This chapter covers Spring’s support for integration testing and best practices for unit testing. The Spring team advocates test-driven development (TDD). The Spring team has found that the correct use of inversion of control (IoC) certainly does make both unit and integration testing easier (in that the presence of setter methods and appropriate constructors on classes makes them easier to wire together in a test without having to set up service locator registries and similar structures).
1. Introduction to Spring Testing
Testing is an integral part of enterprise software development. This chapter focuses on the value added by the IoC principle to unit testing and on the benefits of the Spring Framework’s support for integration testing. (A thorough treatment of testing in the enterprise is beyond the scope of this reference manual.)
2. Unit Testing
Dependency injection should make your code less dependent on the container than it would
be with traditional Java EE development. The POJOs that make up your application should
be testable in JUnit or TestNG tests, with objects instantiated by using the new
operator, without Spring or any other container. You can use mock
objects (in conjunction with other valuable testing techniques) to test your code in
isolation. If you follow the architecture recommendations for Spring, the resulting clean
layering and componentization of your codebase facilitate easier unit testing. For
example, you can test service layer objects by stubbing or mocking DAO or repository
interfaces, without needing to access persistent data while running unit tests.
True unit tests typically run extremely quickly, as there is no runtime infrastructure to set up. Emphasizing true unit tests as part of your development methodology can boost your productivity. You may not need this section of the testing chapter to help you write effective unit tests for your IoC-based applications. For certain unit testing scenarios, however, the Spring Framework provides mock objects and testing support classes, which are described in this chapter.
2.1. Mock Objects
Spring includes a number of packages dedicated to mocking:
2.1.1. Environment
The org.springframework.mock.env
package contains mock implementations of the
Environment
and PropertySource
abstractions (see
Bean Definition Profiles
and PropertySource
Abstraction).
MockEnvironment
and MockPropertySource
are useful for developing
out-of-container tests for code that depends on environment-specific properties.
2.1.2. JNDI
The org.springframework.mock.jndi
package contains an implementation of the JNDI SPI,
which you can use to set up a simple JNDI environment for test suites or stand-alone
applications. If, for example, JDBC DataSource
instances get bound to the same JNDI
names in test code as they do in a Java EE container, you can reuse both application code
and configuration in testing scenarios without modification.
2.1.3. Servlet API
The org.springframework.mock.web
package contains a comprehensive set of Servlet API
mock objects that are useful for testing web contexts, controllers, and filters. These
mock objects are targeted at usage with Spring’s Web MVC framework and are generally more
convenient to use than dynamic mock objects (such as EasyMock)
or alternative Servlet API mock objects (such as MockObjects).
Since Spring Framework 5.0, the mock objects in org.springframework.mock.web are
based on the Servlet 4.0 API.
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The Spring MVC Test framework builds on the mock Servlet API objects to provide an integration testing framework for Spring MVC. See Spring MVC Test Framework.
2.1.4. Spring Web Reactive
The org.springframework.mock.http.server.reactive
package contains mock implementations
of ServerHttpRequest
and ServerHttpResponse
for use in WebFlux applications. The
org.springframework.mock.web.server
package contains a mock ServerWebExchange
that
depends on those mock request and response objects.
Both MockServerHttpRequest
and MockServerHttpResponse
extend from the same abstract
base classes as server-specific implementations and share behavior with them. For
example, a mock request is immutable once created, but you can use the mutate()
method
from ServerHttpRequest
to create a modified instance.
In order for the mock response to properly implement the write contract and return a
write completion handle (that is, Mono<Void>
), it by default uses a Flux
with
cache().then()
, which buffers the data and makes it available for assertions in tests.
Applications can set a custom write function (for example, to test an infinite stream).
The WebTestClient builds on the mock request and response to provide support for testing WebFlux applications without an HTTP server. The client can also be used for end-to-end tests with a running server.
2.2. Unit Testing Support Classes
Spring includes a number of classes that can help with unit testing. They fall into two categories:
2.2.1. General Testing Utilities
The org.springframework.test.util
package contains several general purpose utilities
for use in unit and integration testing.
ReflectionTestUtils
is a collection of reflection-based utility methods. You can use
these methods in testing scenarios where you need to change the value of a constant, set
a non-public
field, invoke a non-public
setter method, or invoke a non-public
configuration or lifecycle callback method when testing application code for use cases
such as the following:
-
ORM frameworks (such as JPA and Hibernate) that condone
private
orprotected
field access as opposed topublic
setter methods for properties in a domain entity. -
Spring’s support for annotations (such as
@Autowired
,@Inject
, and@Resource
), that provide dependency injection forprivate
orprotected
fields, setter methods, and configuration methods. -
Use of annotations such as
@PostConstruct
and@PreDestroy
for lifecycle callback methods.
AopTestUtils
is a collection of
AOP-related utility methods. You can use these methods to obtain a reference to the
underlying target object hidden behind one or more Spring proxies. For example, if you
have configured a bean as a dynamic mock by using a library such as EasyMock or Mockito,
and the mock is wrapped in a Spring proxy, you may need direct access to the underlying
mock to configure expectations on it and perform verifications. For Spring’s core AOP
utilities, see AopUtils
and
AopProxyUtils
.
2.2.2. Spring MVC Testing Utilities
The org.springframework.test.web
package contains
ModelAndViewAssert
, which you
can use in combination with JUnit, TestNG, or any other testing framework for unit tests
that deal with Spring MVC ModelAndView
objects.
Unit testing Spring MVC Controllers
To unit test your Spring MVC Controller classes as POJOs, use ModelAndViewAssert
combined with MockHttpServletRequest , MockHttpSession , and so on from Spring’s
Servlet API mocks. For thorough integration testing of your
Spring MVC and REST Controller classes in conjunction with your WebApplicationContext
configuration for Spring MVC, use the Spring MVC Test
Framework instead.
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3. Integration Testing
This section (most of the rest of this chapter) covers integration testing for Spring applications. It includes the following topics:
3.1. Overview
It is important to be able to perform some integration testing without requiring deployment to your application server or connecting to other enterprise infrastructure. Doing so lets you test things such as:
-
The correct wiring of your Spring IoC container contexts.
-
Data access using JDBC or an ORM tool. This can include such things as the correctness of SQL statements, Hibernate queries, JPA entity mappings, and so forth.
The Spring Framework provides first-class support for integration testing in the
spring-test
module. The name of the actual JAR file might include the release version
and might also be in the long org.springframework.test
form, depending on where you get
it from (see the section on Dependency Management for
an explanation). This library includes the org.springframework.test
package, which
contains valuable classes for integration testing with a Spring container. This testing
does not rely on an application server or other deployment environment. Such tests are
slower to run than unit tests but much faster than the equivalent Selenium tests or
remote tests that rely on deployment to an application server.
In Spring 2.5 and later, unit and integration testing support is provided in the form of the annotation-driven Spring TestContext Framework. The TestContext framework is agnostic of the actual testing framework in use, which allows instrumentation of tests in various environments, including JUnit, TestNG, and others.
3.2. Goals of Integration Testing
Spring’s integration testing support has the following primary goals:
-
To manage Spring IoC container caching between tests.
-
To provide Dependency Injection of test fixture instances.
-
To provide transaction management appropriate to integration testing.
-
To supply Spring-specific base classes that assist developers in writing integration tests.
The next few sections describe each goal and provide links to implementation and configuration details.
3.2.1. Context Management and Caching
The Spring TestContext Framework provides consistent loading of Spring
ApplicationContext
instances and WebApplicationContext
instances as well as caching
of those contexts. Support for the caching of loaded contexts is important, because
startup time can become an issue — not because of the overhead of Spring itself, but
because the objects instantiated by the Spring container take time to instantiate. For
example, a project with 50 to 100 Hibernate mapping files might take 10 to 20 seconds to
load the mapping files, and incurring that cost before running every test in every test
fixture leads to slower overall test runs that reduce developer productivity.
Test classes typically declare either an array of resource locations for XML or Groovy
configuration metadata — often in the classpath — or an array of annotated classes that
is used to configure the application. These locations or classes are the same as or
similar to those specified in web.xml
or other configuration files for production
deployments.
By default, once loaded, the configured ApplicationContext
is reused for each test.
Thus, the setup cost is incurred only once per test suite, and subsequent test execution
is much faster. In this context, the term “test suite” means all tests run in the same
JVM — for example, all tests run from an Ant, Maven, or Gradle build for a given project
or module. In the unlikely case that a test corrupts the application context and requires
reloading (for example, by modifying a bean definition or the state of an application
object) the TestContext framework can be configured to reload the configuration and
rebuild the application context before executing the next test.
See Context Management and Context Caching with the TestContext framework.
3.2.2. Dependency Injection of Test Fixtures
When the TestContext framework loads your application context, it can optionally
configure instances of your test classes by using Dependency Injection. This provides a
convenient mechanism for setting up test fixtures by using preconfigured beans from your
application context. A strong benefit here is that you can reuse application contexts
across various testing scenarios (for example, for configuring Spring-managed object
graphs, transactional proxies, DataSource
instances, and others), thus avoiding the
need to duplicate complex test fixture setup for individual test cases.
As an example, consider a scenario where we have a class (HibernateTitleRepository
)
that implements data access logic for a Title
domain entity. We want to write
integration tests that test the following areas:
-
The Spring configuration: Basically, is everything related to the configuration of the
HibernateTitleRepository
bean correct and present? -
The Hibernate mapping file configuration: Is everything mapped correctly and are the correct lazy-loading settings in place?
-
The logic of the
HibernateTitleRepository
: Does the configured instance of this class perform as anticipated?
See dependency injection of test fixtures with the TestContext framework.
3.2.3. Transaction Management
One common issue in tests that access a real database is their effect on the state of the persistence store. Even when you use a development database, changes to the state may affect future tests. Also, many operations — such as inserting or modifying persistent data — cannot be performed (or verified) outside of a transaction.
The TestContext framework addresses this issue. By default, the framework creates and
rolls back a transaction for each test. You can write code that can assume the existence
of a transaction. If you call transactionally proxied objects in your tests, they behave
correctly, according to their configured transactional semantics. In addition, if a test
method deletes the contents of selected tables while running within the transaction
managed for the test, the transaction rolls back by default, and the database returns to
its state prior to execution of the test. Transactional support is provided to a test by
using a PlatformTransactionManager
bean defined in the test’s application context.
If you want a transaction to commit (unusual, but occasionally useful when you want a
particular test to populate or modify the database), you can tell the TestContext
framework to cause the transaction to commit instead of roll back by using the
@Commit
annotation.
See transaction management with the TestContext framework.
3.2.4. Support Classes for Integration Testing
The Spring TestContext Framework provides several abstract
support classes that
simplify the writing of integration tests. These base test classes provide well-defined
hooks into the testing framework as well as convenient instance variables and methods,
which let you access:
-
The
ApplicationContext
, for performing explicit bean lookups or testing the state of the context as a whole. -
A
JdbcTemplate
, for executing SQL statements to query the database. You can use such queries to confirm database state both before and after execution of database-related application code, and Spring ensures that such queries run in the scope of the same transaction as the application code. When used in conjunction with an ORM tool, be sure to avoid false positives.
In addition, you may want to create your own custom, application-wide superclass with instance variables and methods specific to your project.
See support classes for the TestContext framework.
3.3. JDBC Testing Support
The org.springframework.test.jdbc
package contains JdbcTestUtils
, which is a
collection of JDBC-related utility functions intended to simplify standard database
testing scenarios. Specifically, JdbcTestUtils
provides the following static utility
methods.
-
countRowsInTable(..)
: Counts the number of rows in the given table. -
countRowsInTableWhere(..)
: Counts the number of rows in the given table by using the providedWHERE
clause. -
deleteFromTables(..)
: Deletes all rows from the specified tables. -
deleteFromTableWhere(..)
: Deletes rows from the given table by using the providedWHERE
clause. -
dropTables(..)
: Drops the specified tables.
The |
3.4. Annotations
This section covers annotations that you can use when you test Spring applications. It includes the following topics:
3.4.1. Spring Testing Annotations
The Spring Framework provides the following set of Spring-specific annotations that you can use in your unit and integration tests in conjunction with the TestContext framework. See the corresponding Javadoc for further information, including default attribute values, attribute aliases, and other details.
Spring’s testing annotations include the following:
@BootstrapWith
@BootstrapWith
is a class-level annotation that you can use to configure how the Spring
TestContext Framework is bootstrapped. Specifically, you can use @BootstrapWith
to
specify a custom TestContextBootstrapper
. See the
Bootstrapping the TestContext framework section for further
details.
@ContextConfiguration
@ContextConfiguration
defines class-level metadata that is used to determine how to
load and configure an ApplicationContext
for integration tests. Specifically,
@ContextConfiguration
declares the application context resource locations
or the
annotated classes
used to load the context.
Resource locations are typically XML configuration files or Groovy scripts located in the
classpath, while annotated classes are typically @Configuration
classes. However,
resource locations can also refer to files and scripts in the file system, and annotated
classes can be component classes, and so on.
The following example shows a @ContextConfiguration
annotation that refers to an XML
file:
@ContextConfiguration("/test-config.xml") (1)
public class XmlApplicationContextTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Referring to an XML file. |
The following example shows a @ContextConfiguration
annotation that refers to a class:
@ContextConfiguration(classes = TestConfig.class) (1)
public class ConfigClassApplicationContextTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Referring to a class. |
As an alternative or in addition to declaring resource locations or annotated classes,
you can use @ContextConfiguration
to declare ApplicationContextInitializer
classes.
The following example shows such a case:
@ContextConfiguration(initializers = CustomContextIntializer.class) (1)
public class ContextInitializerTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Declaring an initializer class. |
You can optionally use @ContextConfiguration
to declare the ContextLoader
strategy as
well. Note, however, that you typically do not need to explicitly configure the loader,
since the default loader supports initializers
and either resource locations
or
annotated classes
.
The following example uses both a location and a loader:
@ContextConfiguration(locations = "/test-context.xml", loader = CustomContextLoader.class) (1)
public class CustomLoaderXmlApplicationContextTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Configuring both a location and a custom loader. |
@ContextConfiguration provides support for inheriting resource locations or
configuration classes as well as context initializers that are declared by superclasses.
|
See Context Management and the @ContextConfiguration
javadocs for further
details.
@WebAppConfiguration
@WebAppConfiguration
is a class-level annotation that you can use to declare that the
ApplicationContext
loaded for an integration test should be a WebApplicationContext
.
The mere presence of @WebAppConfiguration
on a test class ensures that a
WebApplicationContext
is loaded for the test, using the default value of
"file:src/main/webapp"
for the path to the root of the web application (that is, the
resource base path). The resource base path is used behind the scenes to create a
MockServletContext
, which serves as the ServletContext
for the test’s
WebApplicationContext
.
The following example shows how to use the @WebAppConfiguration
annotation:
@ContextConfiguration
@WebAppConfiguration (1)
public class WebAppTests {
// class body...
}
1 | The @WebAppConfiguration annotation. |
To override the default, you can specify a different base resource path by using the
implicit value
attribute. Both classpath:
and file:
resource prefixes are
supported. If no resource prefix is supplied, the path is assumed to be a file system
resource. The following example shows how to specify a classpath resource:
@ContextConfiguration
@WebAppConfiguration("classpath:test-web-resources") (1)
public class WebAppTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Specifying a classpath resource. |
Note that @WebAppConfiguration
must be used in conjunction with
@ContextConfiguration
, either within a single test class or within a test class
hierarchy. See the
@WebAppConfiguration
Javadoc for further details.
@ContextHierarchy
@ContextHierarchy
is a class-level annotation that is used to define a hierarchy of
ApplicationContext
instances for integration tests. @ContextHierarchy
should be
declared with a list of one or more @ContextConfiguration
instances, each of which
defines a level in the context hierarchy. The following examples demonstrate the use of
@ContextHierarchy
within a single test class (@ContextHierarchy
can also be used
within a test class hierarchy):
@ContextHierarchy({
@ContextConfiguration("/parent-config.xml"),
@ContextConfiguration("/child-config.xml")
})
public class ContextHierarchyTests {
// class body...
}
@WebAppConfiguration
@ContextHierarchy({
@ContextConfiguration(classes = AppConfig.class),
@ContextConfiguration(classes = WebConfig.class)
})
public class WebIntegrationTests {
// class body...
}
If you need to merge or override the configuration for a given level of the context
hierarchy within a test class hierarchy, you must explicitly name that level by supplying
the same value to the name
attribute in @ContextConfiguration
at each corresponding
level in the class hierarchy. See Context Hierarchies and the
@ContextHierarchy
Javadoc
for further examples.
@ActiveProfiles
@ActiveProfiles
is a class-level annotation that is used to declare which bean
definition profiles should be active when loading an ApplicationContext
for an
integration test.
The following example indicates that the dev
profile should be active:
@ContextConfiguration
@ActiveProfiles("dev") (1)
public class DeveloperTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Indicate that the dev profile should be active. |
The following example indicates that both the dev
and the integration
profiles should
be active:
@ContextConfiguration
@ActiveProfiles({"dev", "integration"}) (1)
public class DeveloperIntegrationTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Indicate that the dev and integration profiles should be active. |
@ActiveProfiles provides support for inheriting active bean definition profiles
declared by superclasses by default. You can also resolve active bean definition profiles
programmatically by implementing a custom
ActiveProfilesResolver
and registering it by using the resolver attribute of @ActiveProfiles .
|
See Context Configuration with Environment Profiles and the
@ActiveProfiles
Javadoc for
examples and further details.
