Why can't code inside unit tests find bundle resources?
Asked Answered
G

8

209

Some code I am unit testing needs to load a resource file. It contains the following line:

NSString *path = [[NSBundle mainBundle] pathForResource:@"foo" ofType:@"txt"];

In the app it runs just fine, but when run by the unit testing framework pathForResource: returns nil, meaning it could not locate foo.txt.

I've made sure that foo.txt is included in the Copy Bundle Resources build phase of the unit test target, so why can't it find the file?

Genovese answered 10/12, 2009 at 7:37 Comment(0)
G
339

When the unit test harness runs your code, your unit test bundle is NOT the main bundle.

Even though you are running tests, not your application, your application bundle is still the main bundle. (Presumably, this prevents the code you are testing from searching the wrong bundle.) Thus, if you add a resource file to the unit test bundle, you won't find it if search the main bundle. If you replace the above line with:

NSBundle *bundle = [NSBundle bundleForClass:[self class]];
NSString *path = [bundle pathForResource:@"foo" ofType:@"txt"];

Then your code will search the bundle that your unit test class is in, and everything will be fine.

Genovese answered 10/12, 2009 at 7:37 Comment(9)
Does not work for me. Still the build bundle and not the test bundle.Committeeman
@Committeeman In the sample line I'm assuming self refers to a class in the main bundle, not the test case class. Replace [self class] with any class in your main bundle. I'll edit my example.Genovese
@Genovese The bundle is still the same (build), which is correct I think. Because when I am using self or the AppDelegate, both are located in the main bundle. When I check the Build Phases of the main target both files are in. But what I want to differ between main and test bundle at run time. The code where I need the bundle is in the main bundle. I have the following a problem. I am loading a png file. Normally this file is not in the main bundle due the user downloads it from a server. But for a test I want to use a file from the test bundle without copying it into the main bundle.Committeeman
@Committeeman I made a mistake with my previous edit, and edited the answer again. At test time, the app bundle is still the main bundle. If you want to load a resource file that is in the unit test bundle, you need to use bundleForClass: with a class in the unit test bundle. You should get the path of the file in your unit test code, then pass the path string along to your other code.Genovese
This works but how can I distinguish between a run-deploy and a test-deploy? Based on the fact if it is a test I need a resource from the test bundle in a class in the main bundle. If it is a regular 'run' I need a resource from the main bundle and not the test bundle. Any idea?Committeeman
@Committeeman No idea. You should open a new Stack Overflow question.Genovese
@Committeeman - You should write your main classes so that they are testable, not so that they behave differently based on whether they're being tested or not. You'll end up writing new code which only runs in your tests and verifying that works without actually verifying that the code you run outside of your tests works.Knightly
@Knightly Firstly, of course, you're right! ;) Secondly, this post is 2 years old. At that time I was learning objective-C. :)Committeeman
This answer also fixes that problem without changing code https://mcmap.net/q/128929/-nsbundle-pathforresource-returns-nilChitarrone
G
114

A Swift implementation:

Swift 2

let testBundle = NSBundle(forClass: self.dynamicType)
let fileURL = testBundle.URLForResource("imageName", withExtension: "png")
XCTAssertNotNil(fileURL)

Swift 3, Swift 4

let testBundle = Bundle(for: type(of: self))
let filePath = testBundle.path(forResource: "imageName", ofType: "png")
XCTAssertNotNil(filePath)

Bundle provides ways to discover the main and test paths for your configuration:

@testable import Example

class ExampleTests: XCTestCase {
        
    func testExample() {
        let bundleMain = Bundle.main
        let bundleDoingTest = Bundle(for: type(of: self ))
        let bundleBeingTested = Bundle(identifier: "com.example.Example")!
                
        print("bundleMain.bundlePath : \(bundleMain.bundlePath)")
        // …/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/Library/Xcode/Agents
        print("bundleDoingTest.bundlePath : \(bundleDoingTest.bundlePath)")
        // …/PATH/TO/Debug/ExampleTests.xctest
        print("bundleBeingTested.bundlePath : \(bundleBeingTested.bundlePath)")
        // …/PATH/TO/Debug/Example.app
        
        print("bundleMain = " + bundleMain.description) // Xcode Test Agent
        print("bundleDoingTest = " + bundleDoingTest.description) // Test Case Bundle
        print("bundleUnderTest = " + bundleBeingTested.description) // App Bundle

In Xcode 6|7|8|9, a unit-test bundle path will be in Developer/Xcode/DerivedData something like ...

