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Home/ Questions/Q 7518047
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T01:38:29+00:00 2026-05-30T01:38:29+00:00

I read Maven Failsafe plugin is designed specifically to run integration tests. Currently I’m

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I read Maven Failsafe plugin is designed specifically to run integration tests. Currently I’m working on a multi-module project and integration tests are in its own separate module, written in TestNg and run using Surefire plugin. We don’t have conflicts with unit tests since only integration tests are run in the test phase in that module. And to set up the environment before the tests, and clean it after tests are run, @BeforeSuite @AfterSuite TestNg annotations are used. So there’s no need to make use of pre-integration-test phase, integration-test phase, post-integration-test phase utilized by Failsafe plugin.

  • Are there any more benefits I’m missing out on, by not using the Failsafe plugin?
  • Are there better ways to do my current requirement using Failsafe plugin?
  • Can I do my server startup, shut down, file unzipping etc. in the pre-integration-test, post-integration-test phases without writing a maven plugin?
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T01:38:33+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 1:38 am

    If you already have your own test setup/teardown in your suites, which from the looks of it you do, there is not much you can gain from the FailSafe plugin.

    The FailSafe plugin is useful in situations where the Setup of your System Under Test is costly or takes a long time such as starting up a Servlet or a distributed system. The way the FailSafe plugin comes handy in these situations is that you can set up this environment in the pre-integration-test phase. This plugin also doesn’t stop the execution of the Maven build when a test fails, which allows you to clean up all of your artifacts during the post-integration-test phase, after which it checks the status of your tests and passes or fails the build accordingly during the verify phase.

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