@TestPropertySource
@TestPropertySource
is a class-level annotation that you can use to configure the
locations of properties files and inlined properties to be added to the set of
PropertySources
in the Environment
for an ApplicationContext
loaded for an
integration test.
Test property sources have higher precedence than those loaded from the operating
system’s environment or Java system properties as well as property sources added by the
application declaratively through @PropertySource
or programmatically. Thus, test
property sources can be used to selectively override properties defined in system and
application property sources. Furthermore, inlined properties have higher precedence than
properties loaded from resource locations.
The following example demonstrates how to declare a properties file from the classpath:
@ContextConfiguration
@TestPropertySource("/test.properties") (1)
public class MyIntegrationTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Get properties from test.properties in the root of the classpath. |
The following example demonstrates how to declare inlined properties:
@ContextConfiguration
@TestPropertySource(properties = { "timezone = GMT", "port: 4242" }) (1)
public class MyIntegrationTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Declare timezone and port properties. |
@DirtiesContext
@DirtiesContext
indicates that the underlying Spring ApplicationContext
has been
dirtied during the execution of a test (that is, the test modified or corrupted it in
some manner — for example, by changing the state of a singleton bean) and should be
closed. When an application context is marked as dirty, it is removed from the testing
framework’s cache and closed. As a consequence, the underlying Spring container is
rebuilt for any subsequent test that requires a context with the same configuration
metadata.
You can use @DirtiesContext
as both a class-level and a method-level annotation within
the same class or class hierarchy. In such scenarios, the ApplicationContext
is marked
as dirty before or after any such annotated method as well as before or after the current
test class, depending on the configured methodMode
and classMode
.
The following examples explain when the context would be dirtied for various configuration scenarios:
-
Before the current test class, when declared on a class with class mode set to
BEFORE_CLASS
.@DirtiesContext(classMode = BEFORE_CLASS) (1) public class FreshContextTests { // some tests that require a new Spring container }
1 Dirty the context before the current test class. -
After the current test class, when declared on a class with class mode set to
AFTER_CLASS
(i.e., the default class mode).@DirtiesContext public class ContextDirtyingTests { // some tests that result in the Spring container being dirtied }
1 Dirty the context after the current test class. -
Before each test method in the current test class, when declared on a class with class mode set to
BEFORE_EACH_TEST_METHOD.
@DirtiesContext(classMode = BEFORE_EACH_TEST_METHOD) (1) public class FreshContextTests { // some tests that require a new Spring container }
1 Dirty the context before each test method. -
After each test method in the current test class, when declared on a class with class mode set to
AFTER_EACH_TEST_METHOD.
@DirtiesContext(classMode = AFTER_EACH_TEST_METHOD) (1) public class ContextDirtyingTests { // some tests that result in the Spring container being dirtied }
1 Dirty the context after each test method. -
Before the current test, when declared on a method with the method mode set to
BEFORE_METHOD
.@DirtiesContext(methodMode = BEFORE_METHOD) (1) @Test public void testProcessWhichRequiresFreshAppCtx() { // some logic that requires a new Spring container }
1 Dirty the context before the current test method. -
After the current test, when declared on a method with the method mode set to
AFTER_METHOD
(i.e., the default method mode).@DirtiesContext (1) @Test public void testProcessWhichDirtiesAppCtx() { // some logic that results in the Spring container being dirtied }
1 Dirty the context after the current test method.
If you use @DirtiesContext
in a test whose context is configured as part of a context
hierarchy with @ContextHierarchy
, you can use the hierarchyMode
flag to control how
the context cache is cleared. By default, an exhaustive algorithm is used to clear the
context cache, including not only the current level but also all other context
hierarchies that share an ancestor context common to the current test. All
ApplicationContext
instances that reside in a sub-hierarchy of the common ancestor
context are removed from the context cache and closed. If the exhaustive algorithm is
overkill for a particular use case, you can specify the simpler current level algorithm,
as the following example shows.
@ContextHierarchy({
@ContextConfiguration("/parent-config.xml"),
@ContextConfiguration("/child-config.xml")
})
public class BaseTests {
// class body...
}
public class ExtendedTests extends BaseTests {
@Test
@DirtiesContext(hierarchyMode = CURRENT_LEVEL) (1)
public void test() {
// some logic that results in the child context being dirtied
}
}
1 | Use the current-level algorithm. |
For further details regarding the EXHAUSTIVE
and CURRENT_LEVEL
algorithms, see the
DirtiesContext.HierarchyMode
Javadoc.
@TestExecutionListeners
@TestExecutionListeners
defines class-level metadata for configuring the
TestExecutionListener
implementations that should be registered with the
TestContextManager
. Typically, @TestExecutionListeners
is used in conjunction with
@ContextConfiguration
.
The following example shows how to register two TestExecutionListener
implementations:
@ContextConfiguration
@TestExecutionListeners({CustomTestExecutionListener.class, AnotherTestExecutionListener.class}) (1)
public class CustomTestExecutionListenerTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Register two TestExecutionListener implementations. |
By default, @TestExecutionListeners
supports inherited listeners. See the
Javadoc for an example
and further details.
@Commit
@Commit
indicates that the transaction for a transactional test method should be
committed after the test method has completed. You can use @Commit
as a direct
replacement for @Rollback(false)
to more explicitly convey the intent of the code.
Analogous to @Rollback
, @Commit
can also be declared as a class-level or method-level
annotation.
The following example shows how to use the @Commit
annotation:
@Commit (1)
@Test
public void testProcessWithoutRollback() {
// ...
}
1 | Commit the result of the test to the database. |
@Rollback
@Rollback
indicates whether the transaction for a transactional test method should be
rolled back after the test method has completed. If true
, the transaction is rolled
back. Otherwise, the transaction is committed (see also
@Commit
). Rollback for integration tests in the Spring
TestContext Framework defaults to true
even if @Rollback
is not explicitly declared.
When declared as a class-level annotation, @Rollback
defines the default rollback
semantics for all test methods within the test class hierarchy. When declared as a
method-level annotation, @Rollback
defines rollback semantics for the specific test
method, potentially overriding class-level @Rollback
or @Commit
semantics.
The following example causes a test method’s result to not be rolled back (that is, the result is committed to the database):
@Rollback(false) (1)
@Test
public void testProcessWithoutRollback() {
// ...
}
1 | Do not roll back the result. |
@BeforeTransaction
@BeforeTransaction
indicates that the annotated void
method should be run before a
transaction is started, for test methods that have been configured to run within a
transaction by using Spring’s @Transactional
annotation. As of Spring Framework 4.3,
@BeforeTransaction
methods are not required to be public
and may be declared on Java
8-based interface default methods.
The following example shows how to use the @BeforeTransaction
annotation:
@BeforeTransaction (1)
void beforeTransaction() {
// logic to be executed before a transaction is started
}
1 | Run this method before a transaction. |
@AfterTransaction
@AfterTransaction
indicates that the annotated void
method should be run after a
transaction is ended, for test methods that have been configured to run within a
transaction by using Spring’s @Transactional
annotation. As of Spring Framework 4.3,
@AfterTransaction
methods are not required to be public
and may be declared on Java
8-based interface default methods.
@AfterTransaction (1)
void afterTransaction() {
// logic to be executed after a transaction has ended
}
1 | Run this method after a transaction. |
@Sql
@Sql
is used to annotate a test class or test method to configure SQL scripts to be run
against a given database during integration tests. The following example shows how to use
it:
@Test
@Sql({"/test-schema.sql", "/test-user-data.sql"}) (1)
public void userTest {
// execute code that relies on the test schema and test data
}
1 | Run two scripts for this test. |
See Executing SQL scripts declaratively with @Sql for further details.
@SqlConfig
@SqlConfig
defines metadata that is used to determine how to parse and run SQL scripts
configured with the @Sql
annotation. The following example shows how to use it:
@Test
@Sql(
scripts = "/test-user-data.sql",
config = @SqlConfig(commentPrefix = "`", separator = "@@") (1)
)
public void userTest {
// execute code that relies on the test data
}
1 | Set the comment prefix and the separator in SQL scripts. |
@SqlGroup
@SqlGroup
is a container annotation that aggregates several @Sql
annotations. You can
use @SqlGroup
natively to declare several nested @Sql
annotations, or you can use it
in conjunction with Java 8’s support for repeatable annotations, where @Sql
can be
declared several times on the same class or method, implicitly generating this container
annotation. The following example shows how to declare an SQL group:
@Test
@SqlGroup({ (1)
@Sql(scripts = "/test-schema.sql", config = @SqlConfig(commentPrefix = "`")),
@Sql("/test-user-data.sql")
)}
public void userTest {
// execute code that uses the test schema and test data
}
1 | Declare a group of SQL scripts. |
3.4.2. Standard Annotation Support
The following annotations are supported with standard semantics for all configurations of the Spring TestContext Framework. Note that these annotations are not specific to tests and can be used anywhere in the Spring Framework.
-
@Autowired
-
@Qualifier
-
@Resource
(javax.annotation) if JSR-250 is present -
@ManagedBean
(javax.annotation) if JSR-250 is present -
@Inject
(javax.inject) if JSR-330 is present -
@Named
(javax.inject) if JSR-330 is present -
@PersistenceContext
(javax.persistence) if JPA is present -
@PersistenceUnit
(javax.persistence) if JPA is present -
@Required
-
@Transactional
JSR-250 Lifecycle Annotations
In the Spring TestContext Framework, you can use If a method within a test class is annotated with |
3.4.3. Spring JUnit 4 Testing Annotations
The following annotations are supported only when used in conjunction with the SpringRunner, Spring’s JUnit 4 rules, or Spring’s JUnit 4 support classes:
@IfProfileValue
@IfProfileValue
indicates that the annotated test is enabled for a specific testing
environment. If the configured ProfileValueSource
returns a matching value
for the
provided name
, the test is enabled. Otherwise, the test is disabled and, effectively,
ignored.
You can apply @IfProfileValue
at the class level, the method level, or both.
Class-level usage of @IfProfileValue
takes precedence over method-level usage for any
methods within that class or its subclasses. Specifically, a test is enabled if it is
enabled both at the class level and at the method level. The absence of @IfProfileValue
means the test is implicitly enabled. This is analogous to the semantics of JUnit 4’s
@Ignore
annotation, except that the presence of @Ignore
always disables a test.
The following example shows a test that has an @IfProfileValue
annotation:
@IfProfileValue(name="java.vendor", value="Oracle Corporation") (1)
@Test
public void testProcessWhichRunsOnlyOnOracleJvm() {
// some logic that should run only on Java VMs from Oracle Corporation
}
1 | Run this test only when the Java vendor is "Oracle Corporation". |
Alternatively, you can configure @IfProfileValue
with a list of values
(with OR
semantics) to achieve TestNG-like support for test groups in a JUnit 4 environment.
Consider the following example:
@IfProfileValue(name="test-groups", values={"unit-tests", "integration-tests"}) (1)
@Test
public void testProcessWhichRunsForUnitOrIntegrationTestGroups() {
// some logic that should run only for unit and integration test groups
}
1 | Run this test for unit tests and integration tests. |
@ProfileValueSourceConfiguration
@ProfileValueSourceConfiguration
is a class-level annotation that specifies what type
of ProfileValueSource
to use when retrieving profile values configured through the
@IfProfileValue
annotation. If @ProfileValueSourceConfiguration
is not declared for a
test, SystemProfileValueSource
is used by default. The following example shows how to
use @ProfileValueSourceConfiguration
:
@ProfileValueSourceConfiguration(CustomProfileValueSource.class) (1)
public class CustomProfileValueSourceTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Use a custom profile value source. |
@Timed
@Timed
indicates that the annotated test method must finish execution in a specified
time period (in milliseconds). If the text execution time exceeds the specified time
period, the test fails.
The time period includes running the test method itself, any repetitions of the test (see
@Repeat
), as well as any setting up or tearing down of the test fixture. The following
example shows how to use it:
@Timed(millis = 1000) (1)
public void testProcessWithOneSecondTimeout() {
// some logic that should not take longer than 1 second to execute
}
1 | Set the time period for the test to one second. |
Spring’s @Timed
annotation has different semantics than JUnit 4’s @Test(timeout=…)
support. Specifically, due to the manner in which JUnit 4 handles test execution timeouts
(that is, by executing the test method in a separate Thread
), @Test(timeout=…)
preemptively fails the test if the test takes too long. Spring’s @Timed
, on the other
hand, does not preemptively fail the test but rather waits for the test to complete
before failing.
@Repeat
@Repeat
indicates that the annotated test method must be run repeatedly. The number of
times that the test method is to be executed is specified in the annotation.
The scope of execution to be repeated includes execution of the test method itself as
well as any setting up or tearing down of the test fixture. The following example shows
how to use the @Repeat
annotation:
@Repeat(10) (1)
@Test
public void testProcessRepeatedly() {
// ...
}
1 | Repeat this test ten times. |
3.4.4. Spring JUnit Jupiter Testing Annotations
The following annotations are supported only when used in conjunction with the
SpringExtension
and JUnit Jupiter (that is, the
programming model in JUnit 5):
@SpringJUnitConfig
@SpringJUnitConfig
is a composed annotation that combines
@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)
from JUnit Jupiter with @ContextConfiguration
from
the Spring TestContext Framework. It can be used at the class level as a drop-in
replacement for @ContextConfiguration
. With regard to configuration options, the only
difference between @ContextConfiguration
and @SpringJUnitConfig
is that annotated
classes may be declared with the value
attribute in @SpringJUnitConfig
.
The following example shows how to use the @SpringJUnitConfig
annotation to specify a
configuration class:
@SpringJUnitConfig(TestConfig.class) (1)
class ConfigurationClassJUnitJupiterSpringTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Specify the configuration class. |
The following example shows how to use the @SpringJUnitConfig
annotation to specify the
location of a configuration file:
@SpringJUnitConfig(locations = "/test-config.xml") (1)
class XmlJUnitJupiterSpringTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Specify the location of a configuration file. |
See Context Management as well as the
Javadoc for
@SpringJUnitConfig
and @ContextConfiguration
for further details.
@SpringJUnitWebConfig
@SpringJUnitWebConfig
is a composed annotation that combines
@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)
from JUnit Jupiter with @ContextConfiguration
and
@WebAppConfiguration
from the Spring TestContext Framework. You can use it at the class
level as a drop-in replacement for @ContextConfiguration
and @WebAppConfiguration
.
With regard to configuration options, the only difference between @ContextConfiguration
and @SpringJUnitWebConfig
is that you can declare annotated classes bu using the
value
attribute in @SpringJUnitWebConfig
. In addition, you can override the value
attribute from @WebAppConfiguration
only by using the resourcePath
attribute in
@SpringJUnitWebConfig
.
The following example shows how to use the @SpringJUnitWebConfig
annotation to specify
a configuration class:
@SpringJUnitWebConfig(TestConfig.class) (1)
class ConfigurationClassJUnitJupiterSpringWebTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Specify the configuration class. |
The following example shows how to use the @SpringJUnitWebConfig
annotation to specify a
the location of a configuration file:
@SpringJUnitWebConfig(locations = "/test-config.xml") (1)
class XmlJUnitJupiterSpringWebTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Specify the location of a configuration file. |
See Context Management as well as the Javadoc for
@SpringJUnitWebConfig
,
@ContextConfiguration
, and
@WebAppConfiguration
for further details.
@EnabledIf
@EnabledIf
is used to signal that the annotated JUnit Jupiter test class or test method
is enabled and should be run if the supplied expression
evaluates to true
.
Specifically, if the expression evaluates to Boolean.TRUE
or a String
equal to true
(ignoring case), the test is enabled. When applied at the class level, all test methods
within that class are automatically enabled by default as well.
Expressions can be any of the following:
-
Spring Expression Language (SpEL) expression. For example:
@EnabledIf("#{systemProperties['os.name'].toLowerCase().contains('mac')}")
-
Placeholder for a property available in the Spring
Environment
. For example:@EnabledIf("${smoke.tests.enabled}")
-
Text literal. For example:
@EnabledIf("true")
Note, however, that a text literal that is not the result of dynamic resolution of a
property placeholder is of zero practical value, since @EnabledIf("false")
is
equivalent to @Disabled
and @EnabledIf("true")
is logically meaningless.
You can use @EnabledIf
as a meta-annotation to create custom composed annotations. For
example, you can create a custom @EnabledOnMac
annotation as follows:
@Target({ElementType.TYPE, ElementType.METHOD})
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@EnabledIf(
expression = "#{systemProperties['os.name'].toLowerCase().contains('mac')}",
reason = "Enabled on Mac OS"
)
public @interface EnabledOnMac {}
[[integration-testing-annotations-junit-jupiter=-disabledif]]
===== @DisabledIf
@DisabledIf
is used to signal that the annotated JUnit Jupiter test class or test
method is disabled and should not be executed if the supplied expression
evaluates to
true
. Specifically, if the expression evaluates to Boolean.TRUE
or a String
equal
to true
(ignoring case), the test is disabled. When applied at the class level, all
test methods within that class are automatically disabled as well.
Expressions can be any of the following:
-
Spring Expression Language (SpEL) expression. For example:
@DisabledIf("#{systemProperties['os.name'].toLowerCase().contains('mac')}")
-
Placeholder for a property available in the Spring
Environment
. For example:@DisabledIf("${smoke.tests.disabled}")
-
Text literal. For example:
@DisabledIf("true")
Note, however, that a text literal that is not the result of dynamic resolution of a
property placeholder is of zero practical value, since @DisabledIf("true")
is
equivalent to @Disabled
and @DisabledIf("false")
is logically meaningless.
