P intellij
, but
it looks like that doesn't work in some situations. The solution would then be to run
mvn process-resources -P intellij
by yourself.
Q: I (or Travis) just retrieved the code and the build fails with the error: "java.io.IOException: Server returned HTTP response code: 403 for URL: http://download-cf.jetbrains.com/idea/ideaIC-x.y.z.tar.gz"
A: It looks like version x.y.z of IntelliJ isn't available for download anymore, and you're the
first one noticing it. You should replace intellij.version
in pom.xml
by a version that is
available for download, and rebuild.
The build will probably fail again because IntelliJ's dependencies will have changed. Therefore,
once the build has downloaded the requested version of IntelliJ, you should run the script
WHEN-INTELLIJ-VERSION-CHANGES_list-additional-classpath-elements.sh
and then edit pom.xml
to replace all additionalClasspathElement
, except the first one, with the script output.