Jenkins CI is one of the most popular continuous integration servers in the market today. At some point while developing your AngularJS project (hopefully early on), you might want to have automated tests run off your code versioning system. Jenkins will help you with this task. This tutorial assumes you have Jenkins already setup and running on your CI environment.
You need the following tools installed on your Jenkins CI server:
The following Jenkins plugin is optional, but the next guidelines are based on it:
Make the following additions and changes to your karma.conf.js
file as needed:
singleRun: true,
reporters: ['dots', 'junit'],
junitReporter: {
outputFile: 'test-results.xml'
},
Please note the test-results.xml
files will be written to subdirectories
named after the browsers the tests were run in inside the present working
directory (and you will need to tell Jenkins where to find them).
In Jenkins, start a new job for Angular/Karma with the basic settings (Name, description, parameters, source code repo to pull from, etc.)
First go to the job page and click on configure. Then in the Build Environment sub-section, check the “Inject environment variables to the build process' checkbox. A few textboxes will appear and in the “Properties Content” box set the following:
$ PATH=/sbin:/usr/sbin:/bin:/usr/bin:/usr/local/bin
$ PHANTOMJS_BIN=/usr/local/bin/phantomjs #or wherever PhantomJS happens to be installed
Further down the page, in the Post-build Actions sub-section add a
Publish JUnit test result report
from the Post-build action drop
down menu. When the textbox labeled Test report XMLs appears, enter
the path to where the test-results.xml
files are relative to the root of your
Jenkins job workspace (you can use wildcards for this, so **/test-results.xml
will find the file even if it was stored inside a browser-specific
subdirectory).