You can use @DisabledIf
as a meta-annotation to create custom composed annotations. For
example, you can create a custom @DisabledOnMac
annotation as follows:
@Target({ElementType.TYPE, ElementType.METHOD})
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@DisabledIf(
expression = "#{systemProperties['os.name'].toLowerCase().contains('mac')}",
reason = "Disabled on Mac OS"
)
public @interface DisabledOnMac {}
3.4.5. Meta-Annotation Support for Testing
You can use most test-related annotations as meta-annotations to create custom composed annotations and reduce configuration duplication across a test suite.
You can use each of the following as a meta-annotation in conjunction with the TestContext framework.
-
@BootstrapWith
-
@ContextConfiguration
-
@ContextHierarchy
-
@ActiveProfiles
-
@TestPropertySource
-
@DirtiesContext
-
@WebAppConfiguration
-
@TestExecutionListeners
-
@Transactional
-
@BeforeTransaction
-
@AfterTransaction
-
@Commit
-
@Rollback
-
@Sql
-
@SqlConfig
-
@SqlGroup
-
@Repeat
(only supported on JUnit 4) -
@Timed
(only supported on JUnit 4) -
@IfProfileValue
(only supported on JUnit 4) -
@ProfileValueSourceConfiguration
(only supported on JUnit 4) -
@SpringJUnitConfig
(only supported on JUnit Jupiter) -
@SpringJUnitWebConfig
(only supported on JUnit Jupiter) -
@EnabledIf
(only supported on JUnit Jupiter) -
@DisabledIf
(only supported on JUnit Jupiter)
Consider the following example:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration({"/app-config.xml", "/test-data-access-config.xml"})
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
@Transactional
public class OrderRepositoryTests { }
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration({"/app-config.xml", "/test-data-access-config.xml"})
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
@Transactional
public class UserRepositoryTests { }
If we discover that we are repeating the preceding configuration across our JUnit 4-based test suite, we can reduce the duplication by introducing a custom composed annotation that centralizes the common test configuration for Spring, as follows:
@Target(ElementType.TYPE)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@ContextConfiguration({"/app-config.xml", "/test-data-access-config.xml"})
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
@Transactional
public @interface TransactionalDevTestConfig { }
Then we can use our custom @TransactionalDevTestConfig
annotation to simplify the
configuration of individual JUnit 4 based test classes, as follows:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@TransactionalDevTestConfig
public class OrderRepositoryTests { }
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@TransactionalDevTestConfig
public class UserRepositoryTests { }
If we write tests that use JUnit Jupiter, we can reduce code duplication even further, since annotations in JUnit 5 can also be used as meta-annotations. Consider the following example:
@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)
@ContextConfiguration({"/app-config.xml", "/test-data-access-config.xml"})
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
@Transactional
class OrderRepositoryTests { }
@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)
@ContextConfiguration({"/app-config.xml", "/test-data-access-config.xml"})
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
@Transactional
class UserRepositoryTests { }
If we discover that we are repeating the preceding configuration across our JUnit Jupiter-based test suite, we can reduce the duplication by introducing a custom composed annotation that centralizes the common test configuration for Spring and JUnit Jupiter, as follows:
@Target(ElementType.TYPE)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)
@ContextConfiguration({"/app-config.xml", "/test-data-access-config.xml"})
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
@Transactional
public @interface TransactionalDevTestConfig { }
Then we can use our custom @TransactionalDevTestConfig
annotation to simplify the
configuration of individual JUnit Jupiter based test classes, as follows:
@TransactionalDevTestConfig
class OrderRepositoryTests { }
@TransactionalDevTestConfig
class UserRepositoryTests { }
Since JUnit Jupiter supports the use of @Test
, @RepeatedTest
, ParameterizedTest
,
and others as meta-annotations, you can also create custom composed annotations at the
test method level. For example, if we wish to create a composed annotation that combines
the @Test
and @Tag
annotations from JUnit Jupiter with the @Transactional
annotation from Spring, we could create an @TransactionalIntegrationTest
annotation, as
follows:
@Target(ElementType.METHOD)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Transactional
@Tag("integration-test") // org.junit.jupiter.api.Tag
@Test // org.junit.jupiter.api.Test
public @interface TransactionalIntegrationTest { }
Then we can use our custom @TransactionalIntegrationTest
annotation to simplify the
configuration of individual JUnit Jupiter based test methods, as follows:
@TransactionalIntegrationTest
void saveOrder() { }
@TransactionalIntegrationTest
void deleteOrder() { }
For further details, see the Spring Annotation Programming Model.
3.5. Spring TestContext Framework
The Spring TestContext Framework (located in the org.springframework.test.context
package) provides generic, annotation-driven unit and integration testing support that is
agnostic of the testing framework in use. The TestContext framework also places a great
deal of importance on convention over configuration, with reasonable defaults that you
can override through annotation-based configuration.
In addition to generic testing infrastructure, the TestContext framework provides
explicit support for JUnit 4, JUnit Jupiter (AKA JUnit 5), and TestNG. For JUnit 4 and
TestNG, Spring provides abstract
support classes. Furthermore, Spring provides a custom
JUnit Runner
and custom JUnit Rules
for JUnit 4 and a custom Extension
for JUnit
Jupiter that let you write so-called POJO test classes. POJO test classes are not
required to extend a particular class hierarchy, such as the abstract
support classes.
The following section provides an overview of the internals of the TestContext framework. If you are interested only in using the framework and are not interested in extending it with your own custom listeners or custom loaders, feel free to go directly to the configuration (context management, dependency injection, transaction management), support classes, and annotation support sections.
3.5.1. Key Abstractions
The core of the framework consists of the TestContextManager
class and the
TestContext
, TestExecutionListener
, and SmartContextLoader
interfaces. A
TestContextManager
is created for each test class (for example, for the execution of
all test methods within a single test class in JUnit Jupiter). The TestContextManager
,
in turn, manages a TestContext
that holds the context of the current test. The
TestContextManager
also updates the state of the TestContext
as the test progresses
and delegates to TestExecutionListener
implementations, which instrument the actual
test execution by providing dependency injection, managing transactions, and so on. A
SmartContextLoader
is responsible for loading an ApplicationContext
for a given test
class. See the Javadoc and the Spring test suite for further
information and examples of various implementations.
TestContext
TestContext
encapsulates the context in which a test is executed (agnostic of the
actual testing framework in use) and provides context management and caching support for
the test instance for which it is responsible. The TestContext
also delegates to a
SmartContextLoader
to load an ApplicationContext
if requested.
TestContextManager
TestContextManager
is the main entry point into the Spring TestContext Framework and is
responsible for managing a single TestContext
and signaling events to each registered
TestExecutionListener
at well-defined test execution points:
-
Prior to any “before class” or “before all” methods of a particular testing framework.
-
Test instance post-processing.
-
Prior to any “before” or “before each” methods of a particular testing framework.
-
Immediately before execution of the test method but after test setup.
-
Immediately after execution of the test method but before test tear down.
-
After any “after” or “after each” methods of a particular testing framework.
-
After any “after class” or “after all” methods of a particular testing framework.
TestExecutionListener
TestExecutionListener
defines the API for reacting to test-execution events published
by the TestContextManager
with which the listener is registered. See
TestExecutionListener
Configuration.
Context Loaders
ContextLoader
is a strategy interface that was introduced in Spring 2.5 for loading an
ApplicationContext
for an integration test managed by the Spring TestContext Framework.
You should implement SmartContextLoader
instead of this interface to provide support
for annotated classes, active bean definition profiles, test property sources, context
hierarchies, and WebApplicationContext
support.
SmartContextLoader
is an extension of the ContextLoader
interface introduced in
Spring 3.1. The SmartContextLoader
SPI supersedes the ContextLoader
SPI that was
introduced in Spring 2.5. Specifically, a SmartContextLoader
can choose to process
resource locations, annotated classes, or context initializers. Furthermore, a
SmartContextLoader
can set active bean definition profiles and test property sources in
the context that it loads.
Spring provides the following implementations:
-
DelegatingSmartContextLoader
: One of two default loaders, it delegates internally to anAnnotationConfigContextLoader
, aGenericXmlContextLoader
, or aGenericGroovyXmlContextLoader
, depending either on the configuration declared for the test class or on the presence of default locations or default configuration classes. Groovy support is enabled only if Groovy is on the classpath. -
WebDelegatingSmartContextLoader
: One of two default loaders, it delegates internally to anAnnotationConfigWebContextLoader
, aGenericXmlWebContextLoader
, or aGenericGroovyXmlWebContextLoader
, depending either on the configuration declared for the test class or on the presence of default locations or default configuration classes. A webContextLoader
is used only if@WebAppConfiguration
is present on the test class. Groovy support is enabled only if Groovy is on the classpath. -
AnnotationConfigContextLoader
: Loads a standardApplicationContext
from annotated classes. -
AnnotationConfigWebContextLoader
: Loads aWebApplicationContext
from annotated classes. -
GenericGroovyXmlContextLoader
: Loads a standardApplicationContext
from resource locations that are either Groovy scripts or XML configuration files. -
GenericGroovyXmlWebContextLoader
: Loads aWebApplicationContext
from resource locations that are either Groovy scripts or XML configuration files. -
GenericXmlContextLoader
: Loads a standardApplicationContext
from XML resource locations. -
GenericXmlWebContextLoader
: Loads aWebApplicationContext
from XML resource locations. -
GenericPropertiesContextLoader
: Loads a standardApplicationContext
from Java properties files.
3.5.2. Bootstrapping the TestContext Framework
The default configuration for the internals of the Spring TestContext Framework is
sufficient for all common use cases. However, there are times when a development team or
third party framework would like to change the default ContextLoader
, implement a
custom TestContext
or ContextCache
, augment the default sets of
ContextCustomizerFactory
and TestExecutionListener
implementations, and so on. For
such low-level control over how the TestContext framework operates, Spring provides a
bootstrapping strategy.
TestContextBootstrapper
defines the SPI for bootstrapping the TestContext framework. A
TestContextBootstrapper
is used by the TestContextManager
to load the
TestExecutionListener
implementations for the current test and to build the
TestContext
that it manages. You can configure a custom bootstrapping strategy for a
test class (or test class hierarchy) by using @BootstrapWith
, either directly or as a
meta-annotation. If a bootstrapper is not explicitly configured by using
@BootstrapWith
, either the DefaultTestContextBootstrapper
or the
WebTestContextBootstrapper
is used, depending on the presence of @WebAppConfiguration
.
Since the TestContextBootstrapper
SPI is likely to change in the future (to accommodate
new requirements), we strongly encourage implementers not to implement this interface
directly but rather to extend AbstractTestContextBootstrapper
or one of its concrete
subclasses instead.
3.5.3. TestExecutionListener
Configuration
Spring provides the following TestExecutionListener
implementations that are registered
by default, exactly in the following order:
-
ServletTestExecutionListener
: Configures Servlet API mocks for aWebApplicationContext
. -
DirtiesContextBeforeModesTestExecutionListener
: Handles the@DirtiesContext
annotation for “before” modes. -
DependencyInjectionTestExecutionListener
: Provides dependency injection for the test instance. -
DirtiesContextTestExecutionListener
: Handles the@DirtiesContext
annotation for “after” modes. -
TransactionalTestExecutionListener
: Provides transactional test execution with default rollback semantics. -
SqlScriptsTestExecutionListener
: Runs SQL scripts configured by using the@Sql
annotation.
Registering Custom TestExecutionListener
Implementations
You can register custom TestExecutionListener
implementations for a test class and its
subclasses by using the @TestExecutionListeners
annotation. See
annotation support and the
Javadoc for
@TestExecutionListeners
for details and examples.
Automatic Discovery of Default TestExecutionListener
Implementations
Registering custom TestExecutionListener
implementations by using
@TestExecutionListeners
is suitable for custom listeners that are used in limited
testing scenarios. However, it can become cumbersome if a custom listener needs to be
used across a test suite. Since Spring Framework 4.1, this issue is addressed through
support for automatic discovery of default TestExecutionListener
implementations
through the SpringFactoriesLoader
mechanism.
Specifically, the spring-test
module declares all core default TestExecutionListener`
implementations under the org.springframework.test.context.TestExecutionListener
key in
its META-INF/spring.factories
properties file. Third-party frameworks and developers
can contribute their own TestExecutionListener
implementations to the list of default
listeners in the same manner through their own META-INF/spring.factories
properties
file.
Ordering TestExecutionListener
Implementations
When the TestContext framework discovers default TestExecutionListener
implementations
through the aforementioned
SpringFactoriesLoader
mechanism, the instantiated listeners are sorted by using
Spring’s AnnotationAwareOrderComparator
, which honors Spring’s Ordered
interface and
@Order
annotation for ordering. AbstractTestExecutionListener
and all default
TestExecutionListener
implementations provided by Spring implement Ordered
with
appropriate values. Third-party frameworks and developers should therefore make sure that
their default TestExecutionListener
implementations are registered in the proper order
by implementing Ordered
or declaring @Order
. See the Javadoc for the getOrder()
methods of the core default TestExecutionListener
implementations for details on what
values are assigned to each core listener.
Merging TestExecutionListener
Implementations
If a custom TestExecutionListener
is registered via @TestExecutionListeners
, the
default listeners are not registered. In most common testing scenarios, this effectively
forces the developer to manually declare all default listeners in addition to any custom
listeners. The following listing demonstrates this style of configuration:
@ContextConfiguration
@TestExecutionListeners({
MyCustomTestExecutionListener.class,
ServletTestExecutionListener.class,
DirtiesContextBeforeModesTestExecutionListener.class,
DependencyInjectionTestExecutionListener.class,
DirtiesContextTestExecutionListener.class,
TransactionalTestExecutionListener.class,
SqlScriptsTestExecutionListener.class
})
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
The challenge with this approach is that it requires that the developer know exactly
which listeners are registered by default. Moreover, the set of default listeners can
change from release to release — for example, SqlScriptsTestExecutionListener
was
introduced in Spring Framework 4.1, and DirtiesContextBeforeModesTestExecutionListener
was introduced in Spring Framework 4.2. Furthermore, third-party frameworks like Spring
Security register their own default TestExecutionListener
implementations by using the
aforementioned automatic discovery
mechanism.
To avoid having to be aware of and re-declare all default listeners, you can set the
mergeMode
attribute of @TestExecutionListeners
to MergeMode.MERGE_WITH_DEFAULTS
.
MERGE_WITH_DEFAULTS
indicates that locally declared listeners should be merged with the
default listeners. The merging algorithm ensures that duplicates are removed from the
list and that the resulting set of merged listeners is sorted according to the semantics
of AnnotationAwareOrderComparator
, as described in Ordering TestExecutionListener
Implementations.
If a listener implements Ordered
or is annotated with @Order
, it can influence the
position in which it is merged with the defaults. Otherwise, locally declared listeners
are appended to the list of default listeners when merged.
For example, if the MyCustomTestExecutionListener
class in the previous example
configures its order
value (for example, 500
) to be less than the order of the
ServletTestExecutionListener
(which happens to be 1000
), the
MyCustomTestExecutionListener
can then be automatically merged with the list of
defaults in front of the ServletTestExecutionListener
, and the previous example could
be replaced with the following:
@ContextConfiguration
@TestExecutionListeners(
listeners = MyCustomTestExecutionListener.class,
mergeMode = MERGE_WITH_DEFAULTS
)
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
3.5.4. Context Management
Each TestContext
provides context management and caching support for the test instance
for which it is responsible. Test instances do not automatically receive access to the
configured ApplicationContext
. However, if a test class implements the
ApplicationContextAware
interface, a reference to the ApplicationContext
is supplied
to the test instance. Note that AbstractJUnit4SpringContextTests
and
AbstractTestNGSpringContextTests
implement ApplicationContextAware
and, therefore,
provide access to the ApplicationContext
automatically.
@Autowired ApplicationContext
As an alternative to implementing the
Similarly, if your test is configured to load a
Dependency injection by using |
Test classes that use the TestContext framework do not need to extend any particular
class or implement a specific interface to configure their application context. Instead,
configuration is achieved by declaring the @ContextConfiguration
annotation at the
class level. If your test class does not explicitly declare application context resource
locations or annotated classes, the configured ContextLoader
determines how to load a
context from a default location or default configuration classes. In addition to context
resource locations and annotated classes, an application context can also be configured
through application context initializers.
The following sections explain how to use Spring’s @ContextConfiguration
annotation to
configure a test ApplicationContext
by using XML configuration files, Groovy scripts,
annotated classes (typically @Configuration
classes), or context initializers.
Alternatively, you can implement and configure your own custom SmartContextLoader
for
advanced use cases.
Context Configuration with XML resources
To load an ApplicationContext
for your tests by using XML configuration files, annotate
your test class with @ContextConfiguration
and configure the locations
attribute with
an array that contains the resource locations of XML configuration metadata. A plain or
relative path (for example, context.xml
) is treated as a classpath resource that is
relative to the package in which the test class is defined. A path starting with a slash
is treated as an absolute classpath location (for example, /org/example/config.xml
). A
path that represents a resource URL (i.e., a path prefixed with classpath:
, file:
,
http:
, etc.) is used as is.
