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Maven plugin that simplifies running Cucumber Scenarios in parallel.

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Run Cucumber Scenarios in Parallel with Maven

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Note:

This project is feature-complete. Expect mostly bug fixes from this point on. For new projects, you should consider using Cucumber's native parallelization feature instead.

Thanks to everyone using, testing and improving Cucable over the last years!


Cucumber compatible

Cucable Maven Plugin

Cucable is a Maven plugin for Cucumber scenarios that simplifies fine-grained and efficient parallel test runs.

This plugin does the following:

  • Generate single Cucumber features containing one single scenario each (scenario outlines are also split up into separate scenarios)
  • Generating Cucumber runners
    • for every generated "single scenario" feature file or
    • for multiple generated "single scenario" feature files

Those generated runners and features can then be used with Maven Failsafe in order to parallelize test runs.

This also works for non-english feature files!

Cucumber 4

Even though Cucumber 4 supports basic parallel runs, Cucable has more options that may be beneficial for your use case:

  • It supports running single scenarios, complete features or sequences of single scenarios in parallel
  • It supports splitting scenarios and attaching them to a fixed number of runners
  • It supports splitting scenarios and attaching batches of them to a dynamic number of runners
  • You don't need any test framework changes because Cucable runs before the framework invocations
  • You have full control over your runners because of template variables and custom placeholders

Cucumber 5

  • Cucumber 5 (using testng or junit 5) can natively run features and scenarios in parallel. Cucable can be used but does not have to be.

Repository Structure

  • plugin-code contains the full plugin source code.
  • example-project contains an example Maven project to see the plugin in action.

Changelog

All changes are documented in the full changelog.

Maven dependency

<dependency>
    <groupId>com.trivago.rta</groupId>
    <artifactId>cucable-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>(check version on top of the page)</version>
</dependency>

How it works

  • Cucable will cut up feature file into the smallest possible runnable scenarios
  • Each generated feature file includes a single scenario
  • After this, the runner classes for those generated features are generated based on a provided template file, either
    • one runner per generated "single scenario" feature file or
    • one runner per group of "single scenario" feature files

Template placeholders

[CUCABLE:RUNNER]

The [CUCABLE:RUNNER] template placeholder is automatically replaced with the class name of the generated runner class.

If the generated runner runs only one "single scenario" feature, its name will be the same as the generated feature (e.g. Runner_MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT).

In case the runner runs multiple "single scenario" features, its name will be auto-generated (e.g. CucableMultiRunner_1da810a2_c4c6_4edb_b078_d81329593950_IT).

[CUCABLE:FEATURE]

The [CUCABLE:FEATURE] can be placed in the feature option of the @CucumberOptions block in your template:

@CucumberOptions(
  features = {"target/parallel/features/[CUCABLE:FEATURE].feature"}
)

Cucable will automatically detect the string containing the [CUCABLE:FEATURE] placeholder and use this to generate one line for each feature this runner should trigger.

Custom template placeholders - [CUCABLE:CUSTOM:xxx]

In some cases, you may need to set custom values that should be written to your template files.

In this case, just add a block to your POM file:

<customPlaceholders>
    <somename>Any value</somename>
    <foo>bar</foo>
</customPlaceholders>

These custom placeholders can be used anywhere in your template:

import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions;

@CucumberOptions(
        features = {"target/parallel/features/[CUCABLE:FEATURE].feature"},
        plugin = {"json:target/cucumber-report/[CUCABLE:CUSTOM:foo].json"}
)
public class [CUCABLE:RUNNER] {
    // [CUCABLE:CUSTOM:somename]
}

In this case the result would be

import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions;

@CucumberOptions(
        features = {"target/parallel/features/[CUCABLE:FEATURE].feature"},
        plugin = {"json:target/cucumber-report/bar.json"}
)
public class [CUCABLE:RUNNER] {
    // Any value
}

Note: The custom placeholder names are case sensitive!

One runner per generated scenario

This is the default mode of Cucable. Having multiple runners that run one "single scenario" feature each is best for parallelization with Maven Failsafe.

