610f827261
By placing the stdout in a CDATA block we avoid almost all escaping, as there's only two byte sequences you can't sneak into a CDATA and you can handle that with some only slightly regrettable CDATA-splitting. I've done this in at least two other implementations of the junit xml format over the years and it's always worked out. The only quirk new to this (for me) is smuggling newlines as 
 to avoid literal newlines in the output.
2 lines
847 B
XML
2 lines
847 B
XML
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><testsuites><testsuite name="test" package="test" id="0" errors="0" failures="1" tests="4" skipped="1" ><testcase classname="unknown" name="a" time="$TIME"><system-out><![CDATA[print from successful test]]>
<![CDATA[]]></system-out></testcase><testcase classname="unknown" name="b" time="$TIME"><failure type="assert"/><system-out><![CDATA[print from failing test]]>
<![CDATA[thread 'b' panicked at 'assertion failed: false', f.rs:10:5]]>
<![CDATA[note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace]]>
<![CDATA[]]></system-out></testcase><testcase classname="unknown" name="c" time="$TIME"><system-out><![CDATA[thread 'c' panicked at 'assertion failed: false', f.rs:16:5]]>
<![CDATA[]]></system-out></testcase><system-out/><system-err/></testsuite></testsuites>
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