I would like to run JUnit test cases from the command line. How can I do this?
210 Answers
For JUnit 5.x it's:
java -jar junit-platform-console-standalone-<version>.jar <Options> Find a brief summary at and full details at
For JUnit 4.X it's really:
java -cp .:/usr/share/java/junit.jar org.junit.runner.JUnitCore [test class name] But if you are using JUnit 3.X note the class name is different:
java -cp .:/usr/share/java/junit.jar junit.textui.TestRunner [test class name] You might need to add more JARs or directories with your class files to the classpath and separate that with semicolons (Windows) or colons (UNIX/Linux). It depends on your environment.
Edit: I've added current directory as an example. Depends on your environment and how you build your application (can be bin/ or build/ or even my_application.jar etc). Note Java 6+ does support globs in classpath, you can do:
java -cp lib/*.jar:/usr/share/java/junit.jar ... Hope it helps. Write tests! :-)
10Maven way
If you use Maven, you can run the following command to run all your test cases:
mvn clean test Or you can run a particular test as below
mvn clean test -Dtest=your.package.TestClassName mvn clean test -Dtest=your.package.TestClassName#particularMethod If you would like to see the stack trace (if any) in the console instead of report files in the target\surefire-reports folder, set the user property surefire.useFile to false. For example:
mvn clean test -Dtest=your.package.TestClassName -Dsurefire.useFile=false Gradle way
If you use Gradle, you can run the following command to run all your test cases:
gradle test Or you can run a particular test as below
gradle test --tests your.package.TestClassName gradle test --tests your.package.TestClassName.particularMethod If you would like more information, you can consider options such as --stacktrace, or --info, or --debug.
For example, when you run Gradle with the info logging level --info, it will show you the result of each test while they are running. If there is any exception, it will show you the stack trace, pointing out what the problem is.
gradle test --info If you would like to see the overall test results, you can open the report in the browser, for example (Open it using Google Chrome in Ubuntu):
google-chrome build/reports/tests/index.html Ant way
Once you set up your Ant build file build.xml, you can run your JUnit test cases from the command line as below:
ant -f build.xml <Your JUnit test target name> You can follow the link below to read more about how to configure JUnit tests in the Ant build file:
Normal way
If you do not use Maven, or Gradle or Ant, you can follow the following way:
First of all, you need to compile your test cases. For example (in Linux):
javac -d /absolute/path/for/compiled/classes -cp /absolute/path/to/junit-4.12.jar /absolute/path/to/TestClassName.java Then run your test cases. For example:
java -cp /absolute/path/for/compiled/classes:/absolute/path/to/junit-4.12.jar:/absolute/path/to/hamcrest-core-1.3.jar org.junit.runner.JUnitCore your.package.TestClassName 3The answer that @lzap gave is a good solution. However, I would like to add that you should add . to the class path, so that your current directory is not left out, resulting in your own classes to be left out. This has happened to me on some platforms. So an updated version for JUnit 4.x would be:
java -cp .:/usr/share/java/junit.jar org.junit.runner.JUnitCore [test class name] 4Ensure that JUnit.jar is in your classpath, then invoke the command line runner from the console
java org.junit.runner.JUnitCore [test class name]
Reference: junit FAQ
2With JUnit 4.12 the following didn't work for me:
java -cp .:/usr/share/java/junit.jar org.junit.runner.JUnitCore [test class name] Apparently, from JUnit 4.11 onwards you should also include hamcrest-core.jar in your classpath:
java -cp .:/usr/share/java/junit.jar:/usr/share/java/hamcrest-core.jar org.junit.runner.JUnitCore [test class name] 3In windows it is
java -cp .;/path/junit.jar org.junit.runner.JUnitCore TestClass [test class name without .class extension]
for example: c:\>java -cp .;f:/libraries/junit-4.8.2 org.junit.runner.JUnitCore TestSample1 TestSample2 ... and so on, if one has more than one test classes.
-cp stands for class path and the dot (.) represents the existing classpath while semi colon (;) appends the additional given jar to the classpath , as in above example junit-4.8.2 is now available in classpath to execute JUnitCore class that here we have used to execute our test classes.
Above command line statement helps you to execute junit (version 4+) tests from command prompt(i-e MSDos).
Note: JUnitCore is a facade to execute junit tests, this facade is included in 4+ versions of junit.
3Actually you can also make the Junit test a runnable Jar and call the runnable jar as java -jar
1If your project is Maven-based you can run all test-methods from test-class CustomTest which belongs to module 'my-module' using next command:
mvn clean test -pl :my-module -Dtest=CustomTest Or run only 1 test-method myMethod from test-class CustomTest using next command:
mvn clean test -pl :my-module -Dtest=CustomTest#myMethod For this ability you need Maven Surefire Plugin v.2.7.3+ and Junit 4. More details is here:
Personally I would use the Maven surefire JUnit runner to do that.
0Alternatively you can use the following methods in JunitCore class
run (with Request , Class classes and Runner) or runClasses from your java file.