Importing JUnit XML

While most test frameworks have a built-in JUnit XML export feature, these JUnit reports do not provide detailed span information. Therefore, features in Test Analytics that depend on span information aren't available when using JUnit as a data source. If you need span information, consider using the JSON import API instead.

Mandatory JUnit XML attributes

The following attributes are mandatory for the <testcase> element:

  • classname: full class name for the class the test method is in.
  • name: name of the test method.

To learn more about the JUnit XML file format, see Common JUnit XML format & examples .

How to import JUnit XML in Buildkite

It's possible to import XML-formatted JUnit (or JSON) test results to Buildkite Test Analytics with or without the help of a plugin.

Using a plugin

To import XML-formatted JUnit test results to Test Analytics using Test Collector plugin from a build step:

pipeline.yml
steps:
  - label: "🔨 Test"
    command: "make test"
    plugins:
      - test-collector#v1.0.0:
          files: "test/junit-*.xml"
          format: "junit"

See more configuration information in the Test Collector plugin README.

Using the plugin is the recommended way as it allows for a better debugging process in case of an issue.

Not using a plugin

If for some reason you cannot or do not want to use the Test Collector plugin, or if you are looking to implement your own integration, another approach is possible.

To import XML-formatted JUnit test results to Test Analytics, make a POST request to https://analytics-api.buildkite.com/v1/uploads with a multipart/form-data. For example, to import the contents of a junit.xml file in a Buildkite pipeline:

  1. Securely set the Test Analytics token environment variable (BUILDKITE_ANALYTICS_TOKEN).

  2. Run the following curl command:

    curl \
      -X POST \
      -H "Authorization: Token token=\"$BUILDKITE_ANALYTICS_TOKEN\"" \
      -F "data=@junit.xml" \
      -F "format=junit" \
      -F "run_env[CI]=buildkite" \
      -F "run_env[key]=$BUILDKITE_BUILD_ID" \
      -F "run_env[url]=$BUILDKITE_BUILD_URL" \
      -F "run_env[branch]=$BUILDKITE_BRANCH" \
      -F "run_env[commit_sha]=$BUILDKITE_COMMIT" \
      -F "run_env[number]=$BUILDKITE_BUILD_NUMBER" \
      -F "run_env[job_id]=$BUILDKITE_JOB_ID" \
      -F "run_env[message]=$BUILDKITE_MESSAGE" \
      https://analytics-api.buildkite.com/v1/uploads
    

To learn more about passing through environment variables to run_env-prefixed fields, see CI environments.

Note that when a payload is processed, Buildkite validates and queues each test execution result in a loop. For that reason, it is possible for some to be queued and others to be skipped. Even when some or all test executions get skipped, REST API will respond with a 202 Accepted because the upload and the run were created in the database, but the skipped test execution results were not ingested.

Currently, the errors returned contain no information on individual records that failed the validation. This may complicate the process of fixing and retrying the request.

A single file can have a maximum of 5000 test results, and if that limit is exceeded then the upload request will fail. To upload more than 5000 test results for a single run upload multiple smaller files with the same run_env[key].

How to import JUnit XML in CircleCI

To import XML-formatted JUnit test results, make a POST request to https://analytics-api.buildkite.com/v1/uploads with a multipart/form-data. For example, to import the contents of a junit.xml file in a CircleCI pipeline:

  1. Securely set the Test Analytics token environment variable (BUILDKITE_ANALYTICS_TOKEN).

  2. Run the following curl command:

    curl \
      -X POST \
      -H "Authorization: Token token=\"$BUILDKITE_ANALYTICS_TOKEN\"" \
      -F "data=@junit.xml" \
      -F "format=junit" \
      -F "run_env[CI]=circleci" \
      -F "run_env[key]=$CIRCLE_WORKFLOW_ID-$CIRCLE_BUILD_NUM" \
      -F "run_env[number]=$CIRCLE_BUILD_NUM" \
      -F "run_env[branch]=$CIRCLE_BRANCH" \
      -F "run_env[commit_sha]=$CIRCLE_SHA1" \
      -F "run_env[url]=$CIRCLE_BUILD_URL" \
      https://analytics-api.buildkite.com/v1/uploads
    

To learn more about passing through environment variables to run_env-prefixed fields, see CI environments.

Note that when a payload is processed, Buildkite validates and queues each test execution result in a loop. For that reason, it is possible for some to be queued and others to be skipped. Even when some or all test executions get skipped, REST API will respond with a 202 Accepted because the upload and the run were created in the database, but the skipped test execution results were not ingested.

Currently, the errors returned contain no information on individual records that failed the validation. This may complicate the process of fixing and retrying the request.

A single file can have a maximum of 5000 test results, and if that limit is exceeded then the upload request will fail. To upload more than 5000 test results for a single run upload multiple smaller files with the same run_env[key].

How to import JUnit XML in GitHub Actions

To import XML-formatted JUnit test results, make a POST request to https://analytics-api.buildkite.com/v1/uploads with a multipart/form-data. For example, to import the contents of a junit.xml file in a GitHub Actions pipeline:

  1. Securely set the Test Analytics token environment variable (BUILDKITE_ANALYTICS_TOKEN).

  2. Run the following curl command:

    curl \
      -X POST \
      --fail-with-body \
      -H "Authorization: Token token=\"$BUILDKITE_ANALYTICS_TOKEN\"" \
      -F "data=@junit.xml" \
      -F "format=junit" \
      -F "run_env[CI]=github_actions" \
      -F "run_env[key]=$GITHUB_ACTION-$GITHUB_RUN_NUMBER-$GITHUB_RUN_ATTEMPT" \
      -F "run_env[number]=$GITHUB_RUN_NUMBER" \
      -F "run_env[branch]=$GITHUB_REF" \
      -F "run_env[commit_sha]=$GITHUB_SHA" \
      -F "run_env[url]=https://github.com/$GITHUB_REPOSITORY/actions/runs/$GITHUB_RUN_ID" \
      https://analytics-api.buildkite.com/v1/uploads
    

To learn more about passing through environment variables to run_env-prefixed fields, see CI environments.

Note that when a payload is processed, Buildkite validates and queues each test execution result in a loop. For that reason, it is possible for some to be queued and others to be skipped. Even when some or all test executions get skipped, REST API will respond with a 202 Accepted because the upload and the run were created in the database, but the skipped test execution results were not ingested.

Currently, the errors returned contain no information on individual records that failed the validation. This may complicate the process of fixing and retrying the request.

A single file can have a maximum of 5000 test results, and if that limit is exceeded then the upload request will fail. To upload more than 5000 test results for a single run upload multiple smaller files with the same run_env[key].