Single feature runner generation

One runner per group of generated scenarios

If you use the desiredNumberOfRunners or desiredNumberOfFeaturesPerRunner option, Cucable will automatically switch to the multi-feature runner mode.

This means that it will only generate the specified number of runners (or features per runner) and distribute the generated features evenly among the runners. This is helpful if a group of scenarios should be executed during each forked run of your test framework.

Note: If a runner runs only one feature, it automatically has the same name as the feature. Otherwise it will have a unique auto-generated name.

Multi feature runner generation

Typical workflow

  1. Generation of runners and features
  2. Running the generated tests with Maven Failsafe
  3. Aggregation of a single test report after all test runs

The following sections break down the above steps.

1. Generation of runners and features

<plugin>
    <groupId>com.trivago.rta</groupId>
    <artifactId>cucable-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>${cucable-plugin.version}</version>
    <executions>
        <execution>
            <id>generate-test-resources</id>
            <phase>generate-test-resources</phase>
            <goals>
                <goal>parallel</goal>
            </goals>
        </execution>
    </executions>
    <configuration>
        <!-- Required properties -->
        <sourceRunnerTemplateFile>src/test/resources/parallel/cucable.template</sourceRunnerTemplateFile>
        <sourceFeatures>src/test/resources/features</sourceFeatures>
        <generatedFeatureDirectory>src/test/resources/parallel/features</generatedFeatureDirectory>
        <generatedRunnerDirectory>src/test/java/parallel/runners</generatedRunnerDirectory>
        
        <!-- Optional properties -->
        <numberOfTestRuns>1</numberOfTestRuns>
        <includeScenarioTags>@includeMe and @includeMeAsWell</includeScenarioTags>                                
        <logLevel>compact</logLevel>
        
        <desiredNumberOfRunners>2</desiredNumberOfRunners>                                
        <!-- or <desiredNumberOfFeaturesPerRunner>5</desiredNumberOfRunners> -->
    </configuration>    
</plugin>

Required Parameters

sourceRunnerTemplateFile

The specified file will be used to generate runner classes for the generated feature file that can be run using Maven Failsafe.

This can be either a text file or a Java class. The difference can be seen below:

Using a java file as a runner template

If you use a java file (e.g. src/test/java/some/template/CucableJavaTemplate.java), the [CUCABLE:FEATURE] placeholder as well as the class name will be substituted for the generated feature file name(s). The [CUCABLE:RUNNER] placeholder will be replaced by the runner class name.

Additionally, the package declaration will be stripped.

Example:

package some.template;

import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions;

@CucumberOptions(
        features = {"target/parallel/features/[CUCABLE:FEATURE].feature"},
        plugin = {"json:target/cucumber-report/[CUCABLE:RUNNER].json"}
)
public class CucableJavaTemplate {

}

will turn into

import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions;

@CucumberOptions(
        features = {"target/parallel/features/MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT.feature"},
        plugin = {"json:target/cucumber-report/MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT.json"}
)
public class MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT {
}

// Generated by Cucable from src/test/java/some/template/CucableJavaTemplate.java

In case of a fixed number of runners that contain multiple scenarios (via desiredNumberOfRunners property), the runner name will be auto-generated:

import cucumber.api.junit.Cucumber;
import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;

@RunWith(Cucumber.class)
@CucumberOptions(
    features = {"target/parallel/features/Bookmarks_scenario001_run001_IT.feature",
"target/parallel/features/Bookmarks_scenario003_run001_IT.feature"},
    plugin = {
        "json:target/cucumber-report/CucableMultiRunner_1da810a2_c4c6_4edb_b078_d81329593950_IT.json",
        "com.trivago.trupi.plugin.TrupiCucumberPlugin"
    },
    glue = {"com.trivago.trupi.glue"}
)
public class CucableMultiRunner_1da810a2_c4c6_4edb_b078_d81329593950_IT {
}

// Generated by Cucable from src/test/java/some/template/CucableJavaTemplate.java
Using a text file as a runner template

