I'm using Mockito 1.9.0. I want mock the behaviour for a single method of a class in a JUnit test, so I have
final MyClass myClassSpy = Mockito.spy(myInstance);
Mockito.when(myClassSpy.method1()).thenReturn(myResults);
The problem is, in the second line, myClassSpy.method1() is actually getting called, resulting in an exception. The only reason I'm using mocks is so that later, whenever myClassSpy.method1() is called, the real method won't be called and the myResults object will be returned.
MyClass is an interface and myInstance is an implementation of that, if that matters.
What do I need to do to correct this spying behaviour?
Let me quote the official documentation:
Important gotcha on spying real objects!
Sometimes it's impossible to use when(Object) for stubbing spies. Example:
List list = new LinkedList();
List spy = spy(list);
// Impossible: real method is called so spy.get(0) throws IndexOutOfBoundsException (the list is yet empty)
when(spy.get(0)).thenReturn("foo");
// You have to use doReturn() for stubbing
doReturn("foo").when(spy).get(0);
In your case it goes something like:
doReturn(resultsIWant).when(myClassSpy).method1();
In my case, using Mockito 2.0, I had to change all the any() parameters to nullable() in order to stub the real call.
My case was different from the accepted answer. I was trying to mock a package-private method for an instance that did not live in that package
package common;
public class AnimalĀ {
void packageProtected();
}
package instances;
class Dog extends Animal { }
and the test classes
package common;
public abstract class AnimalTest<T extends Animal> {
#Before
setup(){
doNothing().when(getInstance()).packageProtected();
}
abstract T getInstance();
}
package instances;
class DogTest extends AnimalTest<Dog> {
Dog getInstance(){
return spy(new Dog());
}
#Test
public void myTest(){}
}
The compilation is correct, but when it tries to setup the test, it invokes the real method instead.
Declaring the method protected or public fixes the issue, tho it's not a clean solution.
The answer by Tomasz Nurkiewicz appears not to tell the whole story!
NB Mockito version: 1.10.19.
I am very much a Mockito newb, so can't explain the following behaviour: if there's an expert out there who can improve this answer, please feel free.
The method in question here, getContentStringValue, is NOT final and NOT static.
This line does call the original method getContentStringValue:
doReturn( "dummy" ).when( im ).getContentStringValue( anyInt(), isA( ScoreDoc.class ));
This line does not call the original method getContentStringValue:
doReturn( "dummy" ).when( im ).getContentStringValue( anyInt(), any( ScoreDoc.class ));
For reasons which I can't answer, using isA() causes the intended (?) "do not call method" behaviour of doReturn to fail.
Let's look at the method signatures involved here: they are both static methods of Matchers. Both are said by the Javadoc to return null, which is a little difficult to get your head around in itself. Presumably the Class object passed as the parameter is examined but the result either never calculated or discarded. Given that null can stand for any class and that you are hoping for the mocked method not to be called, couldn't the signatures of isA( ... ) and any( ... ) just return null rather than a generic parameter* <T>?
Anyway:
public static <T> T isA(java.lang.Class<T> clazz)
public static <T> T any(java.lang.Class<T> clazz)
The API documentation does not give any clue about this. It also seems to say the need for such "do not call method" behaviour is "very rare". Personally I use this technique all the time: typically I find that mocking involves a few lines which "set the scene" ... followed by calling a method which then "plays out" the scene in the mock context which you have staged... and while you are setting up the scenery and the props the last thing you want is for the actors to enter stage left and start acting their hearts out...
But this is way beyond my pay grade... I invite explanations from any passing Mockito high priests...
* is "generic parameter" the right term?
One more possible scenario which may causing issues with spies is when you're testing spring beans (with spring test framework) or some other framework that is proxing your objects during test.
Example
#Autowired
private MonitoringDocumentsRepository repository
void test(){
repository = Mockito.spy(repository)
Mockito.doReturn(docs1, docs2)
.when(repository).findMonitoringDocuments(Mockito.nullable(MonitoringDocumentSearchRequest.class));
}
In above code both Spring and Mockito will try to proxy your MonitoringDocumentsRepository object, but Spring will be first, which will cause real call of findMonitoringDocuments method. If we debug our code just after putting a spy on repository object it will look like this inside debugger:
repository = MonitoringDocumentsRepository$$EnhancerBySpringCGLIB$$MockitoMock$
#SpyBean to the rescue
If instead #Autowired annotation we use #SpyBean annotation, we will solve above problem, the SpyBean annotation will also inject repository object but it will be firstly proxied by Mockito and will look like this inside debugger
repository = MonitoringDocumentsRepository$$MockitoMock$$EnhancerBySpringCGLIB$
and here is the code:
#SpyBean
private MonitoringDocumentsRepository repository
void test(){
Mockito.doReturn(docs1, docs2)
.when(repository).findMonitoringDocuments(Mockito.nullable(MonitoringDocumentSearchRequest.class));
}
Important gotcha on spying real objects
When stubbing a method using spies , please use doReturn() family of methods.
when(Object) would result in calling the actual method that can throw exceptions.
