147
votes

I have a simple solution in visual studio 2013 that is composed by one web project, one library project and one unit test project. When I open the solution and try to run the unit tests they are not discover by visual studio. To run the tests I try to go to the menu and choose Test -> Run -> Run all tests or by opening the test explorer window. By those to methods visual studio doesn’t discover any tests in the solution.

Creating first a simple unit tests project and try to run the test, visual studio know discover the test and I can run it. Then, if I open my previous solution visual studio now discovers all the tests. I try to save my solution but closing it and reopening, without creating a unit test project first, the visual studio doesn’t find the tests again. This is a very strange behave that I don’t know why this is happening.

I used to working alone in this project that was using the source control git integrated with the visual studio team foundation. The problem of visual studio not discover the unit tests start when a new element came to the project and when I need to recreate the solution through the source control online. Before this, all tests always been discovered by visual studio.

For creation the unit tests I use the dll Microsoft.VisualStudio.QualityTools.UnitTestFramework. My version of visual studio is: Microsoft Visual Studio Express 2013 for Web Version 12.0.30723.00 Update 3. My version of .net framework is 4.5.50938.

All of my tests are like this:

[TestClass] 
public class Service1Test 
{ 
    [TestMethod] 
    public void Test1() 
    {
        Assert.IsTrue(True); 
    } 
}
30
Are these Async based Unit tests?Jamie Keeling
Not sure what the issue was, but running as administrator fixed the issue for me.Sriram Sakthivel
All sync based unit testsmiguelbgouveia
Have you tried an external test-runner (like ReSharpers or NCrunch)? Maybe your install is bugged (so reinstall VS)Random Dev
None of these fixed the issue for me :( What a disaster. I've given up NUnit and am relying on UnitTestFramework - bizarrely the opposite problem from the OPAdam

30 Answers

210
votes

Some things I've noticed I have to do from time to time to get tests to show up properly.

  1. If your solution is in a protected drive that you need administrator access to read/write, sometimes only a portion of the tests come up. Definitely run VS as administrator in that case.

  2. If your solution is 64 bit, make sure that Test > Test Settings > Default Processor Architecture is set to x64. Sometimes it gets set to x86. Set it to x64, then rebuild.

  3. Sometimes just restarting Visual Studio does the trick because the test explorer will start up again.

  4. Don't forget to actually build the test project/solution. (If you want it to get built with the rest of the projects, right-click on your solution > Properties > Configuration Properties > Configuration > check the "Build" box for your test project)

  5. Ensure the tests are in a public section of your test class

81
votes

If you using NUnit, make sure to download NUnit Adapter first.

Go to Tools → Extensions and Updates… → Online → search for "NUnit Test Adapter".

61
votes

Make sure your test class is public so it can be found. And if you're referencing another class, make sure of the same.

Also, sometimes if you have no Asserts or you're not decorating the test with a [TestMethod], a test might not be recognized.

2 more things: 1) Async unit tests act funny at best, and none at all at worst. Have a look at this article by Stephen Cleary and keep from there if it interests you.

2) If you use NUnit and you run into the same issues, keep in mind it's [TestCase] for Nunit, instead of [TestMethod]

Having said the above, here's an article I've posted on the code project, with both MSTest & NUnit, in case you want to give it a spin and make sure you're not missing anything.

28
votes

I had the same issue but none of the other solutions worked. Turns out that I was using the NUnit 3 framework with the 2 adapter.

If you're using NUnit 3, go to Extensions and Updates and install the NUnit3 Test Adapter.

12
votes

I'm having this issue from time to time. What works for me is to shutdown Visual Studio and go to folder:

%LocalAppData%\Microsoft\VisualStudio\12.0\ComponentModelCache

and delete it content.

Once you open Visual Studio and load your project again Test Explorer should contain back your tests

12
votes

XUnit users may notice Test Explorer window no longer lists any tests. To make tests discoverable again try this important tip, highlighted below.

If you're having problems discovering or running tests, you may be a victim of a corrupted runner cache inside Visual Studio. To clear this cache, shut down all instances of Visual Studio, then delete the folder %TEMP%\VisualStudioTestExplorerExtensions. Also make sure your project is only linked against a single version of the Visual Studio runner NuGet package (xunit.runner.visualstudio).

Type in TEMP to find target folder

5
votes

For future googlers I had a rare scenario that caused this.

On my base test class I had a property named TestContext. This interfered with MSTest's reserved TestContext property causing all my tests to be hidden from VS/Resharper except one (which did not inherit from the base).

4
votes

for me it was changing 'solution configurations' to Debug (instead of Release).

4
votes

My problem was because my unit test method wasn't void, and it was receiving parameters.

4
votes

I have found that unit test methods marked as async void aren't discovered by the VS Test Explorer. This seems to be because VS would not have any way to wait for a test to finish and decide if it succeeded or not. If you absolutely need to have a test method to run asynchronously then get it to return a Task instead like async Task. I found that this fixed the issue for me.

