I have the following service:
#Service
public class PlayerValidationService {
#Autowire
private EmailService emailService;
public boolean validatePlayerEmail(Player player) {
return this.emailService.validateEmail(player.getEmail());
}
Now in my junit test class i'm using a different 3rd service that uses PlayerValidationService :
public class junit {
#autowire PlayerAccountService playerAccountService ;
#Test
public test() {
this.playerAccountService .createAccount();
assertAllSortsOfThings();
}
Is it possible to mock the EmailService within the PlayerAccountService when using annotation based autowiring? (for example make the mock not checking the validation of the email via the regular email provider we work with)
thanks.
There are a couple of ways in which you could do this. First the simplest option is to ensure that your service provides a setEmailService(EmailService) method. In which case you just replace the Spring-injected implementation with your own.
#Autowired
private PlayerValidationService playerValidationService;
#Mock
private EmailService emailService;
#Before
public void setup() {
initMocks(this);
playerValidationService.setEmailService(emailService);
}
A shortcoming of that approach is that an instance of the full-blown EmailService is likely to be created by Spring. Assuming that you don't want that to happen, you can use 'profiles'.
In your test packages, create a configuration class which is only active in a particular profile:
#Configuration
#Profile("mockemail")
public class MockEmailConfig {
#Bean(name = "emailService")
public EmailService emailService() {
return new MyDummyEmailService();
}
}
And add an annotation to your test to activate that profile:
#ActiveProfiles({ "mockemail" })
public class PlayerValidationServiceTest {
//...
}
Related
I'm new to spring boot and I'm trying to wrap my head around how to make dependency injection work for deployment and testing.
I have a #RestController and a supporting #Service. The service injects another class that is an interface for talking to Kafka. For the Kafka interface I have two implementations: one real and one fake. The real one I want to use in production and the fake in test.
My approach is to use two different configuration for each environment (prod and test).
#Configuration
public class AppTestConfiguration {
#Bean
public KafkaMessagePublisher kafkaMessagePublisher() {
return new KafkaMessagePublisherFakeImpl();
}
}
#Configuration
public class AppConfiguration {
#Bean
public KafkaMessagePublisher kafkaMessagePublisher() {
return new KafkaMessagePublisherImpl();
}
}
Then in my main application I would like to somehow load AppConfiguration.
#SpringBootApplication
public class DeployerServiceApiApplication {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SpringApplication.run(DeployerServiceApiApplication.class, args);
}
// TODO: somehow load here...
}
And in my test load the fake configuration somehow
#SpringBootTest
#AutoConfigureMockMvc(addFilters = false)
public class DeployerServiceApiApplicationTest {
#Autowired private MockMvc mockMvc;
// TODO: somehow load AppTestConfiguration here
#Test
public void testDeployAction() throws Exception {
...
ResultActions resultActions = mockMvc.perform(...);
...
}
}
I've spent the better part of a day trying to figure this out. What I'm trying to accomplish here is fundamental and should be straight forward yet I keep running into issues which makes me wonder if the way I'm thinking about this is all wrong.
Am not sure if i understand your question completely but from description i guess you wish to initialize bean based on environment. Please see below.
#Profile("test")
#Configuration
public class AppTestConfiguration {
#Bean
public KafkaMessagePublisher kafkaMessagePublisher() {
return new KafkaMessagePublisherFakeImpl();
}
}
#Profile("prod")
#Configuration
public class AppConfiguration {
#Bean
public KafkaMessagePublisher kafkaMessagePublisher() {
return new KafkaMessagePublisherImpl();
}
and then you can pass the "-Dspring.profiles.active=prod" argument while starting you application using java command or you can also specify the profile in your test case like below.
#SpringBootTest
#ActiveProfile("test")
#AutoConfigureMockMvc(addFilters = false)
public class DeployerServiceApiApplicationTest
Use spring profiles, you can annotate your test class with #ActiveProfiles("test-kafka") and your test configuration with #Profile("test-kafka").
This is pretty easy task in spring boot world
Rewrite your classes as follows:
#Profile("test")
#Configuration
public class AppTestConfiguration {
#Bean
public KafkaMessagePublisher kafkaMessagePublisher() {
return new KafkaMessagePublisherFakeImpl();
}
}
#Profile("prod")
#Configuration
public class AppConfiguration {
#Bean
public KafkaMessagePublisher kafkaMessagePublisher() {
return new KafkaMessagePublisherImpl();
}
}
This will instruct spring boot to load the relevant configuration when the "prod"/"test" specified.
Then you can start your application in production with --spring.profiles.active=prod and in the Test you can write something like this:
#SpringBootTest
#ActiveProfiles("test")
public class DeployerServiceApiApplicationTest {
...