List spy = spy(new LinkedList());
//Incorrect , spy.get() will throw IndexOutOfBoundsException
when(spy.get(0)).thenReturn("foo");
//You have to use doReturn() for stubbing
doReturn("foo").when(spy).get(0);
I've found yet another reason for spy to call the original method.
Someone had the idea to mock a final class, and found about MockMaker:
As this works differently to our current mechanism and this one has different limitations and as we want to gather experience and user feedback, this feature had to be explicitly activated to be available ; it can be done via the mockito extension mechanism by creating the file src/test/resources/mockito-extensions/org.mockito.plugins.MockMaker containing a single line: mock-maker-inline
Source: https://github.com/mockito/mockito/wiki/What%27s-new-in-Mockito-2#mock-the-unmockable-opt-in-mocking-of-final-classesmethods
After I merged and brought that file to my machine, my tests failed.
I just had to remove the line (or the file), and spy() worked.
One way to make sure a method from a class is not called is to override the method with a dummy.
WebFormCreatorActivity activity = spy(new WebFormCreatorActivity(clientFactory) {//spy(new WebFormCreatorActivity(clientFactory));
#Override
public void select(TreeItem i) {
log.debug("SELECT");
};
});
As mentioned in some of the comments, my method was "static" (though being called on by an instance of the class)
public class A {
static void myMethod() {...}
}
A instance = spy(new A());
verify(instance).myMethod(); // still calls the original method because it's static
Work around was make an instance method or upgrade Mockito to a newer version with some config: https://stackoverflow.com/a/62860455/32453
Bit late to the party but above solutions did not work for me , so sharing my 0.02$
Mokcito version: 1.10.19
MyClass.java
private int handleAction(List<String> argList, String action)
Test.java
MyClass spy = PowerMockito.spy(new MyClass());
Following did NOT work for me (actual method was being called):
1.
doReturn(0).when(spy , "handleAction", ListUtils.EMPTY_LIST, new String());
2.
doReturn(0).when(spy , "handleAction", any(), anyString());
3.
doReturn(0).when(spy , "handleAction", null, null);
Following WORKED:
doReturn(0).when(spy , "handleAction", any(List.class), anyString());
I would like to provide the same textual message for a group of assertions, something like
import static org.hamcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat;
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.*;
#Test
public void myTest() {
MyClass result = ...
withClue("the result {} does not conform", result.toString()) {
assertThat(result.id, notEmpty())
assertThat(result.xxxx, hasLength(33))
}
}
My expectation is that the "clue" will be shown before the first failed assertion. In Scala I'm used to ScalaTest withClue() that I usually use to show the full text representation of object (usually a JsonNode in my case) which usually allows me to understand better what went wrong.
So is there any way with vanilla JUnit, hamcrest of any other library dependency to get a message prepended to a group of assertions?
Suppose you have a Java method in a legacy library you need to use that takes a Class as an argument:
public void takeClass(Class<? extends JavaClass> cls);
Now, suppose you have a Ceylon class which extends JavaClass:
shared class CeylonClass() extends JavaClass() {}
Now, how can I use the method takeClass in Ceylon such that this works?
javaThing.takeClass( `class CeylonClass` );
// or maybe this should work?
javaThing.takeClass( javaClass<CeylonClass>() );
As shown above, I've been trying function javaClass in module ceylon.interop.java without success... if I do javaClass<JavaClass>() then it works, but this is no use for me, of course.
EDIT:
The error I get when using javaClass<CeylonClass>() as shown above:
argument must be assignable to parameter class of takeClass:
Class<CeylonClass> is not assignable to Class<JavaClass>?
Unfortunately, this is a case where you need to drop back to Java to add some glue. You can't, today, write it completely in Ceylon.
Explanation
The problem is that since Ceylon doesn't have use-site covariance, and since the Ceylon typechecker doesn't even understand Java's use-site covariance, the typechecker treats this method:
public void takeClass(Class<? extends JavaClass> cls);
As if it had this more restrictive signature:
public void takeClass(Class<JavaClass> cls);
Furthermore, the typechecker treats all Java classes as if they were invariant types.
Therefore, since javaClass<CeylonClass>() produces a Class<CeylonClass>, it's not considered assignable to the parameter of takeClass(). :-(
Workaround
The workaround is to add the following Java method:
public static <T extends JavaClass> void takeClass2(Class<T> cls) {
takeClass(cls);
}
Now this method can be called like this from Ceylon:
javaThing.takeClass2( javaClass<CeylonClass>() );
HTH
P.S.
While writing this up, I noticed that in fact java.lang.Class is actually a covariant type, and I think that Ceylon should easily be able to notice that too. So I created this issue:
https://github.com/ceylon/ceylon-compiler/issues/1474
I have successfully set up a quick test of creating a "REST-like" service that returns an object serialized to JSON, and that was quite easy and quick (based on this article).