If you use a text file (e.g. src/test/resources/cucable.template), all [CUCABLE:FEATURE] placeholder will be substituted for the generated feature file name(s). The [CUCABLE:RUNNER] placeholder will be replaced by the runner class name.

sourceFeatures

This property specifies the location of the features that Cucable should process. It must point to one of the following:

  • the root path of your existing Cucumber .feature files, e.g. src/test/resources/features

  • the path to a specific existing Cucumber .feature file, e.g. src/test/resources/features/MyFeature.feature

  • the path to a specific existing Cucumber .feature file with optional line numbers of specific scenarios e.g. src/test/resources/features/MyFeature.feature:12:19

  • comma separated paths to specific existing Cucumber .feature file(s) with optional line numbers or feature directories e.g.

    src/test/resources/features/MyFeature.feature:12:19, src/test/resources/features/MyOther.feature, src/test/some/other/feature/directory
    
  • the path to a Cucumber text file containing the path to a feature including line number(s) per line (as written by the Cucumber rerun reporter plugin, e.g.

    @src/test/resources/rerun.txt
    

    Note: The path to a text file has to start with an @ character!

    The file contents can look like this:

    file:///pathToProject/resources/features/feature1.feature:12
    file:///pathToProject/resources/features/feature4.feature:6
    

generatedFeatureDirectory

The path where the generated Cucumber .feature files should be located (e.g. src/test/resources/parallel).

Note: This directory should be located under a valid resource folder to be included as a test source by Maven. If you want to use a directory inside Maven's target folder, check this example.

Caution: This directory will be wiped prior to the feature file generation!

generatedRunnerDirectory

The path where the generated runner classes should be located (e.g. src/test/java/parallel/runners).

Note: This directory should be located under a valid source folder to be included as a test source by Maven. If you want to use a directory inside Maven's target folder, check this example.

Caution: This directory will be wiped prior to the runner file generation!

Optional Parameters

numberOfTestRuns

Optional number of test runs. This can be used if specific scenarios should be run multiple times. If this options is not set, its default value is 1.

For each test run, the whole set of features and runners is generated like this:

  • MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT.feature
  • MyFeature_scenario001_run002_IT.feature
  • MyFeature_scenario001_run003_IT.feature
  • etc.

Note: Characters other than letters from A to Z, numbers and underscores will be stripped out of the feature file name.

includeScenarioTags

includeScenarioTags can be used to provide a Cucumber tag expression in order to specify which tags should be included or excluded from scenario generation:

Example: include scenarios that are tagged with @scenario1:

<includeScenarioTags>@scenario1</includeScenarioTags>

Example: include scenarios that are tagged with @scenario1 or @scenario2:

<includeScenarioTags>@scenario1 or @scenario2</includeScenarioTags>

Example: include scenarios that are tagged with @scenario1 and @scenario2:

<includeScenarioTags>@scenario1 and @scenario2</includeScenarioTags>

Example: include scenarios that are not tagged with @scenario1:

<includeScenarioTags>not @scenario1</includeScenarioTags>

Example: include scenarios that are not tagged with @scenario1 but tagged with scenario2 or scenario3:

<includeScenarioTags>not @scenario1 and (@scenario2 or scenario3)</includeScenarioTags>

parallelizationMode

By default, Cucable uses the parallelizationMode = scenarios meaning that feature files are split into individual scenarios that each have a dedicated runner.

Sometimes it may be desirable, to parallelize complete features. When setting the parallelizationMode = features, only complete features containing all of their source scenarios are generated so each runner runs a complete feature.

<parallelizationMode>features</parallelizationMode>

Note: For this mode to work, <sourceFeatures> must specify a directory. Also, includeScenarioTags cannot be used.

logLevel

By default, Cucable logs all information including

  • its own name and version
  • all passed property values
  • a list of processed feature paths

This can be configured by passing the logLevel property:

<logLevel>default|compact|minimal|off</logLevel>
  • default will log all the mentioned information
  • compact will only log the plugin name, version, properties and one line of summary
  • minimal will only log a summary line
  • off will prevent any logging

desiredNumberOfRunners

If you set this options, all generated features will be distributed to a fixed set of runner classes. This means that one runner can potentially run multiple features in sequence.