}
If you want to run all the tests with this profile and do not want to write this ActiveProfiles annotation you can create src/test/resources/application.properties and put into it: spring.active.profiles=test
I'm using JUnit5 to test a Spring Boot application. I want to test a #Service object, which uses #Autowired fields. I would like to mock another #Service object which is indirectly used by my test object. Concretely, I have the following (highly simplified) setup:
Object being tested:
#Service
public class MainService {
private #Autowired SubService subService;
public String test() {
return subService.test();
}
}
SubService:
#Service
public class SubService {
private #Autowired StringService stringService;
public String test() {
return stringService.test();
}
}
StringService:
#Service
public class StringService {
public String test() {
return "Real service";
}
}
Test class used:
#SpringBootTest
public class MainServiceTest {
private #Autowired MainService mainService;
private #MockBean StringService stringService;
#BeforeEach
public void mock() {
Mockito.when(stringService.test()).thenReturn("Mocked service");
}
#Test
public void test() {
assertEquals("Mocked service", mainService.test());
}
}
The above works if I run the test class as a #SpringBootTest, but this loads the full application and is very slow. I also want to avoid #WebMvcTest since I don't need the web server, or #DataJpaTest since I don't need persistence. I don't want to mock SubService, as it contains functionality I want to test together with the MainService.
I tried the following:
#ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class) => throws NoSuchBeanDefinitionException, it seems the autowiring does not work in this case
#ExtendWith(MockitoExtension.class) and using #InjectMocks and #Mock instead of the Spring annotations => as the StringService is not a direct field of the MainService being tested, this does not work.
Is there a way to use the spring dependency injection system without loading the web server or persistence layer, or alternatively not use Spring tests but allow for 'nested' dependency injection?
You can use profiling (i.e Spring #Profile) to avoid loading the whole application. It will look something like below:
#Profile("test")
#Configuration
public class TestConfiguration {
#Bean
public MainService mainService() {
return new MainService();
}
#Bean
public SubService subService() {
return new SubService();
}
// mock the StringService
#Bean
public StringService stringService() {
return Mockito.mock(StringService.class);
}
}
then use that profile with `#SpringBootTest(classes = TestConfiguration.class), it will look something like below:
#ActiveProfiles("test")
#SpringBootTest(classes = TestConfiguration.class)
class MainServiceTest {
#Autowired
private MainService mainService;
#Test
public void test() {
// configure behavior using apis like when(), basically however you
// want your mock to behave
}
}
This will load only the beans defined in the class TestConfiguration.
NOTE: Since your question is more about how to avoid loading the whole application, I've answered focusing on that. The above approach will get the job done, but I'd prefer constructor wiring over any other mode of dependency injection on any given day, it's easier to maintain and test(like cases where you want to mock).
I have created an interface Client with its two concrete implementations
clientA and clientB and annotated them with my custom annotation.
public interface Client{
public void dosomething();
}
#Component
#Myannotation
public class clientA implements Client {
public void doSomething(){
sysout("Client A do something");
}
}
#Component
#Myannotation
public class clientB implements Client {
public void doSomething(){
sysout("Client B do something");
}
}
Now I am calling the overriden methods of both clientA and clientB from Alien class.
#Component
class Alien{
#Autowired
private ApplicationContext context;
public void performOperation(){
Map<String, Object> beans =
context.getBeansWithAnnotation(MyAnnotation.class);
for(Map.Entry<String, Object> entry: beans.entrySet()) {
Client c = (Client)entry.getValue();
c.doSomething();
}
}
}
I am facing problem with writing test method for performOperation.
#RunWith(MockitoJUnitRunner.class)
class AlienTest
{
#InjectMocks
Alien a;
#Test
public void testperformOperation(){
//how to Mock for beans
assertEquals(expected, a.performOperation());
}
}
1) How should I write testperformOperation method(allowed to change the return type of performOperation method from void to any other type)
2) Is there any better way to get list of all implementations for Client interface without creating custom annotations.
I would suggest you first refactoring Alien to make it more testable using Dependency Injection idea which its dependencies (i.e Client) can be injected from outside rather than hard coded inside a method which always get from the spring context:
#Component
public class Alien{
private List<Client> clients = new ArrayList<>();
#Autowired
public Alien(List<Client> clients) {
this.clients = clients;
}
public void performOperation(){
for(Client c: clients) {
c.doSomething();
}
}
}
If you simply want to inject all Client implementation to the Alien , you just need to #Autowired List<Client> into Alien which Spring will already help you to inject all the Client implementation to it out of the box. No need to create #Myannotation
Once you make the Alien 's dependencies injectable (i.e a list of client) , you can simply inject a mock to it and verify performOperation() really invoke all of Client 's doSomething():
#RunWith(MockitoJUnitRunner.class)
class AlienTest{
#Mock
private Client mockClientA;
#Mock
private Client mockClientB;
#Test
public void testperformOperation(){
List<Client> clients = new ArrayList<>();
clients.add(mockClientA);
clients.add(mockClientB);
Alien alien = new Alien(clients);
alien.performOperation();
verify(mockClientA).doSomething();
verify(mockClientB).doSomething();
}
}
I’ll answer both parts of your question, but I believe the first approach is inferior and the second is the go-to approach.