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from "/app-config.xml" and
// "/test-config.xml" in the root of the classpath
@ContextConfiguration(locations={"/app-config.xml", "/test-config.xml"}) (1)
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Setting the locations attribute to a list of XML files. |
@ContextConfiguration
supports an alias for the locations
attribute through the
standard Java value
attribute. Thus, if you do not need to declare additional
attributes in @ContextConfiguration
, you can omit the declaration of the locations
attribute name and declare the resource locations by using the shorthand format
demonstrated in the following example:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration({"/app-config.xml", "/test-config.xml"}) (1)
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Specifying XML files without using the location attribute. |
If you omit both the locations
and the value
attributes from the
@ContextConfiguration
annotation, the TestContext framework tries to detect a default
XML resource location. Specifically, GenericXmlContextLoader
and
GenericXmlWebContextLoader
detect a default location based on the name of the test
class. If your class is named com.example.MyTest
, GenericXmlContextLoader
loads your
application context from "classpath:com/example/MyTest-context.xml"
. The following
example shows how to do so:
package com.example;
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from
// "classpath:com/example/MyTest-context.xml"
@ContextConfiguration (1)
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Loading configuration from the default location. |
Context Configuration with Groovy Scripts
To load an ApplicationContext
for your tests by using Groovy scripts that use the
Groovy Bean Definition DSL, you can annotate
your test class with @ContextConfiguration
and configure the locations
or value
attribute with an array that contains the resource locations of Groovy scripts. Resource
lookup semantics for Groovy scripts are the same as those described for
XML configuration files.
Enabling Groovy script support
Support for using Groovy scripts to load an ApplicationContext in the Spring
TestContext Framework is enabled automatically if Groovy is on the classpath.
|
The following example shows how to specify Groovy configuration files:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from "/AppConfig.groovy" and
// "/TestConfig.groovy" in the root of the classpath
@ContextConfiguration({"/AppConfig.groovy", "/TestConfig.Groovy"}) (1)
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Specifying the location of Groovy configuration files. |
If you omit both the locations
and value
attributes from the @ContextConfiguration
annotation, the TestContext framework tries to detect a default Groovy script.
Specifically, GenericGroovyXmlContextLoader
and GenericGroovyXmlWebContextLoader
detect a default location based on the name of the test class. If your class is named
com.example.MyTest
, the Groovy context loader loads your application context from
"classpath:com/example/MyTestContext.groovy"
. The following example shows how to use
the default:
package com.example;
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from
// "classpath:com/example/MyTestContext.groovy"
@ContextConfiguration (1)
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Loading configuration from the default location. |
Declaring XML configuration and Groovy scripts simultaneously
You can declare both XML configuration files and Groovy scripts simultaneously by using
the The following listing shows how to combine both in an integration test:
|
Context Configuration with Annotated Classes
To load an ApplicationContext
for your tests by using annotated classes (see
Java-based container configuration), you can annotate your test
class with @ContextConfiguration
and configure the classes
attribute with an array
that contains references to annotated classes. The following example shows how to do so:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from AppConfig and TestConfig
@ContextConfiguration(classes = {AppConfig.class, TestConfig.class}) (1)
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Specifying annotated classes. |
Annotated Classes
The term “annotated class” can refer to any of the following:
See the Javadoc of
|
If you omit the classes
attribute from the @ContextConfiguration
annotation, the
TestContext framework tries to detect the presence of default configuration classes.
Specifically, AnnotationConfigContextLoader
and AnnotationConfigWebContextLoader
detect all static
nested classes of the test class that meet the requirements for
configuration class implementations, as specified in the
@Configuration
Javadoc.
Note that the name of the configuration class is arbitrary. In addition, a test class can
contain more than one static
nested configuration class if desired. In the following
example, the OrderServiceTest
class declares a static
nested configuration class
named Config
that is automatically used to load the ApplicationContext
for the test
class:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from the
// static nested Config class
@ContextConfiguration (1)
public class OrderServiceTest {
@Configuration
static class Config {
// this bean will be injected into the OrderServiceTest class
@Bean
public OrderService orderService() {
OrderService orderService = new OrderServiceImpl();
// set properties, etc.
return orderService;
}
}
@Autowired
private OrderService orderService;
@Test
public void testOrderService() {
// test the orderService
}
}
1 | Loading configuration information from the nested class. |
Mixing XML, Groovy Scripts, and Annotated Classes
It may sometimes be desirable to mix XML configuration files, Groovy scripts, and
annotated classes (typically @Configuration
classes) to configure an
ApplicationContext
for your tests. For example, if you use XML configuration in
production, you may decide that you want to use @Configuration
classes to configure
specific Spring-managed components for your tests, or vice versa.
Furthermore, some third-party frameworks (such as Spring Boot) provide first-class
support for loading an ApplicationContext
from different types of resources
simultaneously (for example, XML configuration files, Groovy scripts, and
@Configuration
classes). The Spring Framework, historically, has not supported this for
standard deployments. Consequently, most of the SmartContextLoader
implementations that
the Spring Framework delivers in the spring-test
module support only one resource type
for each test context. However, this does not mean that you cannot use both. One
exception to the general rule is that the GenericGroovyXmlContextLoader
and
GenericGroovyXmlWebContextLoader
support both XML configuration files and Groovy
scripts simultaneously. Furthermore, third-party frameworks may choose to support the
declaration of both locations
and classes
through @ContextConfiguration
, and, with
the standard testing support in the TestContext framework, you have the following options.
If you want to use resource locations (for example, XML or Groovy) and @Configuration
classes to configure your tests, you must pick one as the entry point, and that one must
include or import the other. For example, in XML or Groovy scripts, you can include
@Configuration
classes by using component scanning or defining them as normal Spring
beans, whereas, in a @Configuration
class, you can use @ImportResource
to import XML
configuration files or Groovy scripts. Note that this behavior is semantically equivalent
to how you configure your application in production: In production configuration, you
define either a set of XML or Groovy resource locations or a set of @Configuration
classes from which your production ApplicationContext
is loaded, but you still have the
freedom to include or import the other type of configuration.
Context Configuration with Context Initializers
To configure an ApplicationContext
for your tests by using context initializers,
annotate your test class with @ContextConfiguration
and configure the initializers
attribute with an array that contains references to classes that implement
ApplicationContextInitializer
. The declared context initializers are then used to
initialize the ConfigurableApplicationContext
that is loaded for your tests. Note that
the concrete ConfigurableApplicationContext
type supported by each declared initializer
must be compatible with the type of ApplicationContext
created by the
SmartContextLoader
in use (typically a GenericApplicationContext
). Furthermore, the
order in which the initializers are invoked depends on whether they implement Spring’s
Ordered
interface or are annotated with Spring’s @Order
annotation or the standard
@Priority
annotation. The following example shows how to use initializers:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from TestConfig
// and initialized by TestAppCtxInitializer
@ContextConfiguration(
classes = TestConfig.class,
initializers = TestAppCtxInitializer.class) (1)
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Specifying configuration by using a configuration class and an initializer. |
You can also omit the declaration of XML configuration files, Groovy scripts, or
annotated classes in @ContextConfiguration
entirely and instead declare only
ApplicationContextInitializer
classes, which are then responsible for registering beans
in the context — for example, by programmatically loading bean definitions from XML
files or configuration classes. The following example shows how to do so:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be initialized by EntireAppInitializer
// which presumably registers beans in the context
@ContextConfiguration(initializers = EntireAppInitializer.class) (1)
public class MyTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Specifying configuration by using only an initializer. |
Context Configuration Inheritance
@ContextConfiguration
supports boolean inheritLocations
and inheritInitializers
attributes that denote whether resource locations or annotated classes and context
initializers declared by superclasses should be inherited. The default value for both
flags is true
. This means that a test class inherits the resource locations or
annotated classes as well as the context initializers declared by any superclasses.
Specifically, the resource locations or annotated classes for a test class are appended
to the list of resource locations or annotated classes declared by superclasses.
Similarly, the initializers for a given test class are added to the set of initializers
defined by test superclasses. Thus, subclasses have the option of extending the resource
locations, annotated classes, or context initializers.
If the inheritLocations
or inheritInitializers
attribute in @ContextConfiguration
is set to false
, the resource locations or annotated classes and the context
initializers, respectively, for the test class shadow and effectively replace the
configuration defined by superclasses.
In the next example, which uses XML resource locations, the ApplicationContext
for
ExtendedTest
is loaded from base-config.xml
and extended-config.xml
, in that order.
Beans defined in extended-config.xml
can, therefore, override (that is, replace) those
defined in base-config.xml
. The following example shows how one class can extend
another and use both its own configuration file and the superclass’s configuration file:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from "/base-config.xml"
// in the root of the classpath
@ContextConfiguration("/base-config.xml") (1)
public class BaseTest {
// class body...
}
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from "/base-config.xml" and
// "/extended-config.xml" in the root of the classpath
@ContextConfiguration("/extended-config.xml") (2)
public class ExtendedTest extends BaseTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Configuration file defined in the superclass. |
2 | Configuration file defined in the subclass. |
Similarly, in the next example, which uses annotated classes, the ApplicationContext
for ExtendedTest
is loaded from the BaseConfig
and ExtendedConfig
classes, in that
order. Beans defined in ExtendedConfig
can, therefore, override (that is, replace)
those defined in BaseConfig
. The following example shows how one class can extend
another and use both its own configuration class and the superclass’s configuration class:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from BaseConfig
@ContextConfiguration(classes = BaseConfig.class) (1)
public class BaseTest {
// class body...
}
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from BaseConfig and ExtendedConfig
@ContextConfiguration(classes = ExtendedConfig.class) (2)
public class ExtendedTest extends BaseTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Configuration class defined in the superclass. |
2 | Configuration class defined in the subclass. |
In the next example, which uses context initializers, the ApplicationContext
for
ExtendedTest
is initialized by using BaseInitializer
and ExtendedInitializer
. Note,
however, that the order in which the initializers are invoked depends on whether they
implement Spring’s Ordered
interface or are annotated with Spring’s @Order
annotation
or the standard @Priority
annotation. The following example shows how one class can
extend another and use both its own initializer and the superclass’s initializer:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be initialized by BaseInitializer
@ContextConfiguration(initializers = BaseInitializer.class) (1)
public class BaseTest {
// class body...
}
// ApplicationContext will be initialized by BaseInitializer
// and ExtendedInitializer
@ContextConfiguration(initializers = ExtendedInitializer.class) (2)
public class ExtendedTest extends BaseTest {
// class body...
}
1 | Initializer defined in the superclass. |
2 | Initializer defined in the subclass. |
Context Configuration with Environment Profiles
Spring 3.1 introduced first-class support in the framework for the notion of environments
and profiles (AKA “bean definition profiles”), and integration tests can be configured
to activate particular bean definition profiles for various testing scenarios. This is
achieved by annotating a test class with the @ActiveProfiles
annotation and supplying a
list of profiles that should be activated when loading the ApplicationContext
for the
test.
You can use @ActiveProfiles with any implementation of the new
SmartContextLoader SPI, but @ActiveProfiles is not supported with implementations of
the older ContextLoader SPI.
|
Consider two examples with XML configuration and @Configuration
classes:
<!-- app-config.xml -->
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:jdbc="http://www.springframework.org/schema/jdbc"
xmlns:jee="http://www.springframework.org/schema/jee"
xsi:schemaLocation="...">
<bean id="transferService"
class="com.bank.service.internal.DefaultTransferService">
<constructor-arg ref="accountRepository"/>
<constructor-arg ref="feePolicy"/>
</bean>
<bean id="accountRepository"
class="com.bank.repository.internal.JdbcAccountRepository">
<constructor-arg ref="dataSource"/>
</bean>
<bean id="feePolicy"
class="com.bank.service.internal.ZeroFeePolicy"/>
<beans profile="dev">
<jdbc:embedded-database id="dataSource">
<jdbc:script
location="classpath:com/bank/config/sql/schema.sql"/>
<jdbc:script
location="classpath:com/bank/config/sql/test-data.sql"/>
</jdbc:embedded-database>
</beans>
<beans profile="production">
<jee:jndi-lookup id="dataSource" jndi-name="java:comp/env/jdbc/datasource"/>
</beans>
<beans profile="default">
<jdbc:embedded-database id="dataSource">
<jdbc:script
location="classpath:com/bank/config/sql/schema.sql"/>
</jdbc:embedded-database>
</beans>
</beans>
package com.bank.service;
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// ApplicationContext will be loaded from "classpath:/app-config.xml"
@ContextConfiguration("/app-config.xml")
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
public class TransferServiceTest {
@Autowired
private TransferService transferService;
@Test
public void testTransferService() {
// test the transferService
}
}
When TransferServiceTest
is run, its ApplicationContext
is loaded from the
app-config.xml
configuration file in the root of the classpath. If you inspect
app-config.xml
, you can see that the accountRepository
bean has a dependency on a
dataSource
bean. However, dataSource
is not defined as a top-level bean. Instead,
dataSource
is defined three times: in the production
profile, in the dev
profile,
and in the default
profile.
By annotating TransferServiceTest
with @ActiveProfiles("dev")
, we instruct the Spring
TestContext Framework to load the ApplicationContext
with the active profiles set to
{"dev"}
. As a result, an embedded database is created and populated with test data, and
the accountRepository
bean is wired with a reference to the development DataSource
.
That is likely what we want in an integration test.
It is sometimes useful to assign beans to a default
profile. Beans within the default
profile are included only when no other profile is specifically activated. You can use
this to define “fallback” beans to be used in the application’s default state. For
example, you may explicitly provide a data source for dev
and production
profiles,
but define an in-memory data source as a default when neither of these is active.
The following code listings demonstrate how to implement the same configuration and
integration test with @Configuration
classes instead of XML:
@Configuration
@Profile("dev")
public class StandaloneDataConfig {
@Bean
public DataSource dataSource() {
return new EmbeddedDatabaseBuilder()
.setType(EmbeddedDatabaseType.HSQL)
.addScript("classpath:com/bank/config/sql/schema.sql")
.addScript("classpath:com/bank/config/sql/test-data.sql")
.build();
}
}
@Configuration
@Profile("production")
public class JndiDataConfig {
@Bean(destroyMethod="")
public DataSource dataSource() throws Exception {
Context ctx = new InitialContext();
return (DataSource) ctx.lookup("java:comp/env/jdbc/datasource");
}
}
@Configuration
@Profile("default")
public class DefaultDataConfig {
@Bean
public DataSource dataSource() {
return new EmbeddedDatabaseBuilder()
.setType(EmbeddedDatabaseType.HSQL)
.addScript("classpath:com/bank/config/sql/schema.sql")
.build();
}
}
@Configuration
public class TransferServiceConfig {
@Autowired DataSource dataSource;
@Bean
public TransferService transferService() {
return new DefaultTransferService(accountRepository(), feePolicy());
}
@Bean
public AccountRepository accountRepository() {
return new JdbcAccountRepository(dataSource);
}
@Bean
public FeePolicy feePolicy() {
return new ZeroFeePolicy();
}
}
package com.bank.service;
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration(classes = {
TransferServiceConfig.class,
StandaloneDataConfig.class,
JndiDataConfig.class,
DefaultDataConfig.class})
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
public class TransferServiceTest {
@Autowired
private TransferService transferService;
@Test
public void testTransferService() {
// test the transferService
}
}
In this variation, we have split the XML configuration into four independent
@Configuration
classes:
-
TransferServiceConfig
: Acquires adataSource
through dependency injection by using@Autowired
. -
StandaloneDataConfig
: Defines adataSource
for an embedded database suitable for developer tests. -
JndiDataConfig
: Defines adataSource
that is retrieved from JNDI in a production environment. -
DefaultDataConfig
: Defines adataSource
for a default embedded database, in case no profile is active.
As with the XML-based configuration example, we still annotate TransferServiceTest
with
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
, but this time we specify all four configuration classes by
using the @ContextConfiguration
annotation. The body of the test class itself remains
completely unchanged.
It is often the case that a single set of profiles is used across multiple test classes
within a given project. Thus, to avoid duplicate declarations of the @ActiveProfiles
annotation, you can declare @ActiveProfiles
once on a base class, and subclasses
automatically inherit the @ActiveProfiles
configuration from the base class. In the
following example, the declaration of @ActiveProfiles
(as well as other annotations)
has been moved to an abstract superclass, AbstractIntegrationTest
:
package com.bank.service;
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration(classes = {
TransferServiceConfig.class,
StandaloneDataConfig.class,
JndiDataConfig.class,
DefaultDataConfig.class})
@ActiveProfiles("dev")
public abstract class AbstractIntegrationTest {
}
package com.bank.service;
// "dev" profile inherited from superclass
public class TransferServiceTest extends AbstractIntegrationTest {
@Autowired
private TransferService transferService;
@Test
public void testTransferService() {
// test the transferService
}
}
@ActiveProfiles
also supports an inheritProfiles
attribute that can be used to
disable the inheritance of active profiles, as the following example shows:
package com.bank.service;
// "dev" profile overridden with "production"
@ActiveProfiles(profiles = "production", inheritProfiles = false)
public class ProductionTransferServiceTest extends AbstractIntegrationTest {
// test body
}
Furthermore, it is sometimes necessary to resolve active profiles for tests programmatically instead of declaratively — for example, based on:
-
The current operating system.
-
Whether tests are being executed on a continuous integration build server.
-
The presence of certain environment variables.
-
The presence of custom class-level annotations.
-
Other concerns.
To resolve active bean definition profiles programmatically, you can implement a custom
ActiveProfilesResolver
and register it by using the resolver
attribute of
@ActiveProfiles
. For further information, see the corresponding
Javadoc. The following
example demonstrates how to implement and register a custom
OperatingSystemActiveProfilesResolver
:
package com.bank.service;
// "dev" profile overridden programmatically via a custom resolver
@ActiveProfiles(
resolver = OperatingSystemActiveProfilesResolver.class,
inheritProfiles = false)
public class TransferServiceTest extends AbstractIntegrationTest {
// test body
}
package com.bank.service.test;
public class OperatingSystemActiveProfilesResolver implements ActiveProfilesResolver {
@Override
String[] resolve(Class<?> testClass) {
String profile = ...;
// determine the value of profile based on the operating system
return new String[] {profile};
}
}
Context Configuration with Test Property Sources
Spring 3.1 introduced first-class support in the framework for the notion of an
environment with a hierarchy of property sources. Since Spring 4.1, you can configure
integration tests with test-specific property sources. In contrast to the
@PropertySource
annotation used on @Configuration
classes, you can declare the
@TestPropertySource
annotation on a test class to declare resource locations for test
properties files or inlined properties. These test property sources are added to the set
of PropertySources
in the Environment
for the ApplicationContext
loaded for the
annotated integration test.
