Prior to setting up Test Impact Analysis, set up Test Optimization for Swift. The code coverage option must also be enabled in the test settings of your scheme or test plan, or --enable-code-coverage must be added to your Swift test command (if using a SPM target).
If you are reporting data through the Agent, use v6.40 and later or v7.40 and later.
You, or a user in your organization with the Intelligent Test Runner Activation (intelligent_test_runner_activation_write) permission, must activate Test Impact Analysis on the Test Service Settings page.
Test Impact Analysis uses code coverage data to determine whether or not tests should be skipped. In some cases, this data may not be sufficient to make this determination.
Examples include:
Tests that read data from text files
Tests that interact with APIs outside of the code being tested (such as remote REST APIs)
Tests that run external processes
Tests that depend on global shared state (for example, caches created by a different test or process)
Tests that use forked processes (per test code coverage only collects coverage for the main process)
Integration tests that use capybara or selenium-webdriver
Designating tests as unskippable ensures that Test Impact Analysis runs them regardless of coverage data.
importXCTestimportDatadogSDKTestingclassSomeTestCase:XCTestCase{functestMethod(){}}extensionSomeTestCase:ExtendableTaggedType{staticfuncextendableTypeTags()->ExtendableTypeTags{withTagger{taggerin// Mark all class unskippabletagger.set(type:.itrSkippable,to:false)// Set only one method unskippabletagger.set(instance:.itrSkippable,to:false,method:#selector(testMethod))}}}