If you want to stick with your custom annotation approach, you need to have a #Mock ApplicationContext applicationContext in your test class. In the test method (or setup method) you need to mock the call to applicationContext.getBeansWithAnnotation and return an appropriate map containing your bean (possibly also a mock)
You can easily inject all beans to a class by injecting a List of the appropriate type. In your case
get rid of #Autowired ApplicationContext
add an #Autowired List (or, preferably, use constructor injection)
This will also make the tests simpler, no need to mock ApplicationContext.
For example, see https://dzone.com/articles/load-all-implementors
I have a Interface which is registered as part of ServiceLocatorFactoryBean. The main purpose of this Interface is to act as a factory.
http://docs.spring.io/spring/docs/current/javadoc-api/org/springframework/beans/factory/config/ServiceLocatorFactoryBean.html
I have "autowired" this Interface in various classes, that I want to test now with Mockito.
The issue is Mockito doesn't support interfaces. How can inject a mock of this interface in the class I am testing.
The only alternative I see is to run the test using SpringJunitRunner and providing an Application Context which has the bean configurations. But this is too verbose.
I take it you'd like to spy on the implementation that Spring generated for your interface?! That's close to impossible to achieve with what you have so far... However there are at least the following alternatives below.
Suppose we have the following setup:
public interface MyService {
String doIt();
}
#Component
public static class ServiceConsumer {
#Autowired
private MyService service;
public String execute() {
return service.doIt();
}
}
0) Later edit: while roaming around, I found that it may be possible to spy and even replace an autowired field with a mock, and fairly easy too, using Springockito-annotations.
#RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
#ComponentScan
#ContextConfiguration(loader = SpringockitoAnnotatedContextLoader.class, classes = {SpringockitoConsumerTest.class})
public class SpringockitoConsumerTest {
#WrapWithSpy(beanName = "myService")
#Autowired
private MyService mockService;
#Autowired
private ServiceConsumer consumer;
#Test
public void shouldConsumeService() {
assertEquals("allDone", consumer.execute());
verify(mockService).doIt();
}
}
If Springockito-annotations is out of the question, please see the 2 original suggestions below
1) You could just create your mock of the interface and auto-inject it Mockito in your bean. This is the simplest solution (I could think of at the time of writing) but it does not ensure that the #Autowired annotation was not forgotten in the consumer (perhaps a dedicated test could be added?!):
public class AutoInjectMocksConsumerTest {
#Mock
private MyService serviceMock;
#InjectMocks
private ServiceConsumer consumer = new ServiceConsumer();
#Before
public void initMocks() {
MockitoAnnotations.initMocks(this);
when(serviceMock.doIt()).thenReturn("allDone");
}
#Test
public void shouldConsumeService() {
assertEquals("allDone", consumer.execute());
verify(serviceMock).doIt();
}
}
2) Alternatively as you also said, you could run it with the SpringJunitRunner making a minimum of effort to define and instantiate the necessary Spring context while also providing your own service mock. Albeit people may complain this solution is not that clean, I find it sufficiently elegant and it also validates that the #Autowired annotation was not forgotten in the consumer implementation.
#RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
#Configuration
#ComponentScan
#ContextConfiguration(classes = {SpringAutowiringConsumerTest.class})
public class SpringAutowiringConsumerTest {
#Autowired
private MyService mockService;
#Autowired
private ServiceConsumer consumer;
#Test
public void shouldConsumeService() {
assertEquals("allDone", consumer.execute());
verify(mockService).doIt();
}
#Bean
public MyService mockService() {
MyService serviceMock = mock(MyService.class);
when(serviceMock.doIt()).thenReturn("allDone");
return serviceMock;
}
}
There is the spring-boot application that uses spring-aop. proxy-target-class is true.
I'm trying to create a test for a service class. This service depends on a component class. I want to inject a mock into the service instead of the real component.
I found some similar questions:
Mocking a property of a CGLIB proxied service not working
Injecting Mockito mocks into a Spring bean
I choose this answer to the last question, and I have tried to implement this approach. I chose it because it is not tied to the implementation details of the proxy classes and I can easily use a config class in other tests.
Below there is the example which simulates the real problem.
#org.aspectj.lang.annotation.Aspect
#org.springframework.stereotype.Component
public class Aspect {
#Before("within(demo.Service)")
public void someAdvice() {
System.out.println("advice");
}
}
#org.springframework.stereotype.Service
public class Service {
#Autowired
private Component component;
public void action() {
System.out.println(component.action());
}
}
#org.springframework.stereotype.Component
public class Component {
public String action() {
return "real action";
}
}
#SpringApplicationConfiguration
public class ServiceTest extends BaseTest {
#Autowired
Service service;
#Test
public void testAction() {
service.action();
}
#Configuration
public static class Config {
#Mock Component mock;
public Config() {
MockitoAnnotations.initMocks(this);
}
#Bean
public Component component() {
Mockito.when(mock.action()).thenReturn("mock action");
return mock;
}
}
}
Complete example: https://github.com/eds0404/spring-inject-mock-into-proxy
The above code is not working as I expect, the service does not use mock ("real action" will be printed if you run test). But the above code works fine if the Component class is not marked with #Component annotation, and its objects are created by the method with #Been annotation.
How to solve this issue? If this is wrong approach, what is best practice?