But while returning JSON-ified objects was easy as peach, I have yet to see any examples dealing with input parameters that are not primitives. How can I pass in a complex object as an argument? I am using Apache CXF, but examples using other frameworks like Jackson are welcome too :)
Client side would probably be something like building a javascript object, pass it into JSON.stringify(complexObj), and pass that string as one of the parameters.
The service would probably look something like this
#Service("myService")
class RestService {
#GET
#Produces("application/json")
#Path("/fooBar")
public Result fooBar(#QueryParam("foo") double foo, #QueryParam("bar") double bar,
#QueryParam("object") MyComplex object) throws WebServiceException {
...
}
}
Sending serialized objects as parameters would probably quickly touch the 2KB URL-limit imposed by Internet Explorer. Would you recommend using POST in these cases, and would I need to change much in the function definitions?
After digging a bit I quickly found out there are basically two options:
Option 1
You pass a "wrapper object" containing all the other parameters to the service. You might need to annotate this wrapper class with JAXB annotations like #XmlRootElement in order for this to work with the Jettison based provider, but if you use Jackson in stead there is no need. Just set the content type to the right type and the right message body reader will be invoked.
This will only work for POST type services of course (AFAIK).
Example
This is just an example of turning the service mentioned in the original question into one using a wrapper object.
#Service("myService")
class RestService {
#POST
#Produces("application/json")
#Path("/fooBar")
public Result fooBar(
/**
* Using "" will inject all form params directly into a ParamsWrapper
* #see http://cxf.apache.org/docs/jax-rs-basics.html
*/
#FormParam("") FooBarParamsWrapper wrapper
) throws WebServiceException {
doSomething(wrapper.foo);
}
}
class ParamsWrapper {
double foo, bar;
MyComplexObject object;
}
Option 2
You can provide some special string format that you pack your objects into and then implement either a constructor taking a string, a static valueOf(String s) or a static fromString(String s) in the class that will take this string and create an object from it. Or quite similar, create a ParameterHandler that does exactly the same.
AFAIK, only the second version will allow you to call your services from a browser using JSONP (since JSONP is a trick restricted to GET). I chose this route to be able to pass arrays of complex objects in the URI.
As an example of how this works, take the following domain class and service
Example
#GET
#Path("myService")
public void myService(#QueryParam("a") MyClass [] myVals) {
//do something
}
class MyClass {
public int foo;
public int bar;
/** Deserializes an Object of class MyClass from its JSON representation */
public static MyClass fromString(String jsonRepresentation) {
ObjectMapper mapper = new ObjectMapper(); //Jackson's JSON marshaller
MyClass o= null;
try {
o = mapper.readValue(jsonRepresentation, MyClass.class );
} catch (IOException e) {
throw new WebApplicationException()
}
return o;
}
}
A URI http://my-server.com/myService?a={"foo":1, "bar":2}&a={"foo":100, "bar":200} would in this case be deserialized into an array composed of two MyClass objects.
2019 comment:
Seeing that this answer still gets some hits in 2019, I feel I should comment. In hindsight, I would not recomment option 2, as going through these steps just to be able to be able to do GET calls adds complexity that's probably not worth it. If your service takes such complex input, you will probably not be able to utilize client side caching anyway, due to the number of permutations of your input. I'd just go for configuring proper Cross-Origin-Sharing (CORS) headers on the server and POST the input. Then focus on caching whatever you can on the server.
The accepted answer is missing #BeanParam. See
https://docs.jboss.org/resteasy/docs/3.0-rc-1/javadocs/javax/ws/rs/BeanParam.html
for further details. It allows you to define query params inside a wrapper object.
E.g.
public class TestPOJO {
#QueryParam("someQueryParam")
private boolean someQueryParam;
public boolean isSomeQueryParam() {
return someQueryParam;
}
public boolean setSomeQueryParam(boolean value) {
this.someQueryParam = value;
}
}
... // inside the Resource class
#GET
#Path("test")
public Response getTest(#BeanParam TestPOJO testPOJO) {
...
}
the best and simplest solution is to send your object as a json string and in server side implement a method which will decode that json and map to the specified object as per your need.. and yes it`s better to use POST.
I have the following code:
public IQueryable<ITax> FindAllTaxes()
{
return db.Taxes;
}
I am getting the following error
Cannot implicitly convert type 'System.Data.Linq.Table<Models.Tax>' to 'System.Linq.IQueryable<Interfaces.ITax>'
I am trying to use Interface where ever I go, but not sure how to convert this, any help?
We don't have covariance of generic types yet, I'm afraid. You can do IQueryable<Tax>, but not IQueryable<ITax>. You could introduce a conversion, but it'll probably break composability, rendering it useless. You could try it though:
return db.Taxes.Cast<ITax>();
In C# 4.0, this would probably work without the extra cast (although I haven't tried it).
try this
public IQueryable<Taxe> FindAllTaxes() { return db.Taxes; }
or
public IQueryable<Tax> FindAllTaxes() { return db.Taxes; }