You can use Implementations of |
Declaring Test Property Sources
You can configure test properties files by using the locations
or value
attribute of
@TestPropertySource
.
Both traditional and XML-based properties file formats are supported — for example,
"classpath:/com/example/test.properties"
or "file:///path/to/file.xml"
.
Each path is interpreted as a Spring Resource
. A plain path (for example,
"test.properties"
) is treated as a classpath resource that is relative to the package
in which the test class is defined. A path starting with a slash is treated as an
absolute classpath resource (for example: "/org/example/test.xml"
). A path that
references a URL (for example, a path prefixed with classpath:
, file:
, or http:
) is
loaded by using the specified resource protocol. Resource location wildcards (such as
*/.properties
) are not permitted: Each location must evaluate to exactly one
.properties
or .xml
resource.
The following example uses a test properties file:
@ContextConfiguration
@TestPropertySource("/test.properties") (1)
public class MyIntegrationTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Specifying a properties file with an absolute path. |
You can configure inlined properties in the form of key-value pairs by using the
properties
attribute of @TestPropertySource
, as shown in the next example. All
key-value pairs are added to the enclosing Environment
as a single test
PropertySource
with the highest precedence.
The supported syntax for key-value pairs is the same as the syntax defined for entries in a Java properties file:
-
key=value
-
key:value
-
key value
The following example sets two inlined properties:
@ContextConfiguration
@TestPropertySource(properties = {"timezone = GMT", "port: 4242"}) (1)
public class MyIntegrationTests {
// class body...
}
1 | Setting two properties by using two variations of the key-value syntax. |
Default Properties File Detection
If @TestPropertySource
is declared as an empty annotation (that is, without explicit
values for the locations
or properties
attributes), an attempt is made to detect a
default properties file relative to the class that declared the annotation. For example,
if the annotated test class is com.example.MyTest
, the corresponding default properties
file is classpath:com/example/MyTest.properties
. If the default cannot be detected, an
IllegalStateException
is thrown.
Precedence
Test property sources have higher precedence than those loaded from the operating
system’s environment, Java system properties, or property sources added by the
application declaratively by using @PropertySource
or programmatically. Thus, test
property sources can be used to selectively override properties defined in system and
application property sources. Furthermore, inlined properties have higher precedence than
properties loaded from resource locations.
In the next example, the timezone
and port
properties and any properties defined in
"/test.properties"
override any properties of the same name that are defined in system
and application property sources. Furthermore, if the "/test.properties"
file defines
entries for the timezone
and port
properties those are overridden by the inlined
properties declared by using the properties
attribute. The following example shows how
to specify properties both in a file and inline:
@ContextConfiguration
@TestPropertySource(
locations = "/test.properties",
properties = {"timezone = GMT", "port: 4242"}
)
public class MyIntegrationTests {
// class body...
}
Inheriting and Overriding Test Property Sources
@TestPropertySource
supports boolean inheritLocations
and inheritProperties
attributes that denote whether resource locations for properties files and inlined
properties declared by superclasses should be inherited. The default value for both flags
is true
. This means that a test class inherits the locations and inlined properties
declared by any superclasses. Specifically, the locations and inlined properties for a
test class are appended to the locations and inlined properties declared by superclasses.
Thus, subclasses have the option of extending the locations and inlined properties. Note
that properties that appear later shadow (that is, override) properties of the same name
that appear earlier. In addition, the aforementioned precedence rules apply for inherited
test property sources as well.
If the inheritLocations
or inheritProperties
attribute in @TestPropertySource
is
set to false
, the locations or inlined properties, respectively, for the test class
shadow and effectively replace the configuration defined by superclasses.
In the next example, the ApplicationContext
for BaseTest
is loaded by using only the
base.properties
file as a test property source. In contrast, the ApplicationContext
for ExtendedTest
is loaded by using the base.properties
and extended.properties
files as test property source locations. The following example shows how to define
properties in both a subclass and its superclass by using properties
files:
@TestPropertySource("base.properties")
@ContextConfiguration
public class BaseTest {
// ...
}
@TestPropertySource("extended.properties")
@ContextConfiguration
public class ExtendedTest extends BaseTest {
// ...
}
In the next example, the ApplicationContext
for BaseTest
is loaded by using only the
inlined key1
property. In contrast, the ApplicationContext
for ExtendedTest
is
loaded by using the inlined key1
and key2
properties. The following example shows how
to define properties in both a subclass and its superclass by using inline properties:
@TestPropertySource(properties = "key1 = value1")
@ContextConfiguration
public class BaseTest {
// ...
}
@TestPropertySource(properties = "key2 = value2")
@ContextConfiguration
public class ExtendedTest extends BaseTest {
// ...
}
Loading a WebApplicationContext
Spring 3.2 introduced support for loading a WebApplicationContext
in integration tests.
To instruct the TestContext framework to load a WebApplicationContext
instead of a
standard ApplicationContext
, you can annotate the respective test class with
@WebAppConfiguration
.
The presence of @WebAppConfiguration
on your test class instructs the TestContext
framework (TCF) that a WebApplicationContext
(WAC) should be loaded for your
integration tests. In the background, the TCF makes sure that a MockServletContext
is
created and supplied to your test’s WAC. By default, the base resource path for your
MockServletContext
is set to src/main/webapp
. This is interpreted as a path relative
to the root of your JVM (normally the path to your project). If you are familiar with the
directory structure of a web application in a Maven project, you know that
src/main/webapp
is the default location for the root of your WAR. If you need to
override this default, you can provide an alternate path to the @WebAppConfiguration
annotation (for example, @WebAppConfiguration("src/test/webapp")
). If you wish to
reference a base resource path from the classpath instead of the file system, you can use
Spring’s classpath:
prefix.
Note that Spring’s testing support for WebApplicationContext
implementations is on par
with its support for standard ApplicationContext
implementations. When testing with a
WebApplicationContext
, you are free to declare XML configuration files, Groovy scripts,
or @Configuration
classes by using @ContextConfiguration
. You are also free to use
any other test annotations, such as @ActiveProfiles
, @TestExecutionListeners
, @Sql
,
@Rollback
, and others.
The remaining examples in this section show some of the various configuration options for
loading a WebApplicationContext
. The following example shows the TestContext
framework’s support for convention over configuration:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// defaults to "file:src/main/webapp"
@WebAppConfiguration
// detects "WacTests-context.xml" in the same package
// or static nested @Configuration classes
@ContextConfiguration
public class WacTests {
//...
}
If you annotate a test class with @WebAppConfiguration
without specifying a resource
base path, the resource path effectively defaults to file:src/main/webapp
. Similarly,
if you declare @ContextConfiguration
without specifying resource locations
, annotated
classes
, or context initializers
, Spring tries to detect the presence of your
configuration by using conventions (that is, WacTests-context.xml
in the same package
as the WacTests
class or static nested @Configuration
classes).
The following example shows how to explicitly declare a resource base path with
@WebAppConfiguration
and an XML resource location with @ContextConfiguration
:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// file system resource
@WebAppConfiguration("webapp")
// classpath resource
@ContextConfiguration("/spring/test-servlet-config.xml")
public class WacTests {
//...
}
The important thing to note here is the different semantics for paths with these two
annotations. By default, @WebAppConfiguration
resource paths are file system based,
whereas @ContextConfiguration
resource locations are classpath based.
The following example shows that we can override the default resource semantics for both annotations by specifying a Spring resource prefix:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// classpath resource
@WebAppConfiguration("classpath:test-web-resources")
// file system resource
@ContextConfiguration("file:src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/servlet-config.xml")
public class WacTests {
//...
}
Contrast the comments in this example with the previous example.
To provide comprehensive web testing support, Spring 3.2 introduced a
ServletTestExecutionListener
that is enabled by default. When testing against a
WebApplicationContext
, this TestExecutionListener
sets up default thread-local state by using Spring Web’s RequestContextHolder
before
each test method and creates a MockHttpServletRequest
, a MockHttpServletResponse
, and
a ServletWebRequest
based on the base resource path configured with
@WebAppConfiguration
. ServletTestExecutionListener
also ensures that the
MockHttpServletResponse
and ServletWebRequest
can be injected into the test instance,
and, once the test is complete, it cleans up thread-local state.
Once you have a WebApplicationContext
loaded for your test, you might find that you
need to interact with the web mocks — for example, to set up your test fixture or to
perform assertions after invoking your web component. The following example shows which
mocks can be autowired into your test instance. Note that the WebApplicationContext
and
MockServletContext
are both cached across the test suite, whereas the other mocks are
managed per test method by the ServletTestExecutionListener
.
@WebAppConfiguration
@ContextConfiguration
public class WacTests {
@Autowired
WebApplicationContext wac; // cached
@Autowired
MockServletContext servletContext; // cached
@Autowired
MockHttpSession session;
@Autowired
MockHttpServletRequest request;
@Autowired
MockHttpServletResponse response;
@Autowired
ServletWebRequest webRequest;
//...
}
Context Caching
Once the TestContext framework loads an ApplicationContext
(or WebApplicationContext
)
for a test, that context is cached and reused for all subsequent tests that declare the
same unique context configuration within the same test suite. To understand how caching
works, it is important to understand what is meant by “unique” and “test suite.”
An ApplicationContext
can be uniquely identified by the combination of configuration
parameters that is used to load it. Consequently, the unique combination of configuration
parameters is used to generate a key under which the context is cached. The TestContext
framework uses the following configuration parameters to build the context cache key:
-
locations
(from@ContextConfiguration
) -
classes
(from@ContextConfiguration
) -
contextInitializerClasses
(from@ContextConfiguration
) -
contextCustomizers
(fromContextCustomizerFactory
) -
contextLoader
(from@ContextConfiguration
) -
parent
(from@ContextHierarchy
) -
activeProfiles
(from@ActiveProfiles
) -
propertySourceLocations
(from@TestPropertySource
) -
propertySourceProperties
(from@TestPropertySource
) -
resourceBasePath
(from@WebAppConfiguration
)
For example, if TestClassA
specifies {"app-config.xml", "test-config.xml"}
for the
locations
(or value
) attribute of @ContextConfiguration
, the TestContext framework
loads the corresponding ApplicationContext
and stores it in a static
context cache
under a key that is based solely on those locations. So, if TestClassB
also defines
{"app-config.xml", "test-config.xml"}
for its locations (either explicitly or
implicitly through inheritance) but does not define @WebAppConfiguration
, a different
ContextLoader
, different active profiles, different context initializers, different
test property sources, or a different parent context, then the same ApplicationContext
is shared by both test classes. This means that the setup cost for loading an application
context is incurred only once (per test suite), and subsequent test execution is much
faster.
Test suites and forked processes
The Spring TestContext framework stores application contexts in a static cache. This
means that the context is literally stored in a To benefit from the caching mechanism, all tests must run within the same process or test
suite. This can be achieved by executing all tests as a group within an IDE. Similarly,
when executing tests with a build framework such as Ant, Maven, or Gradle, it is
important to make sure that the build framework does not fork between tests. For example,
if the
|
Since Spring Framework 4.3, the size of the context cache is bounded with a default
maximum size of 32. Whenever the maximum size is reached, a least recently used (LRU)
eviction policy is used to evict and close stale contexts. You can configure the maximum
size from the command line or a build script by setting a JVM system property named
spring.test.context.cache.maxSize
. As an alternative, you can set the same property
programmatically by using the SpringProperties
API.
Since having a large number of application contexts loaded within a given test suite can
cause the suite to take an unnecessarily long time to execute, it is often beneficial to
know exactly how many contexts have been loaded and cached. To view the statistics for
the underlying context cache, you can set the log level for the
org.springframework.test.context.cache
logging category to DEBUG
.
In the unlikely case that a test corrupts the application context and requires reloading
(for example, by modifying a bean definition or the state of an application object), you
can annotate your test class or test method with @DirtiesContext
(see the discussion of
@DirtiesContext
in Spring Testing Annotations). This instructs Spring
to remove the context from the cache and rebuild the application context before running
the next test. Note that support for the @DirtiesContext
annotation is provided by the
DirtiesContextBeforeModesTestExecutionListener
and the
DirtiesContextTestExecutionListener
, which are enabled by default.
Context Hierarchies
When writing integration tests that rely on a loaded Spring ApplicationContext
, it is
often sufficient to test against a single context. However, there are times when it is
beneficial or even necessary to test against a hierarchy of ApplicationContext
instances. For example, if you are developing a Spring MVC web application, you typically
have a root WebApplicationContext
loaded by Spring’s ContextLoaderListener
and a
child WebApplicationContext
loaded by Spring’s DispatcherServlet
. This results in a
parent-child context hierarchy where shared components and infrastructure configuration
are declared in the root context and consumed in the child context by web-specific
components. Another use case can be found in Spring Batch applications, where you often
have a parent context that provides configuration for shared batch infrastructure and a
child context for the configuration of a specific batch job.
Since Spring Framework 3.2.2, you can write integration tests that use context
hierarchies by declaring context configuration with the @ContextHierarchy
annotation,
either on an individual test class or within a test class hierarchy. If a context
hierarchy is declared on multiple classes within a test class hierarchy, you can also
merge or override the context configuration for a specific, named level in the context
hierarchy. When merging configuration for a given level in the hierarchy, the
configuration resource type (that is, XML configuration files or annotated classes) must
be consistent. Otherwise, it is perfectly acceptable to have different levels in a
context hierarchy configured using different resource types.
The remaining JUnit 4-based examples in this section show common configuration scenarios for integration tests that require the use of context hierarchies.
ControllerIntegrationTests
represents a typical integration testing scenario for a
Spring MVC web application by declaring a context hierarchy that consists of two levels,
one for the root WebApplicationContext
(loaded by using the TestAppConfig
@Configuration
class) and one for the dispatcher servlet WebApplicationContext
(loaded by using the WebConfig
@Configuration
class). The WebApplicationContext
that is autowired into the test instance is the one for the child context (that is, the
lowest context in the hierarchy). The following listing shows this configuration scenario:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@WebAppConfiguration
@ContextHierarchy({
@ContextConfiguration(classes = TestAppConfig.class),
@ContextConfiguration(classes = WebConfig.class)
})
public class ControllerIntegrationTests {
@Autowired
private WebApplicationContext wac;
// ...
}
The test classes in this example define a context hierarchy within a test class
hierarchy. AbstractWebTests
declares the configuration for a root
WebApplicationContext
in a Spring-powered web application. Note, however, that
AbstractWebTests
does not declare @ContextHierarchy
. Consequently, subclasses of
AbstractWebTests
can optionally participate in a context hierarchy or follow the
standard semantics for @ContextConfiguration
. SoapWebServiceTests
and
RestWebServiceTests
both extend AbstractWebTests
and define a context hierarchy by
using @ContextHierarchy
. The result is that three application contexts are loaded (one
for each declaration of @ContextConfiguration
), and the application context loaded
based on the configuration in AbstractWebTests
is set as the parent context for each of
the contexts loaded for the concrete subclasses. The following listing shows this
configuration scenario:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@WebAppConfiguration
@ContextConfiguration("file:src/main/webapp/WEB-INF/applicationContext.xml")
public abstract class AbstractWebTests {}
@ContextHierarchy(@ContextConfiguration("/spring/soap-ws-config.xml")
public class SoapWebServiceTests extends AbstractWebTests {}
@ContextHierarchy(@ContextConfiguration("/spring/rest-ws-config.xml")
public class RestWebServiceTests extends AbstractWebTests {}
The classes in this example show the use of named hierarchy levels in order to merge the
configuration for specific levels in a context hierarchy. BaseTests
defines two levels
in the hierarchy, parent
and child
. ExtendedTests
extends BaseTests
and instructs
the Spring TestContext Framework to merge the context configuration for the child
hierarchy level, by ensuring that the names declared in the name
attribute in
@ContextConfiguration
are both child
. The result is that three application contexts
are loaded: one for /app-config.xml
, one for /user-config.xml
, and one for
{"/user-config.xml", "/order-config.xml"}
. As with the previous example, the
application context loaded from /app-config.xml
is set as the parent context for the
contexts loaded from /user-config.xml
and {"/user-config.xml", "/order-config.xml"}
.