/Users/
  UserName/
    Library/
      Developer/
        Xcode/
          DerivedData/
            App-qwertyuiop.../
              Build/
                Products/
                  Debug-iphonesimulator/
                    AppTests.xctest/
                      foo.txt

... which is separate from the Developer/CoreSimulator/Devices regular (non-unit-test) bundle path:

/Users/
  UserName/
    Library/
    Developer/
      CoreSimulator/
        Devices/
          _UUID_/
            data/
              Containers/
                Bundle/
                  Application/
                    _UUID_/
                      App.app/

Also note the unit test executable is, by default, linked with the application code. However, the unit test code should only have Target Membership in just the test bundle. The application code should only have Target Membership in the application bundle. At runtime, the unit test target bundle is injected into the application bundle for execution.

Swift Package Manager (SPM) 4:

let testBundle = Bundle(for: type(of: self)) 
print("testBundle.bundlePath = \(testBundle.bundlePath) ")

Note: By default, the command line swift test will create a MyProjectPackageTests.xctest test bundle. And, the swift package generate-xcodeproj will create a MyProjectTests.xctest test bundle. These different test bundles have different paths. Also, the different test bundles may have some internal directory structure and content differences.

In either case, the .bundlePath and .bundleURL will return the path of test bundle currently being run on macOS. However, Bundle is not currently implemented for Ubuntu Linux.

Also, command line swift build and swift test do not currently provide a mechanism for copying resources.

However, with some effort, it is possible to set up processes for using the Swift Package Manger with resources in the macOS Xcode, macOS command line, and Ubuntu command line environments. One example can be found here: 004.4'2 SW Dev Swift Package Manager (SPM) With Resources Qref

See also: Use resources in unit tests with Swift Package Manager

Swift Package Manager (SwiftPM) 5.3+

Swift 5.3 includes Package Manager Resources SE-0271 evolution proposal with "Status: Implemented (Swift 5.3)". :-)

Resources aren't always intended for use by clients of the package; one use of resources might include test fixtures that are only needed by unit tests. Such resources would not be incorporated into clients of the package along with the library code, but would only be used while running the package's tests.

  • Add a new resources parameter in target and testTarget APIs to allow declaring resource files explicitly.

SwiftPM uses file system conventions for determining the set of source files that belongs to each target in a package: specifically, a target's source files are those that are located underneath the designated "target directory" for the target. By default this is a directory that has the same name as the target and is located in "Sources" (for a regular target) or "Tests" (for a test target), but this location can be customized in the package manifest.

// Get path to DefaultSettings.plist file.
let path = Bundle.module.path(forResource: "DefaultSettings", ofType: "plist")

// Load an image that can be in an asset archive in a bundle.
let image = UIImage(named: "MyIcon", in: Bundle.module, compatibleWith: UITraitCollection(userInterfaceStyle: .dark))

// Find a vertex function in a compiled Metal shader library.
let shader = try mtlDevice.makeDefaultLibrary(bundle: Bundle.module).makeFunction(name: "vertexShader")

// Load a texture.
let texture = MTKTextureLoader(device: mtlDevice).newTexture(name: "Grass", scaleFactor: 1.0, bundle: Bundle.module, options: options)

Example

// swift-tools-version:5.3
import PackageDescription

  targets: [
    .target(
      name: "CLIQuickstartLib",
      dependencies: [],
      resources: [
        // Apply platform-specific rules.
        // For example, images might be optimized per specific platform rule.
        // If path is a directory, the rule is applied recursively.
        // By default, a file will be copied if no rule applies.
        .process("Resources"),
      ]),
    .testTarget(
      name: "CLIQuickstartLibTests",
      dependencies: [],
      resources: [
        // Copy directories as-is. 
        // Use to retain directory structure.
        // Will be at top level in bundle.
        .copy("Resources"),
      ]),

Current Issue

Xcode

Bundle.module is generated by SwiftPM (see Build/BuildPlan.swift SwiftTargetBuildDescription generateResourceAccessor()) and thus not present in Foundation.Bundle when built by Xcode.