If this option is not set, its default value is 0 which basically means "Generate a dedicated runner for every generated feature".

Note: This cannot be used together with desiredNumberOfFeaturesPerRunner!

desiredNumberOfFeaturesPerRunner

If you set this option, all generated features will be distributed to a dynamic set of runner classes so that every runner contains a fixed number of generated features. This means that one runner can potentially run multiple features in sequence.

If this option is not set, its default value is 0 which basically means "Generate a dedicated runner for every generated feature".

Note: This cannot be used together with desiredNumberOfRunners!

scenarioNames

A comma separated list of strings matching a scenario name, either completely or partially. Please see --name in Cucumber command-line options (java cucumber.api.cli.Main --help or mvn test -Dcucumber.options="--help). If you set this option, only scenarios matching the specified names will be loaded into the generated runners. The number of runner files will default to the number of scenario names and each runner file will contain the scenarios matching 1 name. Please note that this will override desiredNumberOfRunners. For example, if the following scenario names are specified:

<scenarioNames>
    name1,
    name2
</scenarioNames>

2 runner files will be generated. The first file will contain all the scenarios matching name1 and the second file will contain all the scenarios matching name2.

Note: This cannot be used together with desiredNumberOfFeaturesPerRunner or parallelizationMode = features!

Generating runners and features inside target directory

It may be desirable for you to generate the Cucable features and runners in Maven's target directory. The advantage of this is that this directory is wiped by the mvn clean command and older generated files do not reside in your src directory.

In order to achieve this, you can specify subdirectories under target (${project.build.directory}) for Cucable, e.g. ${project.build.directory}/parallel/runners and ${project.build.directory}/parallel/features

After this step, use the build-helper-maven-plugin in your POM file in order to consider the generated runner classes test sources:

<plugins>
    <plugin>
        <groupId>com.trivago.rta</groupId>
        <artifactId>cucable-plugin</artifactId>
        <version>${cucable.plugin.version}</version>
        <executions>
            <execution>
                <id>generate-test-resources</id>
                <phase>generate-test-resources</phase>
                <goals>
                    <goal>parallel</goal>
                </goals>
            </execution>
        </executions>
        <configuration>
            <sourceRunnerTemplateFile>path_to_template_file</sourceRunnerTemplateFile>
            <sourceFeatures>path_to_features</sourceFeatures>
            <generatedFeatureDirectory>${project.build.directory}/parallel/features</generatedFeatureDirectory>
            <generatedRunnerDirectory>${project.build.directory}/parallel/runners</generatedRunnerDirectory>
        </configuration>    
    </plugin>
    <plugin>
        <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
        <artifactId>build-helper-maven-plugin</artifactId>
        <version>${build.helper.plugin.version}</version>
        <executions>
            <execution>
                <id>add-test-source</id>
                <phase>generate-test-sources</phase>
                <goals>
                    <goal>add-test-source</goal>
                </goals>
            </execution>
        </executions>
        <configuration>
            <sources>
                <source>${project.build.directory}/parallel/runners</source>
            </sources>
        </configuration>    
    </plugin>
</plugins>

Complete Example

Below, you can see a full example of what Cucable does.

Source feature file

This is our source feature file. It contains a scenario and a scenario outline with two examples.

MyFeature.feature

Feature: This is the feature name

    Scenario: First scenario
        Given I am on the start page
        And I click the login button
        Then I see an error message

    Scenario Outline: Second scenario with an amount of <amount>
        Given I am on the start page
        And I add <amount> items
        And I navigate to the shopping basket
        Then I see <amount> items
        Examples:
            | amount |
            | 12     |
            | 85     |

Runner template file

This is the runner template file (in this example we use a text file) that is used to generate single scenario runners.

  • The placeholder [CUCABLE:FEATURE] and its enclosing string will be replaced with the generated feature names by Cucable.
  • The placeholder [CUCABLE:RUNNER] will be replaced with the generated runner class name by Cucable.
import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions;

@CucumberOptions(
        features = {"target/parallel/features/[CUCABLE:FEATURE].feature"},
        plugin = {"json:target/cucumber-report/[CUCABLE:RUNNER].json"}
)
public class [CUCABLE:RUNNER] {
}

Note: The specified plugin generates Cucumber JSON files which are needed for custom aggregated test reports.