The following listing shows this configuration scenario:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextHierarchy({
@ContextConfiguration(name = "parent", locations = "/app-config.xml"),
@ContextConfiguration(name = "child", locations = "/user-config.xml")
})
public class BaseTests {}
@ContextHierarchy(
@ContextConfiguration(name = "child", locations = "/order-config.xml")
)
public class ExtendedTests extends BaseTests {}
In contrast to the previous example, this example demonstrates how to override the
configuration for a given named level in a context hierarchy by setting the
inheritLocations
flag in @ContextConfiguration
to false
. Consequently, the
application context for ExtendedTests
is loaded only from /test-user-config.xml
and
has its parent set to the context loaded from /app-config.xml
. The following listing
shows this configuration scenario:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextHierarchy({
@ContextConfiguration(name = "parent", locations = "/app-config.xml"),
@ContextConfiguration(name = "child", locations = "/user-config.xml")
})
public class BaseTests {}
@ContextHierarchy(
@ContextConfiguration(
name = "child",
locations = "/test-user-config.xml",
inheritLocations = false
))
public class ExtendedTests extends BaseTests {}
Dirtying a context within a context hierarchy
If you use @DirtiesContext in a test whose context is configured as part of a
context hierarchy, you can use the hierarchyMode flag to control how the context cache
is cleared. For further details, see the discussion of @DirtiesContext in
Spring Testing Annotations and the
@DirtiesContext Javadoc.
|
3.5.5. Dependency Injection of Test Fixtures
When you use the DependencyInjectionTestExecutionListener
(which is configured by
default), the dependencies of your test instances are injected from beans in the
application context that you configured with @ContextConfiguration
. You may use setter
injection, field injection, or both, depending on which annotations you choose and
whether you place them on setter methods or fields. For consistency with the annotation
support introduced in Spring 2.5 and 3.0, you can use Spring’s @Autowired
annotation or
the @Inject
annotation from JSR 330.
The TestContext framework does not instrument the manner in which a test instance is
instantiated. Thus, the use of @Autowired or @Inject for constructors has no effect
for test classes.
|
Because @Autowired
is used to perform autowiring by
type, if you have multiple bean definitions of the same type, you cannot rely on this
approach for those particular beans. In that case, you can use @Autowired
in
conjunction with @Qualifier
. As of Spring 3.0, you can also choose to use @Inject
in
conjunction with @Named
. Alternatively, if your test class has access to its
ApplicationContext
, you can perform an explicit lookup by using (for example) a call to
applicationContext.getBean("titleRepository")
.
If you do not want dependency injection applied to your test instances, do not annotate
fields or setter methods with @Autowired
or @Inject
. Alternatively, you can disable
dependency injection altogether by explicitly configuring your class with
@TestExecutionListeners
and omitting DependencyInjectionTestExecutionListener.class
from the list of listeners.
Consider the scenario of testing a HibernateTitleRepository
class, as outlined in the
Goals section. The next two code listings demonstrate the
use of @Autowired
on fields and setter methods. The application context configuration
is presented after all sample code listings.
The dependency injection behavior in the following code listings is not specific to JUnit 4. The same DI techniques can be used in conjunction with any testing framework. The following examples make calls to static assertion methods, such as |
The first code listing shows a JUnit 4 based implementation of the test class that uses
@Autowired
for field injection:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// specifies the Spring configuration to load for this test fixture
@ContextConfiguration("repository-config.xml")
public class HibernateTitleRepositoryTests {
// this instance will be dependency injected by type
@Autowired
private HibernateTitleRepository titleRepository;
@Test
public void findById() {
Title title = titleRepository.findById(new Long(10));
assertNotNull(title);
}
}
Alternatively, you can configure the class to use @Autowired
for setter injection, as
follows:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
// specifies the Spring configuration to load for this test fixture
@ContextConfiguration("repository-config.xml")
public class HibernateTitleRepositoryTests {
// this instance will be dependency injected by type
private HibernateTitleRepository titleRepository;
@Autowired
public void setTitleRepository(HibernateTitleRepository titleRepository) {
this.titleRepository = titleRepository;
}
@Test
public void findById() {
Title title = titleRepository.findById(new Long(10));
assertNotNull(title);
}
}
The preceding code listings use the same XML context file referenced by the
@ContextConfiguration
annotation (that is, repository-config.xml
). The following
shows this configuration:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans.xsd">
<!-- this bean will be injected into the HibernateTitleRepositoryTests class -->
<bean id="titleRepository" class="com.foo.repository.hibernate.HibernateTitleRepository">
<property name="sessionFactory" ref="sessionFactory"/>
</bean>
<bean id="sessionFactory" class="org.springframework.orm.hibernate5.LocalSessionFactoryBean">
<!-- configuration elided for brevity -->
</bean>
</beans>
If you are extending from a Spring-provided test base class that happens to use
The specified qualifier value indicates the specific |
3.5.6. Testing Request- and Session-scoped Beans
Spring has supported Request- and session-scoped beans since the early years. Since Spring 3.2, you can test your request-scoped and session-scoped beans by following these steps:
-
Ensure that a
WebApplicationContext
is loaded for your test by annotating your test class with@WebAppConfiguration
. -
Inject the mock request or session into your test instance and prepare your test fixture as appropriate.
-
Invoke your web component that you retrieved from the configured
WebApplicationContext
(with dependency injection). -
Perform assertions against the mocks.
The next code snippet shows the XML configuration for a login use case. Note that the
userService
bean has a dependency on a request-scoped loginAction
bean. Also, the
LoginAction
is instantiated by using SpEL expressions that
retrieve the username and password from the current HTTP request. In our test, we want to
configure these request parameters through the mock managed by the TestContext framework.
The following listing shows the configuration for this use case:
<beans>
<bean id="userService" class="com.example.SimpleUserService"
c:loginAction-ref="loginAction"/>
<bean id="loginAction" class="com.example.LoginAction"
c:username="#{request.getParameter('user')}"
c:password="#{request.getParameter('pswd')}"
scope="request">
<aop:scoped-proxy/>
</bean>
</beans>
In RequestScopedBeanTests
, we inject both the UserService
(that is, the subject under
test) and the MockHttpServletRequest
into our test instance. Within our
requestScope()
test method, we set up our test fixture by setting request parameters in
the provided MockHttpServletRequest
. When the loginUser()
method is invoked on our
userService
, we are assured that the user service has access to the request-scoped
loginAction
for the current MockHttpServletRequest
(that is, the one in which we just
set parameters). We can then perform assertions against the results based on the known
inputs for the username and password. The following listing shows how to do so:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration
@WebAppConfiguration
public class RequestScopedBeanTests {
@Autowired UserService userService;
@Autowired MockHttpServletRequest request;
@Test
public void requestScope() {
request.setParameter("user", "enigma");
request.setParameter("pswd", "$pr!ng");
LoginResults results = userService.loginUser();
// assert results
}
}
The following code snippet is similar to the one we saw earlier for a request-scoped
bean. However, this time, the userService
bean has a dependency on a session-scoped
userPreferences
bean. Note that the UserPreferences
bean is instantiated by using a
SpEL expression that retrieves the theme from the current HTTP session. In our test, we
need to configure a theme in the mock session managed by the TestContext framework. The
following example shows how to do so:
<beans>
<bean id="userService" class="com.example.SimpleUserService"
c:userPreferences-ref="userPreferences" />
<bean id="userPreferences" class="com.example.UserPreferences"
c:theme="#{session.getAttribute('theme')}"
scope="session">
<aop:scoped-proxy/>
</bean>
</beans>
In SessionScopedBeanTests
, we inject the UserService
and the MockHttpSession
into
our test instance. Within our sessionScope()
test method, we set up our test fixture by
setting the expected theme
attribute in the provided MockHttpSession
. When the
processUserPreferences()
method is invoked on our userService
, we are assured that
the user service has access to the session-scoped userPreferences
for the current
MockHttpSession
, and we can perform assertions against the results based on the
configured theme. The following example shows how to do so:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration
@WebAppConfiguration
public class SessionScopedBeanTests {
@Autowired UserService userService;
@Autowired MockHttpSession session;
@Test
public void sessionScope() throws Exception {
session.setAttribute("theme", "blue");
Results results = userService.processUserPreferences();
// assert results
}
}
3.5.7. Transaction Management
In the TestContext framework, transactions are managed by the
TransactionalTestExecutionListener
, which is configured by default, even if you do not
explicitly declare @TestExecutionListeners
on your test class. To enable support for
transactions, however, you must configure a PlatformTransactionManager
bean in the
ApplicationContext
that is loaded with @ContextConfiguration
semantics (further
details are provided later). In addition, you must declare Spring’s @Transactional
annotation either at the class or the method level for your tests.
Test-managed Transactions
Test-managed transactions are transactions that are managed declaratively by using the
TransactionalTestExecutionListener
or programmatically by using TestTransaction
(described later). You should not confuse such transactions with Spring-managed
transactions (those managed directly by Spring within the ApplicationContext
loaded for
tests) or application-managed transactions (those managed programmatically within
application code that is invoked by tests). Spring-managed and application-managed
transactions typically participate in test-managed transactions. However, you should use
caution if Spring-managed or application-managed transactions are configured with any
propagation type other than REQUIRED
or SUPPORTS
(see the discussion on
transaction propagation for details).
Enabling and Disabling Transactions
Annotating a test method with @Transactional
causes the test to be run within a
transaction that is, by default, automatically rolled back after completion of the test.
If a test class is annotated with @Transactional
, each test method within that class
hierarchy runs within a transaction. Test methods that are not annotated with
@Transactional
(at the class or method level) are not run within a transaction.
Furthermore, tests that are annotated with @Transactional
but have the propagation
type set to NOT_SUPPORTED
are not run within a transaction.
Note that AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests
and
AbstractTransactionalTestNGSpringContextTests
are preconfigured for transactional support at the class level.
The following example demonstrates a common scenario for writing an integration test for
a Hibernate-based UserRepository
:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration(classes = TestConfig.class)
@Transactional
public class HibernateUserRepositoryTests {
@Autowired
HibernateUserRepository repository;
@Autowired
SessionFactory sessionFactory;
JdbcTemplate jdbcTemplate;
@Autowired
public void setDataSource(DataSource dataSource) {
this.jdbcTemplate = new JdbcTemplate(dataSource);
}
@Test
public void createUser() {
// track initial state in test database:
final int count = countRowsInTable("user");
User user = new User(...);
repository.save(user);
// Manual flush is required to avoid false positive in test
sessionFactory.getCurrentSession().flush();
assertNumUsers(count + 1);
}
protected int countRowsInTable(String tableName) {
return JdbcTestUtils.countRowsInTable(this.jdbcTemplate, tableName);
}
protected void assertNumUsers(int expected) {
assertEquals("Number of rows in the [user] table.", expected, countRowsInTable("user"));
}
}
As explained in Transaction Rollback and Commit Behavior, there is no need to
clean up the database after the createUser()
method runs, since any changes made to the
database are automatically rolled back by the TransactionalTestExecutionListener
. See
PetClinic Example for an additional example.
Transaction Rollback and Commit Behavior
By default, test transactions will be automatically rolled back after completion of the
test; however, transactional commit and rollback behavior can be configured declaratively
via the @Commit
and @Rollback
annotations. See the corresponding entries in the
annotation support section for further details.
Programmatic Transaction Management
Since Spring Framework 4.1, you can interact with test-managed transactions
programmatically by using the static methods in TestTransaction
. For example, you can
use TestTransaction
within test methods, before methods, and after methods to start or
end the current test-managed transaction or to configure the current test-managed
transaction for rollback or commit. Support for TestTransaction
is automatically
available whenever the TransactionalTestExecutionListener
is enabled.
The following example demonstrates some of the features of TestTransaction
(see the
Javadoc for
TestTransaction
for further details):
@ContextConfiguration(classes = TestConfig.class)
public class ProgrammaticTransactionManagementTests extends
AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests {
@Test
public void transactionalTest() {
// assert initial state in test database:
assertNumUsers(2);
deleteFromTables("user");
// changes to the database will be committed!
TestTransaction.flagForCommit();
TestTransaction.end();
assertFalse(TestTransaction.isActive());
assertNumUsers(0);
TestTransaction.start();
// perform other actions against the database that will
// be automatically rolled back after the test completes...
}
protected void assertNumUsers(int expected) {
assertEquals("Number of rows in the [user] table.", expected, countRowsInTable("user"));
}
}
Running Code Outside of a Transaction
Occasionally, you may need to execute certain code before or after a transactional test
method but outside the transactional context — for example, to verify the initial
database state prior to running your test or to verify expected transactional commit
behavior after your test runs (if the test was configured to commit the transaction).
TransactionalTestExecutionListener
supports the @BeforeTransaction
and
@AfterTransaction
annotations for exactly such scenarios. You can annotate any void
method in a test class or any void
default method in a test interface with one of these
annotations, and the TransactionalTestExecutionListener
ensures that your before
transaction method or after transaction method runs at the appropriate time.
Any before methods (such as methods annotated with JUnit Jupiter’s @BeforeEach )
and any after methods (such as methods annotated with JUnit Jupiter’s @AfterEach ) are
run within a transaction. In addition, methods annotated with @BeforeTransaction or
@AfterTransaction are not run for test methods that are not configured to run within a
transaction.
|
Configuring a Transaction Manager
TransactionalTestExecutionListener
expects a PlatformTransactionManager
bean to be
defined in the Spring ApplicationContext
for the test. If there are multiple instances
of PlatformTransactionManager
within the test’s ApplicationContext
, you can declare a
qualifier by using @Transactional("myTxMgr")
or @Transactional(transactionManager =
"myTxMgr")
, or TransactionManagementConfigurer
can be implemented by an
@Configuration
class. Consult the
Javadoc
for TestContextTransactionUtils.retrieveTransactionManager()
for details on the
algorithm used to look up a transaction manager in the test’s ApplicationContext
.
Demonstration of All Transaction-related Annotations
The following JUnit 4 based example displays a fictitious integration testing scenario
that highlights all transaction-related annotations. The example is not intended to
demonstrate best practices but rather to demonstrate how these annotations can be used.
See the annotation support section for further
information and configuration examples. Transaction management for @Sql
contains an additional example that uses @Sql
for
declarative SQL script execution with default transaction rollback semantics. The
following example shows the relevant annotations in bold:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration
@Transactional(transactionManager = "txMgr")
@Commit
public class FictitiousTransactionalTest {
@BeforeTransaction
void verifyInitialDatabaseState() {
// logic to verify the initial state before a transaction is started
}
@Before
public void setUpTestDataWithinTransaction() {
// set up test data within the transaction
}
@Test
// overrides the class-level @Commit setting
@Rollback
public void modifyDatabaseWithinTransaction() {
// logic which uses the test data and modifies database state
}
@After
public void tearDownWithinTransaction() {
// execute "tear down" logic within the transaction
}
@AfterTransaction
void verifyFinalDatabaseState() {
// logic to verify the final state after transaction has rolled back
}
}
Avoid false positives when testing ORM code
When you test application code that manipulates the state of a Hibernate session or JPA persistence context, make sure to flush the underlying unit of work within test methods that run that code. Failing to flush the underlying unit of work can produce false positives: Your test passes, but the same code throws an exception in a live, production environment. Note that this applies to any ORM framework that maintains an in-memory unit of work. In the following Hibernate-based example test case, one method demonstrates a false positive, and the other method correctly exposes the results of flushing the session:
The following example shows matching methods for JPA:
|
3.5.8. Executing SQL Scripts
When writing integration tests against a relational database, it is often beneficial to
execute SQL scripts to modify the database schema or insert test data into tables. The
spring-jdbc
module provides support for initializing an embedded or existing database
by executing SQL scripts when the Spring ApplicationContext
is loaded. See
Embedded database support and
Testing data access logic with an
embedded database for details.
Although it is very useful to initialize a database for testing once when the
ApplicationContext
is loaded, sometimes it is essential to be able to modify the
database during integration tests. The following sections explain how to execute SQL
scripts programmatically and declaratively during integration tests.
Executing SQL scripts programmatically
Spring provides the following options for executing SQL scripts programmatically within integration test methods.
-
org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.init.ScriptUtils
-
org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.init.ResourceDatabasePopulator
-
org.springframework.test.context.junit4.AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests
-
org.springframework.test.context.testng.AbstractTransactionalTestNGSpringContextTests
ScriptUtils
provides a collection of static utility methods for working with SQL
scripts and is mainly intended for internal use within the framework. However, if you
require full control over how SQL scripts are parsed and executed, ScriptUtils
may suit
your needs better than some of the other alternatives described later. See the
Javadoc for individual
methods in ScriptUtils
for further details.
ResourceDatabasePopulator
provides an object-based API for programmatically populating,
initializing, or cleaning up a database by using SQL scripts defined in external
resources. ResourceDatabasePopulator
provides options for configuring the character
encoding, statement separator, comment delimiters, and error handling flags used when
parsing and running the scripts. Each of the configuration options has a reasonable
default value. See the
Javadoc for
details on default values. To run the scripts configured in a
ResourceDatabasePopulator
, you can invoke either the populate(Connection)
method to
execute the populator against a java.sql.Connection
or the execute(DataSource)
method
to execute the populator against a javax.sql.DataSource
. The following example
specifies SQL scripts for a test schema and test data, sets the statement separator to
@@
, and executes the scripts against a DataSource
:
@Test
public void databaseTest {
ResourceDatabasePopulator populator = new ResourceDatabasePopulator();
populator.addScripts(
new ClassPathResource("test-schema.sql"),
new ClassPathResource("test-data.sql"));
populator.setSeparator("@@");
populator.execute(this.dataSource);
// execute code that uses the test schema and data
}
Note that ResourceDatabasePopulator
internally delegates to ScriptUtils
for parsing
and running SQL scripts. Similarly, the executeSqlScript(..)
methods in
AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests
and AbstractTransactionalTestNGSpringContextTests
internally use a ResourceDatabasePopulator
to run SQL scripts. See the Javadoc for the
various executeSqlScript(..)
methods for further details.
Executing SQL scripts declaratively with @Sql
In addition to the aforementioned mechanisms for running SQL scripts programmatically,
you can declaratively configure SQL scripts in the Spring TestContext Framework.
Specifically, you can declare the @Sql
annotation on a test class or test method to
configure the resource paths to SQL scripts that should be run against a given database
before or after an integration test method. Note that method-level declarations override
class-level declarations and that support for @Sql
is provided by the
SqlScriptsTestExecutionListener
, which is enabled by default.
