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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T00:41:25+00:00 2026-05-14T00:41:25+00:00

From Eclipse I can easily run all the JUnit tests in my application. I

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From Eclipse I can easily run all the JUnit tests in my application.

I would like to be able to run the tests on target systems from the application jar, without Eclipse (or Ant or Maven or any other development tool).

I can see how to run a specific test or suite from the command line.

I could manually create a suite listing all the tests in my application, but that seems error prone – I’m sure at some point I’ll create a test and forget to add it to the suite.

The Eclipse JUnit plugin has a wizard to create a test suite, but for some reason it doesn’t “see” my test classes. It may be looking for JUnit 3 tests, not JUnit 4 annotated tests.

I could write a tool that would automatically create the suite by scanning the source files.

Or I could write code so the application would scan it’s own jar file for tests (either by naming convention or by looking for the @Test annotation).

It seems like there should be an easier way. What am I missing?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T00:41:25+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 12:41 am

    I ran into a minor problem with my last solution. If I ran “all tests” from Eclipse they ran twice because they ran the individual tests AND the suite. I could have worked around that, but then I realized there was a simpler solution:

    package suneido;
    
    import java.io.IOException;
    import java.util.ArrayList;
    import java.util.Enumeration;
    import java.util.jar.JarEntry;
    import java.util.jar.JarFile;
    
    public class RunAllTests {
    
        public static void run(String jarfile) {
            String[] tests = findTests(jarfile);
            org.junit.runner.JUnitCore.main(tests);
        }
    
        private static String[] findTests(String jarfile) {
            ArrayList<String> tests = new ArrayList<String>();
            try {
                JarFile jf = new JarFile(jarfile);
                for (Enumeration<JarEntry> e = jf.entries(); e.hasMoreElements();) {
                    String name = e.nextElement().getName();
                    if (name.startsWith("suneido/") && name.endsWith("Test.class")
                            && !name.contains("$"))
                        tests.add(name.replaceAll("/", ".")
                                .substring(0, name.length() - 6));
                }
                jf.close();
            } catch (IOException e) {
                throw new RuntimeException(e);
            }
            return tests.toArray(new String[0]);
        }
    
        public static void main(String[] args) {
            run("jsuneido.jar");
        }
    
    }
    
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