3
votes

Try building all projects as MSIL (Any CPU) instead of x86/x64. Worked for me strangely

3
votes

While AndyG's solution works, a more lasting solution could be to set the PreferredToolArchitecture environment variable to "x64", either by:

How to make Visual Studio use the native amd64 toolchain

or by:

  • Control Panel | System and Security | System | Advanced System Settings|Environment Variables
  • PreferredToolArchitecture = x64
  • DefaultToolArchitecture = Native64Bit
  • PROCESSOR_ARCHITECTURE = x64
  • ProcessorArchitecture = x64
2
votes

I was facing the same problem and I've remembered, again (this situation happened before), that selecting "Mixed Platform" on the solutions platform menu works, as well as the other answers.

2
votes

I'd managed to add mine as

public static void TestMethod1(){}

started working once I removed static....

2
votes

Go to Nuget package manager and download Nunit Adapter as follow. enter image description here

1
votes

go to the project menu > Configuration Manager check your test project platform matches the rest of the project and is check to build then rebuild.

1
votes

Just ran into this as well as I didn't see a similar case that was similar to mine.

In the .csproj file of my test project, NUnit reference privacy was set to False:

<Reference Include="nunit.framework, Version=2.6.4.14350, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=96d09a1eb7f44a77, processorArchitecture=MSIL">
  <HintPath>..\packages\NUnit.2.6.4\lib\nunit.framework.dll</HintPath>
  <Private>False</Private>
</Reference>

After I set <Private> to True it worked.

1
votes

You just need to install this package only:

NUnit TestAdapter NUnit TestAdapter

1
votes

To get tests to show in the Test Explorer Window I had to install NUnit3 Test Adapter 3.0 which was not available in Package Manager.

Downloaded from https://visualstudiogallery.msdn.microsoft.com/0da0f6bd-9bb6-4ae3-87a8-537788622f2d

1
votes

I had the exact same problem.

It was due to incompatible version of NUnit I'd added to my project (3.2.0) and the Test Adapter I had installed (2.0.0).

To fix, use "Tools > Extensions and Updates" and search for NUnit3 Test Adapter, it discovered my tests after that.

Cheers

1
votes

Let's just say for argument's sake that you need to use X64 architecture on your test project in order for the dependencies to build properly (as in my case). You may need to modify your Default Processor Architecture under the Test--Test Settings menu. Setting this to X64 allowed my test explorer to find my tests using Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting.

1
votes

Sorry for adding to the long list, but I had a completely a different problem. First, I would like to mention I discovered my issue when clicking 'Run All' in the Test Explorer and then watching the build output window in Visual Studio. You have to actively watch it, as afterwards the message disappears.

As for the issue, it looks like during the scanning of the tests, the DLL gets loaded and its test types are enumerated. This causes the references to be loaded and if any failure occurs during this process, the tests will not be shown in the explorer. I had two issues preventing the test DLL to be successfully loaded:

  • There was still a binding redirect left in the config file (redirecting to a version lower version NHiberate than what was referenced in the test project).
  • A conflicting assembly reference (2nd level references not being able to load). AsmSpy is btw a great tool to hunt for these.
1
votes

If you load a Visual Studio (VS 2015 Community in my case) solution from a network share or My Documents directory that is part of a share, you will get into this trouble. I solved it by moving the solution and its underlying projects to a local folder.

1
votes

After spending 2 days... none of the above worked for me. The only "solution" was: Go to project properties -> Build Tab. Then click Advanced button on the right bottom corner of the pane. Change "Debug Info:" to "full" and click OK.

Here are the screen shots: enter image description here

enter image description hereenter image description here

0
votes

I came across the same issue. And investigated and found that the dll's were not build, and put in the right folder. as soon as I changed my configuration they appeared. - the Projects build options, what folder should be used? - the build menu entry build configuration, they should be checked.

that fixed it for me.

0
votes

For the Visual Studio 2013.5, clearing the \TestResults directory in the solution helped. Visual Studio corrupted the mdf file in which it stores the discovered tests, thus preventing the discovery of unit tests.

0
votes

Be sure your all projects are runing with the same configuration. Under your project's Properties => Debug => Platform in drop down list choose the appropriate platform (for me it was "Any CPU") as determined at your other projects.

0
votes
  • I know that the unit tests are not found if the solution is not built, so that is something to try (Build the solution), but that solution is like the help desk asking if your computer is plugged in...
  • After a clean rebuild did not fix the problem for me, running a full batch build did fix it.
0
votes

Had the same issue; tests suddenly stopped being discovered.

Nunit Test Adapter had become disabled somehow. Clicking enable in the extension manager fixed it for me.

0
votes

I had the same problem until I realized I made a cut/paste error and left off [Test Method] before the test.