Path Resource Semantics
Each path is interpreted as a Spring Resource
. A plain path (for example,
"schema.sql"
) is treated as a classpath resource that is relative to the package in
which the test class is defined. A path starting with a slash is treated as an absolute
classpath resource (for example, "/org/example/schema.sql"
). A path that references a
URL (for example, a path prefixed with classpath:
, file:
, http:
) is loaded by using
the specified resource protocol.
The following example shows how to use @Sql
at the class level and at the method level
within a JUnit Jupiter based integration test class:
@SpringJUnitConfig
@Sql("/test-schema.sql")
class DatabaseTests {
@Test
void emptySchemaTest {
// execute code that uses the test schema without any test data
}
@Test
@Sql({"/test-schema.sql", "/test-user-data.sql"})
void userTest {
// execute code that uses the test schema and test data
}
}
Default Script Detection
If no SQL scripts are specified, an attempt is made to detect a default
script,
depending on where @Sql
is declared. If a default cannot be detected, an
IllegalStateException
is thrown.
-
Class-level declaration: If the annotated test class is
com.example.MyTest
, the corresponding default script isclasspath:com/example/MyTest.sql
. -
Method-level declaration: If the annotated test method is named
testMethod()
and is defined in the classcom.example.MyTest
, the corresponding default script isclasspath:com/example/MyTest.testMethod.sql
.
Declaring Multiple @Sql
Sets
If you need to configure multiple sets of SQL scripts for a given test class or test
method but with different syntax configuration, different error handling rules, or
different execution phases per set, you can declare multiple instances of @Sql
. With
Java 8, you can use @Sql
as a repeatable annotation. Otherwise, you can use the
@SqlGroup
annotation as an explicit container for declaring multiple instances of
@Sql
.
The following example shows how to use @Sql
as a repeatable annotation with Java 8:
@Test
@Sql(scripts = "/test-schema.sql", config = @SqlConfig(commentPrefix = "`"))
@Sql("/test-user-data.sql")
public void userTest {
// execute code that uses the test schema and test data
}
In the scenario presented in the preceding example, the test-schema.sql
script uses a
different syntax for single-line comments.
The following example is identical to the preceding example, except that the @Sql
declarations are grouped together within @SqlGroup
, for compatibility with Java 6 and
Java 7.
@Test
@SqlGroup({
@Sql(scripts = "/test-schema.sql", config = @SqlConfig(commentPrefix = "`")),
@Sql("/test-user-data.sql")
)}
public void userTest {
// execute code that uses the test schema and test data
}
Script Execution Phases
By default, SQL scripts are executed before the corresponding test method. However, if
you need to run a particular set of scripts after the test method (for example, to clean
up database state), you can use the executionPhase
attribute in @Sql
, as the
following example shows:
@Test
@Sql(
scripts = "create-test-data.sql",
config = @SqlConfig(transactionMode = ISOLATED)
)
@Sql(
scripts = "delete-test-data.sql",
config = @SqlConfig(transactionMode = ISOLATED),
executionPhase = AFTER_TEST_METHOD
)
public void userTest {
// execute code that needs the test data to be committed
// to the database outside of the test's transaction
}
Note that ISOLATED
and AFTER_TEST_METHOD
are statically imported from
Sql.TransactionMode
and Sql.ExecutionPhase
, respectively.
Script Configuration with @SqlConfig
You can configure script parsing and error handling by using the @SqlConfig
annotation.
When declared as a class-level annotation on an integration test class, @SqlConfig
serves as global configuration for all SQL scripts within the test class hierarchy. When
declared directly by using the config
attribute of the @Sql
annotation, @SqlConfig
serves as local configuration for the SQL scripts declared within the enclosing @Sql
annotation. Every attribute in @SqlConfig
has an implicit default value, which is
documented in the Javadoc of the corresponding attribute. Due to the rules defined for
annotation attributes in the Java Language Specification, it is, unfortunately, not
possible to assign a value of null
to an annotation attribute. Thus, in order to
support overrides of inherited global configuration, @SqlConfig
attributes have an
explicit default value of either ""
(for Strings) or DEFAULT
(for enumerations). This
approach lets local declarations of @SqlConfig
selectively override individual
attributes from global declarations of @SqlConfig
by providing a value other than ""
or DEFAULT
. Global @SqlConfig
attributes are inherited whenever local @SqlConfig
attributes do not supply an explicit value other than ""
or DEFAULT
. Explicit local
configuration, therefore, overrides global configuration.
The configuration options provided by @Sql
and @SqlConfig
are equivalent to those
supported by ScriptUtils
and ResourceDatabasePopulator
but are a superset of those
provided by the <jdbc:initialize-database/>
XML namespace element. See the Javadoc of
individual attributes in @Sql
and
@SqlConfig
for details.
Transaction management for @Sql
By default, the SqlScriptsTestExecutionListener
infers the desired transaction
semantics for scripts configured by using @Sql
. Specifically, SQL scripts are run
without a transaction, within an existing Spring-managed transaction (for example, a
transaction managed by the TransactionalTestExecutionListener
for a test annotated with
@Transactional
), or within an isolated transaction, depending on the configured value
of the transactionMode
attribute in @SqlConfig
and the presence of a
PlatformTransactionManager
in the test’s ApplicationContext
. As a bare minimum,
however, a javax.sql.DataSource
must be present in the test’s ApplicationContext
.
If the algorithms used by SqlScriptsTestExecutionListener
to detect a DataSource
and
PlatformTransactionManager
and infer the transaction semantics do not suit your needs,
you can specify explicit names by setting the dataSource
and transactionManager
attributes of @SqlConfig
. Furthermore, you can control the transaction propagation
behavior by setting the transactionMode
attribute of @SqlConfig
(for example, whether
scripts should be run in an isolated transaction). Although a thorough discussion of all
supported options for transaction management with @Sql
is beyond the scope of this
reference manual, the Javadoc for
@SqlConfig
and
SqlScriptsTestExecutionListener
provide detailed information, and the following example shows a typical testing scenario
that uses JUnit Jupiter and transactional tests with @Sql
:
@SpringJUnitConfig(TestDatabaseConfig.class)
@Transactional
class TransactionalSqlScriptsTests {
final JdbcTemplate jdbcTemplate;
@Autowired
TransactionalSqlScriptsTests(DataSource dataSource) {
this.jdbcTemplate = new JdbcTemplate(dataSource);
}
@Test
@Sql("/test-data.sql")
void usersTest() {
// verify state in test database:
assertNumUsers(2);
// execute code that uses the test data...
}
int countRowsInTable(String tableName) {
return JdbcTestUtils.countRowsInTable(this.jdbcTemplate, tableName);
}
void assertNumUsers(int expected) {
assertEquals(expected, countRowsInTable("user"),
"Number of rows in the [user] table.");
}
}
Note that there is no need to clean up the database after the usersTest()
method is
run, since any changes made to the database (either within the test method or within the
/test-data.sql
script) are automatically rolled back by the
TransactionalTestExecutionListener
(see transaction management for
details).
3.5.9. Parallel Test Execution
Spring Framework 5.0 introduces basic support for executing tests in parallel within a single JVM when using the Spring TestContext Framework. In general, this means that most test classes or test methods can be executed in parallel without any changes to test code or configuration.
For details on how to set up parallel test execution, see the documentation for your testing framework, build tool, or IDE. |
Keep in mind that the introduction of concurrency into your test suite can result in unexpected side effects, strange runtime behavior, and tests that fail intermittently or seemingly randomly. The Spring Team therefore provides the following general guidelines for when not to execute tests in parallel.
Do not execute tests in parallel if the tests:
-
Use Spring’s
@DirtiesContext
support. -
Use JUnit 4’s
@FixMethodOrder
support or any testing framework feature that is designed to ensure that test methods run in a particular order. Note, however, that this does not apply if entire test classes are executed in parallel. -
Change the state of shared services or systems such as a database, message broker, filesystem, and others. This applies to both in-memory and external systems.
If parallel test execution fails with an exception stating that the This may be due to the use of |
Parallel test execution in the Spring TestContext Framework is only possible if
the underlying TestContext implementation provides a copy constructor, as explained in
the Javadoc for TestContext . The
DefaultTestContext used in Spring provides such a constructor. However, if you use a
third-party library that provides a custom TestContext implementation, you need to
verify that it is suitable for parallel test execution.
|
3.5.10. TestContext Framework Support Classes
This section describes the various classes that support the Spring TestContext Framework.
Spring JUnit 4 Runner
The Spring TestContext Framework offers full integration with JUnit 4 through a custom
runner (supported on JUnit 4.12 or higher). By annotating test classes with
@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
or the shorter @RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
variant, developers can implement standard JUnit 4-based unit and integration tests and
simultaneously reap the benefits of the TestContext framework, such as support for
loading application contexts, dependency injection of test instances, transactional test
method execution, and so on. If you want to use the Spring TestContext Framework with an
alternative runner (such as JUnit 4’s Parameterized
runner) or third-party runners
(such as the MockitoJUnitRunner
), you can, optionally, use
Spring’s support for JUnit rules instead.
The following code listing shows the minimal requirements for configuring a test class to
run with the custom Spring Runner
:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@TestExecutionListeners({})
public class SimpleTest {
@Test
public void testMethod() {
// execute test logic...
}
}
In the preceding example, @TestExecutionListeners
is configured with an empty list, to
disable the default listeners, which otherwise would require an ApplicationContext
to
be configured through @ContextConfiguration
.
Spring JUnit 4 Rules
The org.springframework.test.context.junit4.rules
package provides the following JUnit
4 rules (supported on JUnit 4.12 or higher):
-
SpringClassRule
-
SpringMethodRule
SpringClassRule
is a JUnit TestRule
that supports class-level features of the Spring
TestContext Framework, whereas SpringMethodRule
is a JUnit MethodRule
that supports
instance-level and method-level features of the Spring TestContext Framework.
In contrast to the SpringRunner
, Spring’s rule-based JUnit support has the advantage of
being independent of any org.junit.runner.Runner
implementation and can, therefore, be
combined with existing alternative runners (such as JUnit 4’s Parameterized
) or
third-party runners (such as the MockitoJUnitRunner
).
To support the full functionality of the TestContext framework, you must combine a
SpringClassRule
with a SpringMethodRule
. The following example shows the proper way
to declare these rules in an integration test:
// Optionally specify a non-Spring Runner via @RunWith(...)
@ContextConfiguration
public class IntegrationTest {
@ClassRule
public static final SpringClassRule springClassRule = new SpringClassRule();
@Rule
public final SpringMethodRule springMethodRule = new SpringMethodRule();
@Test
public void testMethod() {
// execute test logic...
}
}
JUnit 4 Support Classes
The org.springframework.test.context.junit4
package provides the following support
classes for JUnit 4-based test cases (supported on JUnit 4.12 or higher):
-
AbstractJUnit4SpringContextTests
-
AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests
AbstractJUnit4SpringContextTests
is an abstract base test class that integrates the
Spring TestContext Framework with explicit ApplicationContext
testing support in a
JUnit 4 environment. When you extend AbstractJUnit4SpringContextTests
, you can access a
protected
applicationContext
instance variable that you can use to perform explicit
bean lookups or to test the state of the context as a whole.
AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests
is an abstract transactional extension of
AbstractJUnit4SpringContextTests
that adds some convenience functionality for JDBC
access. This class expects a javax.sql.DataSource
bean and a
PlatformTransactionManager
bean to be defined in the ApplicationContext
. When you
extend AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests
, you can access a protected
jdbcTemplate
instance variable that you can use to run SQL statements to query the
database. You can use such queries to confirm database state both before and after
running database-related application code, and Spring ensures that such queries run in
the scope of the same transaction as the application code. When used in conjunction with
an ORM tool, be sure to avoid false positives. As
mentioned in JDBC Testing Support,
AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests
also provides convenience methods that
delegate to methods in JdbcTestUtils
by using the aforementioned jdbcTemplate
.
Furthermore, AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests
provides an
executeSqlScript(..)
method for running SQL scripts against the configured DataSource
.
These classes are a convenience for extension. If you do not want your test classes
to be tied to a Spring-specific class hierarchy, you can configure your own custom test
classes by using @RunWith(SpringRunner.class) or Spring’s
JUnit rules.
|
SpringExtension for JUnit Jupiter
The Spring TestContext Framework offers full integration with the JUnit Jupiter testing
framework, introduced in JUnit 5. By annotating test classes with
@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)
, you can implement standard JUnit Jupiter-based unit
and integration tests and simultaneously reap the benefits of the TestContext framework,
such as support for loading application contexts, dependency injection of test instances,
transactional test method execution, and so on.
Furthermore, thanks to the rich extension API in JUnit Jupiter, Spring can provide the following features above and beyond the feature set that Spring supports for JUnit 4 and TestNG:
-
Dependency injection for test constructors, test methods, and test lifecycle callback methods. See Dependency Injection with
SpringExtension
for further details. -
Powerful support for conditional test execution based on SpEL expressions, environment variables, system properties, and so on. See the documentation for
@EnabledIf
and@DisabledIf
in Spring JUnit Jupiter Testing Annotations for further details and examples. -
Custom composed annotations that combine annotations from Spring and JUnit Jupiter. See the
@TransactionalDevTestConfig
and@TransactionalIntegrationTest
examples in Meta-Annotation Support for Testing for further details.
The following code listing shows how to configure a test class to use the
SpringExtension
in conjunction with @ContextConfiguration
:
// Instructs JUnit Jupiter to extend the test with Spring support.
@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)
// Instructs Spring to load an ApplicationContext from TestConfig.class
@ContextConfiguration(classes = TestConfig.class)
class SimpleTests {
@Test
void testMethod() {
// execute test logic...
}
}
Since you can also use annotations in JUnit 5 as meta-annotations, Spring can provide the
@SpringJUnitConfig
and @SpringJUnitWebConfig
composed annotations to simplify the
configuration of the test ApplicationContext
and JUnit Jupiter.
The following example uses @SpringJUnitConfig
to reduce the amount of configuration
used in the previous example:
// Instructs Spring to register the SpringExtension with JUnit
// Jupiter and load an ApplicationContext from TestConfig.class
@SpringJUnitConfig(TestConfig.class)
class SimpleTests {
@Test
void testMethod() {
// execute test logic...
}
}
Similarly, the following example uses @SpringJUnitWebConfig
to create a
WebApplicationContext
for use with JUnit Jupiter:
// Instructs Spring to register the SpringExtension with JUnit
// Jupiter and load a WebApplicationContext from TestWebConfig.class
@SpringJUnitWebConfig(TestWebConfig.class)
class SimpleWebTests {
@Test
void testMethod() {
// execute test logic...
}
}
See the documentation for @SpringJUnitConfig
and @SpringJUnitWebConfig
in
Spring JUnit Jupiter Testing Annotations for further details.
Dependency Injection with SpringExtension
SpringExtension
implements the
ParameterResolver
extension API from JUnit Jupiter, which lets Spring provide dependency injection for test
constructors, test methods, and test lifecycle callback methods.
Specifically, SpringExtension
can inject dependencies from the test’s
ApplicationContext
into test constructors and methods that are annotated with
@BeforeAll
, @AfterAll
, @BeforeEach
, @AfterEach
, @Test
, @RepeatedTest
,
@ParameterizedTest
, and others.
Constructor Injection
If a parameter in a constructor for a JUnit Jupiter test class is of type
ApplicationContext
(or a sub-type thereof) or is annotated or meta-annotated with
@Autowired
, @Qualifier
, or @Value
, Spring injects the value for that specific
parameter with the corresponding bean from the test’s ApplicationContext
. You can also
directly annotate a test constructor with @Autowired
if all of the parameters should be
supplied by Spring.
If the constructor for a test class is itself annotated with @Autowired ,
Spring assumes the responsibility for resolving all parameters in the constructor.
Consequently, no other ParameterResolver registered with JUnit Jupiter can resolve
parameters for such a constructor.
|
In the following example, Spring injects the OrderService
bean from the
ApplicationContext
loaded from TestConfig.class
into the
OrderServiceIntegrationTests
constructor.
@SpringJUnitConfig(TestConfig.class)
class OrderServiceIntegrationTests {
private final OrderService orderService;
@Autowired
OrderServiceIntegrationTests(OrderService orderService) {
this.orderService = orderService.
}
// tests that use the injected OrderService
}
Note that this feature lets test dependencies be final
and therefore immutable.
Method Injection
If a parameter in a JUnit Jupiter test method or test lifecycle callback method is of
type ApplicationContext
(or a sub-type thereof) or is annotated or meta-annotated with
@Autowired
, @Qualifier
, or @Value
, Spring injects the value for that specific
parameter with the corresponding bean from the test’s ApplicationContext
.
In the following example, Spring injects the OrderService
from the ApplicationContext
loaded from TestConfig.class
into the deleteOrder()
test method:
@SpringJUnitConfig(TestConfig.class)
class OrderServiceIntegrationTests {
@Test
void deleteOrder(@Autowired OrderService orderService) {
// use orderService from the test's ApplicationContext
}
}
Due to the robustness of the ParameterResolver
support in JUnit Jupiter, you can also
have multiple dependencies injected into a single method, not only from Spring but also
from JUnit Jupiter itself or other third-party extensions.
The following example shows how to have both Spring and JUnit Jupiter inject dependencies
into the placeOrderRepeatedly()
test method simultaneously.
@SpringJUnitConfig(TestConfig.class)
class OrderServiceIntegrationTests {
@RepeatedTest(10)
void placeOrderRepeatedly(RepetitionInfo repetitionInfo,
@Autowired OrderService orderService) {
// use orderService from the test's ApplicationContext
// and repetitionInfo from JUnit Jupiter
}
}
Note that the use of @RepeatedTest
from JUnit Jupiter lets the test method gain access
to the RepetitionInfo
.