Generated Scenarios

For each scenario, a single feature file is created:

MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT.feature

Feature: This is the feature name

Scenario: First scenario
Given I am on the start page
And I click the login button
Then I see an error message

Note that for the scenario outlines, each example is converted to its own scenario and feature file:

MyFeature_scenario002_run001_IT.feature

Feature: This is the feature name

Scenario: Second scenario with an amount of 12
Given I am on the start page
And I add 12 items
And I navigate to the shopping basket
Then I see 12 items

MyFeature_scenario003_run001_IT.feature

Feature: This is the feature name

Scenario: Second scenario with an amount of 85
Given I am on the start page
And I add 85 items
And I navigate to the shopping basket
Then I see 85 items

Generated runners

The generated runners point to each one of the generated feature files (unless you use the desiredNumberOfRunners or desiredNumberOfFeaturesPerRunner option).

This is an example for one of the generated runners - note how the placeholders are now replaced with the name of the feature to run:

Runner_MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT.java

import cucumber.api.CucumberOptions;

@CucumberOptions(
        features = {"target/parallel/features/MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT.feature"},
        plugin = {"json:target/cucumber-report/MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT.json"}
)
public class MyFeature_scenario001_run001_IT {
}

2. Running the generated tests with Maven failsafe

This will skip the unit tests (if any) and run the generated runner classes with Maven Failsafe. Since all generated runner classes from the step before end with _IT, they are automatically considered integration tests and run with Maven Failsafe.

Note: If all tests should be run regardless of their result, it is important to set <testFailureIgnore>true</testFailureIgnore> for Maven Failsafe - otherwise the plugin execution will stop on failing tests. However, if this is specified, the build will not fail in case of failing tests!

To circumvent that, it is possible to specify a custom rule for Maven enforcer that passes or fails the build depending on custom conditions.

<plugins>
    <plugin>
        <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
        <artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
        <configuration>
            <skipTests>true</skipTests>
        </configuration>
    </plugin>
    <plugin>
        <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
        <artifactId>maven-failsafe-plugin</artifactId>
        <executions>
            <execution>
                <id>Run parallel tests</id>
                <phase>integration-test</phase>
                <goals>
                    <goal>integration-test</goal>
                </goals>
            </execution>
        </executions>
        <configuration>
            <testFailureIgnore>true</testFailureIgnore>
            <forkCount>${maven.fork.count}</forkCount>
            <reuseForks>false</reuseForks>
            <argLine>-Dfile.encoding=UTF-8</argLine>
            <disableXmlReport>true</disableXmlReport>
        </configuration>
    </plugin>
</plugins>

3. Aggregation of a single test report after all test runs

We use the Cluecumber plugin to aggregate all generated .json report files into one overall test report.

<plugins>
    <plugin>
        <groupId>com.trivago.rta</groupId>
        <artifactId>cluecumber-report-plugin</artifactId>
        <version>${cluecumber.report.version}</version>
        <executions>
            <execution>
                <id>report</id>
                <phase>post-integration-test</phase>
                <goals>
                    <goal>reporting</goal>
                </goals>
            </execution>
        </executions>
        <configuration>
            <sourceJsonReportDirectory>${project.build.directory}/cucumber-report</sourceJsonReportDirectory>
            <generatedHtmlReportDirectory>${project.build.directory}/test-report</generatedHtmlReportDirectory>
        </configuration>    
    </plugin>
</plugins>

Example project

You can test the complete flow and POM configuration by checking out the Cucable example project.

Appendix

Building

Cucable requires Java >= 8 and Maven >= 3.3.9. It is available in Maven central.

License

Copyright 2017 trivago N.V.

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

Credits

This plugin was inspired by the Cucumber Slices Maven Plugin.

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Maven plugin that simplifies running Cucumber Scenarios in parallel.

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