| name | cosmos-run-integration-tests |
| description | Run azure-cosmos integration/customer-workflow tests locally, closely following the CI pipeline (build+install, then failsafe `verify` with a test profile) using one consistent JDK for both steps. USE WHEN: asked to run cosmos integration tests, customer-workflow tests (fi-customer-workflows / fi-sm-customer-workflows), reproduce a CI test failure locally, or run a specific cosmos test profile via Maven. Covers the same-JDK build/test requirement, the two-step build/test split, profile→group→file mapping, and the required account env vars. NOT FOR: unit tests only, Spark/Kafka connector tests, or non-cosmos modules.
|
Running azure-cosmos integration tests locally (CI-equivalent)
TL;DR
CI runs tests in two separate Maven invocations, both on the same JDK (the version CI pins
via JavaTestVersion in eng/pipelines/templates/variables/globals.yml):
- Build + install (
-DskipTests ... install) — compiles main + test classes, installs jars.
- Test (
verify -P<profile> -DskipCompile=true -DskipTestCompile=true) — failsafe runs the TestNG suite.
Because step 2 skips compilation, it runs the classes/jars step 1 produced — so both steps must use
the same JDK (see below).
There is no separate "surefire command" — integration tests run through failsafe via mvn verify -P<profile>.
⚠️ Critical: use the same JDK for build (step 1) and test (step 2)
Step 1 compiles main + test classes and installs the azure-cosmos / azure-cosmos-tests jars into
~/.m2 using whatever JAVA_HOME you build with. A local incremental install packages those classes
at the build JDK's class-file version (the java9plus profile's default-compile /
default-testCompile use <release>${java.vm.specification.version}</release>, i.e. the build VM's
version). Step 2 then skips compilation (-DskipCompile=true -DskipTestCompile=true) and runs those
already-built classes.
So if step 1 and step 2 use different JDKs you get class-file version mismatches. Example: build on a
newer JDK (class file v65/v69), then run step 2 on JDK 17 (v61) and javac / the runtime rejects the
jars with misleading errors like:
cannot access com.azure.cosmos.implementation.TestConfigurations
bad class file: ...azure-cosmos-*.jar(.../TestConfigurations.class)
class file has wrong version 65.0, should be 61.0
This is NOT a JPMS / module-path / javaModulesSurefireArgLine problem. The parent already sets
useModulePath=false; azure-cosmos lands on -classpath correctly. The only cause is the JDK mismatch
between the two steps.
Fix: pick one JDK and use it for both steps — ideally the major version CI uses for tests
(JavaTestVersion in eng/pipelines/templates/variables/globals.yml). Point JAVA_HOME at that JDK and
prepend it to PATH at the top of every command (adjust the path to your local install):
$env:JAVA_HOME='<path-to-your-jdk>' # e.g. C:\Program Files\OpenLogic\jdk-21.0.10.7-hotspot
$env:PATH="$env:JAVA_HOME\bin;$env:PATH"
Step 1 — Build + install (use the same JDK as step 2)
Quote every -D flag in PowerShell (unquoted .skip args get mis-parsed as lifecycle phases).
mvn --batch-mode --fail-at-end '-DskipTests' '-Dgpg.skip=true' '-Dmaven.javadoc.skip=true' `
'-Dcodesnippet.skip=true' '-Dspotbugs.skip=true' '-Dcheckstyle.skip=true' '-Drevapi.skip=true' `
'-Dspotless.apply.skip=true' '-Dspotless.check.skip=true' '-Djacoco.skip=true' '-Denforcer.skip=true' `
'-T' '2C' '-pl' 'com.azure:azure-cosmos,com.azure:azure-cosmos-tests' '-am' 'install'
Step 2 — Run a test profile via failsafe (skip compile like CI)
mvn '-pl' 'com.azure:azure-cosmos-tests' 'verify' '-Pfi-sm-customer-workflows' `
'-DskipCompile=true' '-DskipTestCompile=true' '-DcreateSourcesJar=false' `
"-DACCOUNT_HOST=$env:ACCOUNT_HOST" "-DACCOUNT_KEY=$env:ACCOUNT_KEY" `
'-DACCOUNT_CONSISTENCY=Session' '-DCOSMOS.CLIENT_LEAK_DETECTION_ENABLED=true' `
'-Dgpg.skip=true' '-Dspotbugs.skip=true' '-Dcheckstyle.skip=true' '-Drevapi.skip=true' `
'-Dspotless.apply.skip=true' '-Dspotless.check.skip=true' '-Djacoco.skip=true' '-Denforcer.skip=true' `
2>&1 | Tee-Object -FilePath fi-sm-run1.log
- Failsafe report:
sdk/cosmos/azure-cosmos-tests/target/failsafe-reports/TestSuite.txt
- Summary line to look for:
Tests run: N, Failures: F, Errors: E, Skipped: S
Profile → group → file mapping (customer workflows)
| Profile | Test group | Account shape | Files |
|---|
fi-customer-workflows | fi-customer-workflows | multi-master | 9 test files |
fi-sm-customer-workflows | fi-sm-customer-workflows | single-master, multi-region | 1 file: CustomerWorkflowSingleMasterAvailabilityTest |
Each profile sets a suiteXmlFile (e.g. src/test/resources/fi-sm-customer-workflows-testng.xml)
in sdk/cosmos/azure-cosmos-tests/pom.xml. Other profiles (direct, multi-master, fi-multi-master,
thinclient, etc.) follow the same -P<id> pattern.
Required env vars
| Var | Notes |
|---|
ACCOUNT_HOST | e.g. https://<acct>.documents.azure.com:443/ |
ACCOUNT_KEY | primary key (88 chars) |
ACCOUNT_CONSISTENCY | CI passes Session for these profiles; defaults to Strong if unset |
Notes
javaModulesSurefireArgLine (sdk/cosmos/azure-cosmos-tests/pom.xml) is the runtime --add-opens block
for reflective test access; the parent injects it into the surefire/failsafe argLine. It does not
affect compilation.
- CI source of truth:
sdk/cosmos/tests.yml (TestGoals: verify,
TestOptions: $(ProfileFlag) -DskipCompile=true -DskipTestCompile=true -DcreateSourcesJar=false).
- The commands above add a few local-convenience flags CI does not use (e.g.
-Denforcer.skip=true
plus the various *.skip flags) to speed up local runs. They are intentional — this skill reproduces
the test run, not a byte-for-byte CI build. Drop -Denforcer.skip=true if you also want CI's enforcer
checks locally.
- To run a single test, add
'-Dit.test=CustomerWorkflowSingleMasterAvailabilityTest#<method>'
(failsafe uses it.test, not test).