A comparable approach in Xcode would be to manually add a Resources reference folder to the module, add an Xcode build phase copy to put the Resource into some *.bundle directory, and add a #ifdef Xcode compiler directive for the Xcode build to work with the resources.

#if Xcode 
extension Foundation.Bundle {
  
  /// Returns resource bundle as a `Bundle`.
  /// Requires Xcode copy phase to locate files into `*.bundle`
  /// or `ExecutableNameTests.bundle` for test resources
  static var module: Bundle = {
    var thisModuleName = "CLIQuickstartLib"
    var url = Bundle.main.bundleURL
    
    for bundle in Bundle.allBundles 
      where bundle.bundlePath.hasSuffix(".xctest") {
      url = bundle.bundleURL.deletingLastPathComponent()
      thisModuleName = thisModuleName.appending("Tests")
    }
    
    url = url.appendingPathComponent("\(thisModuleName).bundle")
    
    guard let bundle = Bundle(url: url) else {
      fatalError("Bundle.module could not load: \(url.path)")
    }
    
    return bundle
  }()
  
  /// Directory containing resource bundle
  static var moduleDir: URL = {
    var url = Bundle.main.bundleURL
    for bundle in Bundle.allBundles 
      where bundle.bundlePath.hasSuffix(".xctest") {
      // remove 'ExecutableNameTests.xctest' path component
      url = bundle.bundleURL.deletingLastPathComponent()
    }
    return url
  }()
  
}
#endif
Ganges answered 10/12, 2009 at 7:37 Comment(1)
For Swift 4 as well, you can use Bundle(for: type(of: self))Febrific
M
17

With swift Swift 3 the syntax self.dynamicType has been deprecated, use this instead

let testBundle = Bundle(for: type(of: self))
let fooTxtPath = testBundle.path(forResource: "foo", ofType: "txt")

or

let fooTxtURL = testBundle.url(forResource: "foo", withExtension: "txt")
Melendez answered 10/12, 2009 at 7:37 Comment(0)
C
5

Confirm that the resource is added to the test target.

enter image description here

Colier answered 10/12, 2009 at 7:37 Comment(2)
Adding resources to the test bundle makes the test results largely invalid. After all, a resource could easily be in the test target but not in the app target, and your tests would all pass, but the app would burst into flames.Shuntwound
What @Shuntwound said. It also doesn't fix the problemMagnetomotive
A
2

I had to ensure this General Testing checkbox was set this General Testing checkbox was set

Awl answered 10/12, 2009 at 7:37 Comment(0)
F
2

if you have multiple target in your project then you need to add resources between different target available in the Target Membership and you may need to switch between different Target as 3 steps shown in the figure below

enter image description here

Famine answered 10/12, 2009 at 7:37 Comment(0)
H
0

Just for people like me, that missed this point in the original post:

Make sure that foo.md is included in the Copy Bundle Resources build phase of the unit test target

enter image description here

Hallowmas answered 10/12, 2009 at 7:37 Comment(0)
E
-1

There is a code which finds the file in : How to check if a file exists in the Documents directory in Swift?

I used it in a test as follows, which tests that my file is created and gives its location for further testing.

        let fileFound = XCTestExpectation (description: "Checking for DB File Found")
    
    
    
    let path = NSSearchPathForDirectoriesInDomains(.documentDirectory, .userDomainMask, true)[0] as String
    let url = NSURL(fileURLWithPath: path)
    if let pathComponent = url.appendingPathComponent("filename.ext") {
        let filePath = pathComponent.path
        let fileManager = FileManager.default
        if fileManager.fileExists(atPath: filePath) {
            fileFound.fulfill()
            print("DB FILE AVAILABLE")
        } else {
            print("DB FILE NOT AVAILABLE")
        }
    } else {
        print("DB FILE PATH NOT AVAILABLE")
    }
    
    wait(for: [fileFound], timeout: 5)

This is not testing that the file is created in the right place, only that it is created.

Euterpe answered 10/12, 2009 at 7:37 Comment(0)

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