TestNG Support Classes
The org.springframework.test.context.testng
package provides the following support
classes for TestNG based test cases:
-
AbstractTestNGSpringContextTests
-
AbstractTransactionalTestNGSpringContextTests
AbstractTestNGSpringContextTests
is an abstract base test class that integrates the
Spring TestContext Framework with explicit ApplicationContext
testing support in a
TestNG environment. When you extend AbstractTestNGSpringContextTests
, you can access a
protected
applicationContext
instance variable that you can use to perform explicit
bean lookups or to test the state of the context as a whole.
AbstractTransactionalTestNGSpringContextTests
is an abstract transactional extension of
AbstractTestNGSpringContextTests
that adds some convenience functionality for JDBC
access. This class expects a javax.sql.DataSource
bean and a
PlatformTransactionManager
bean to be defined in the ApplicationContext
. When you
extend AbstractTransactionalTestNGSpringContextTests
, you can access a protected
jdbcTemplate
instance variable that you can use to execute SQL statements to query the
database. You can use such queries to confirm database state both before and after
running database-related application code, and Spring ensures that such queries run in
the scope of the same transaction as the application code. When used in conjunction with
an ORM tool, be sure to avoid false positives. As
mentioned in JDBC Testing Support,
AbstractTransactionalTestNGSpringContextTests
also provides convenience methods that
delegate to methods in JdbcTestUtils
by using the aforementioned jdbcTemplate
.
Furthermore, AbstractTransactionalTestNGSpringContextTests
provides an
executeSqlScript(..)
method for running SQL scripts against the configured DataSource
.
These classes are a convenience for extension. If you do not want your test classes
to be tied to a Spring-specific class hierarchy, you can configure your own custom test
classes by using @ContextConfiguration , @TestExecutionListeners , and so on and by
manually instrumenting your test class with a TestContextManager . See the source code
of AbstractTestNGSpringContextTests for an example of how to instrument your test class.
|
3.6. Spring MVC Test Framework
The Spring MVC Test framework provides first class support for testing Spring MVC code
with a fluent API that you can use with JUnit, TestNG, or any other testing framework. It
is built on the Servlet API mock objects
from the spring-test
module and, hence, does not use a running Servlet container. It
uses the DispatcherServlet
to provide full Spring MVC runtime behavior and provides
support for loading actual Spring configuration with the TestContext framework in
addition to a standalone mode, in which you can manually instantiate controllers and test
them one at a time.
Spring MVC Test also provides client-side support for testing code that uses the
RestTemplate
. Client-side tests mock the server responses and also do not use a running
server.
Spring Boot provides an option to write full, end-to-end integration tests that include a running server. If this is your goal, see the Spring Boot reference page. For more information on the differences between out-of-container and end-to-end integration tests, see Differences Between Out-of-Container and End-to-End Integration Tests. |
3.6.1. Server-Side Tests
You can write a plain unit test for a Spring MVC controller by using JUnit or TestNG. To
do so, instantiate the controller, inject it with mocked or stubbed dependencies, and
call its methods (passing MockHttpServletRequest
, MockHttpServletResponse
, and
others, as necessary). However, when writing such a unit test, much remains untested: for
example, request mappings, data binding, type conversion, validation, and much more.
Furthermore, other controller methods such as @InitBinder
, @ModelAttribute
, and
@ExceptionHandler
may also be invoked as part of the request processing lifecycle.
The goal of Spring MVC Test is to provide an effective way to test controllers by
performing requests and generating responses through the actual DispatcherServlet
.
Spring MVC Test builds on the familiar “mock” implementations of
the Servlet API available in the spring-test
module. This allows performing requests
and generating responses without the need for running in a Servlet container. For the
most part, everything should work as it does at runtime with a few notable exceptions, as
explained in Differences Between Out-of-Container and End-to-End Integration Tests. The following JUnit
Jupiter-based example uses Spring MVC Test:
import static org.springframework.test.web.servlet.request.MockMvcRequestBuilders.*;
import static org.springframework.test.web.servlet.result.MockMvcResultMatchers.*;
@SpringJUnitWebConfig(locations = "test-servlet-context.xml")
class ExampleTests {
private MockMvc mockMvc;
@BeforeEach
void setup(WebApplicationContext wac) {
this.mockMvc = MockMvcBuilders.webAppContextSetup(wac).build();
}
@Test
void getAccount() throws Exception {
this.mockMvc.perform(get("/accounts/1")
.accept(MediaType.parseMediaType("application/json;charset=UTF-8")))
.andExpect(status().isOk())
.andExpect(content().contentType("application/json"))
.andExpect(jsonPath("$.name").value("Lee"));
}
}
The preceding test relies on the WebApplicationContext
support of the TestContext
framework to load Spring configuration from an XML configuration file located in the same
package as the test class, but Java-based and Groovy-based configuration are also
supported. See these
sample tests.
The MockMvc
instance is used to perform a GET
request to /accounts/1
and verify
that the resulting response has status 200, the content type is application/json
, and
the response body has a JSON property called name
with the value Lee
. The jsonPath
syntax is supported through the Jayway JsonPath
project. Many other options for verifying the result of the performed request are
discussed later in this document.
Static Imports
The fluent API in the example from the preceding section
requires a few static imports, such as MockMvcRequestBuilders.*
,
MockMvcResultMatchers.*
, and MockMvcBuilders.*
. An easy way to find
these classes is to search for types that match MockMvc*
. If you use Eclipse or the
Eclipse-based Spring Tool Suite, be sure to add them as “favorite static members” in
the Eclipse preferences under Java → Editor → Content Assist → Favorites. Doing so
lets you use content assist after typing the first character of the static method name.
Other IDEs (such as IntelliJ) may not require any additional configuration. Check the
support for code completion on static members.
Setup Choices
You have two main options for creating an instance of MockMvc
. The first is to load
Spring MVC configuration through the TestContext framework, which loads the Spring
configuration and injects a WebApplicationContext
into the test to use to build a
MockMvc
instance. The following example shows how to do so:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@WebAppConfiguration
@ContextConfiguration("my-servlet-context.xml")
public class MyWebTests {
@Autowired
private WebApplicationContext wac;
private MockMvc mockMvc;
@Before
public void setup() {
this.mockMvc = MockMvcBuilders.webAppContextSetup(this.wac).build();
}
// ...
}
Your second option is to manually create a controller instance without loading Spring configuration. Instead, basic default configuration, roughly comparable to that of the MVC JavaConfig or the MVC namespace, is automatically created. You can customize it to a degree. The following example shows how to do so:
public class MyWebTests {
private MockMvc mockMvc;
@Before
public void setup() {
this.mockMvc = MockMvcBuilders.standaloneSetup(new AccountController()).build();
}
// ...
}
Which setup option should you use?
The webAppContextSetup
loads your actual Spring MVC configuration, resulting in a more
complete integration test. Since the TestContext framework caches the loaded Spring
configuration, it helps keep tests running fast, even as you introduce more tests in your
test suite. Furthermore, you can inject mock services into controllers through Spring
configuration to remain focused on testing the web layer. The following example declares
a mock service with Mockito:
<bean id="accountService" class="org.mockito.Mockito" factory-method="mock">
<constructor-arg value="org.example.AccountService"/>
</bean>
You can then inject the mock service into the test to set up and verify your expectations, as the following example shows:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@WebAppConfiguration
@ContextConfiguration("test-servlet-context.xml")
public class AccountTests {
@Autowired
private WebApplicationContext wac;
private MockMvc mockMvc;
@Autowired
private AccountService accountService;
// ...
}
The standaloneSetup
, on the other hand, is a little closer to a unit test. It tests one
controller at a time. You can manually inject the controller with mock dependencies, and
it does not involve loading Spring configuration. Such tests are more focused on style
and make it easier to see which controller is being tested, whether any specific Spring
MVC configuration is required to work, and so on. The standaloneSetup
is also a very
convenient way to write ad-hoc tests to verify specific behavior or to debug an issue.
As with most “integration versus unit testing” debates, there is no right or wrong
answer. However, using the standaloneSetup
does imply the need for additional
webAppContextSetup
tests in order to verify your Spring MVC configuration.
Alternatively, you can write all your tests with webAppContextSetup
, in order to always
test against your actual Spring MVC configuration.
Setup Features
No matter which MockMvc builder you use, all MockMvcBuilder
implementations provide
some common and very useful features. For example, you can declare an Accept
header for
all requests and expect a status of 200 as well as a Content-Type
header in all
responses, as follows:
// static import of MockMvcBuilders.standaloneSetup
MockMvc mockMvc = standaloneSetup(new MusicController())
.defaultRequest(get("/").accept(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON))
.alwaysExpect(status().isOk())
.alwaysExpect(content().contentType("application/json;charset=UTF-8"))
.build();
In addition, third-party frameworks (and applications) can pre-package setup
instructions, such as those in a MockMvcConfigurer
. The Spring Framework has one such
built-in implementation that helps to save and re-use the HTTP session across requests.
You can use it as follows:
// static import of SharedHttpSessionConfigurer.sharedHttpSession
MockMvc mockMvc = MockMvcBuilders.standaloneSetup(new TestController())
.apply(sharedHttpSession())
.build();
// Use mockMvc to perform requests...
See the Javadoc
for ConfigurableMockMvcBuilder
for a list of all MockMvc builder features or use the
IDE to explore the available options.
Performing Requests
You can perform requests that use any HTTP method, as the following example shows:
mockMvc.perform(post("/hotels/{id}", 42).accept(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON));
You can also perform file upload requests that internally use
MockMultipartHttpServletRequest
so that there is no actual parsing of a multipart
request. Rather, you have to set it up to be similar to the following example:
mockMvc.perform(multipart("/doc").file("a1", "ABC".getBytes("UTF-8")));
You can specify query parameters in URI template style, as the following example shows:
mockMvc.perform(get("/hotels?thing={thing}", "somewhere"));
You can also add Servlet request parameters that represent either query or form parameters, as the following example shows:
mockMvc.perform(get("/hotels").param("thing", "somewhere"));
If application code relies on Servlet request parameters and does not check the query
string explicitly (as is most often the case), it does not matter which option you use.
Keep in mind, however, that query parameters provided with the URI template are decoded
while request parameters provided through the param(…)
method are expected to already
be decoded.
In most cases, it is preferable to leave the context path and the Servlet path out of the
request URI. If you must test with the full request URI, be sure to set the contextPath
and servletPath
accordingly so that request mappings work, as the following example
shows:
mockMvc.perform(get("/app/main/hotels/{id}").contextPath("/app").servletPath("/main"))
In the preceding example, it would be cumbersome to set the contextPath
and
servletPath
with every performed request. Instead, you can set up default request
properties, as the following example shows:
public class MyWebTests {
private MockMvc mockMvc;
@Before
public void setup() {
mockMvc = standaloneSetup(new AccountController())
.defaultRequest(get("/")
.contextPath("/app").servletPath("/main")
.accept(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)).build();
}
The preceding properties affect every request performed through the MockMvc
instance.
If the same property is also specified on a given request, it overrides the default
value. That is why the HTTP method and URI in the default request do not matter, since
they must be specified on every request.
Defining Expectations
You can define expectations by appending one or more .andExpect(..)
calls after
performing a request, as the following example shows:
mockMvc.perform(get("/accounts/1")).andExpect(status().isOk());
MockMvcResultMatchers.*
provides a number of expectations, some of which are further
nested with more detailed expectations.
Expectations fall in two general categories. The first category of assertions verifies properties of the response (for example, the response status, headers, and content). These are the most important results to assert.
The second category of assertions goes beyond the response. These assertions let you inspect Spring MVC specific aspects, such as which controller method processed the request, whether an exception was raised and handled, what the content of the model is, what view was selected, what flash attributes were added, and so on. They also let you inspect Servlet specific aspects, such as request and session attributes.
The following test asserts that binding or validation failed:
mockMvc.perform(post("/persons"))
.andExpect(status().isOk())
.andExpect(model().attributeHasErrors("person"));
Many times, when writing tests, it is useful to dump the results of the performed
request. You can do so as follows, where print()
is a static import from
MockMvcResultHandlers
:
mockMvc.perform(post("/persons"))
.andDo(print())
.andExpect(status().isOk())
.andExpect(model().attributeHasErrors("person"));
As long as request processing does not cause an unhandled exception, the print()
method
prints all the available result data to System.out
. Spring Framework 4.2 introduced a
log()
method and two additional variants of the print()
method, one that accepts an
OutputStream
and one that accepts a Writer
. For example, invoking print(System.err)
prints the result data to System.err
, while invoking print(myWriter)
prints the
result data to a custom writer. If you want to have the result data logged instead of
printed, you can invoke the log()
method, which logs the result data as a single
DEBUG
message under the org.springframework.test.web.servlet.result
logging category.
In some cases, you may want to get direct access to the result and verify something that
cannot be verified otherwise. This can be achieved by appending .andReturn()
after all
other expectations, as the following example shows:
MvcResult mvcResult = mockMvc.perform(post("/persons")).andExpect(status().isOk()).andReturn();
// ...
If all tests repeat the same expectations, you can set up common expectations once when
building the MockMvc
instance, as the following example shows:
standaloneSetup(new SimpleController())
.alwaysExpect(status().isOk())
.alwaysExpect(content().contentType("application/json;charset=UTF-8"))
.build()
Note that common expectations are always applied and cannot be overridden without
creating a separate MockMvc
instance.
When a JSON response content contains hypermedia links created with Spring HATEOAS, you can verify the resulting links by using JsonPath expressions, as the following example shows:
mockMvc.perform(get("/people").accept(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON))
.andExpect(jsonPath("$.links[?(@.rel == 'self')].href").value("http://localhost:8080/people"));
When XML response content contains hypermedia links created with Spring HATEOAS, you can verify the resulting links by using XPath expressions:
Map<String, String> ns = Collections.singletonMap("ns", "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom");
mockMvc.perform(get("/handle").accept(MediaType.APPLICATION_XML))
.andExpect(xpath("/person/ns:link[@rel='self']/@href", ns).string("http://localhost:8080/people"));
Filter Registrations
When setting up a MockMvc
instance, you can register one or more Servlet Filter
instances, as the following example shows:
mockMvc = standaloneSetup(new PersonController()).addFilters(new CharacterEncodingFilter()).build();
Registered filters are invoked through the MockFilterChain
from spring-test
, and the
last filter delegates to the DispatcherServlet
.
Differences Between Out-of-Container and End-to-End Integration Tests
As mentioned earlier Spring MVC Test is built on the Servlet API mock objects from the
spring-test
module and does not use a running Servlet container. Therefore, there are
some important differences compared to full end-to-end integration tests with an actual
client and server running.
The easiest way to think about this is by starting with a blank MockHttpServletRequest
.
Whatever you add to it is what the request becomes. Things that may catch you by surprise
are that there is no context path by default; no jsessionid
cookie; no forwarding,
error, or async dispatches; and, therefore, no actual JSP rendering. Instead,
“forwarded” and “redirected” URLs are saved in the MockHttpServletResponse
and can
be asserted with expectations.
This means that, if you use JSPs, you can verify the JSP page to which the request was
forwarded, but no HTML is rendered. In other words, the JSP is not invoked. Note,
however, that all other rendering technologies that do not rely on forwarding, such as
Thymeleaf and Freemarker, render HTML to the response body as expected. The same is true
for rendering JSON, XML, and other formats through @ResponseBody
methods.
Alternatively, you may consider the full end-to-end integration testing support from
Spring Boot with @WebIntegrationTest
. See the
Spring Boot Reference Guide.
There are pros and cons for each approach. The options provided in Spring MVC Test are
different stops on the scale from classic unit testing to full integration testing. To be
certain, none of the options in Spring MVC Test fall under the category of classic unit
testing, but they are a little closer to it. For example, you can isolate the web layer
by injecting mocked services into controllers, in which case you are testing the web
layer only through the DispatcherServlet
but with actual Spring configuration, as you
might test the data access layer in isolation from the layers above it. Also, you can use
the stand-alone setup, focusing on one controller at a time and manually providing the
configuration required to make it work.
Another important distinction when using Spring MVC Test is that, conceptually, such tests are the server-side, so you can check what handler was used, if an exception was handled with a HandlerExceptionResolver, what the content of the model is, what binding errors there were, and other details. That means that it is easier to write expectations, since the server is not a black box, as it is when testing it through an actual HTTP client. This is generally an advantage of classic unit testing: It is easier to write, reason about, and debug but does not replace the need for full integration tests. At the same time, it is important not to lose sight of the fact that the response is the most important thing to check. In short, there is room here for multiple styles and strategies of testing even within the same project.
Further Server-Side Test Examples
The framework’s own tests include
many
sample tests intended to show how to use Spring MVC Test. You can browse these examples
for further ideas. Also, the
spring-mvc-showcase
project has
full test coverage based on Spring MVC Test.
3.6.2. HtmlUnit Integration
Spring provides integration between MockMvc and HtmlUnit. This simplifies performing end-to-end testing when using HTML-based views. This integration lets you:
-
Easily test HTML pages by using tools such as HtmlUnit, WebDriver, and Geb without the need to deploy to a Servlet container.
-
Test JavaScript within pages.
-
Optionally, test using mock services to speed up testing.
-
Share logic between in-container end-to-end tests and out-of-container integration tests.
MockMvc works with templating technologies that do not rely on a Servlet Container (for example, Thymeleaf, FreeMarker, and others), but it does not work with JSPs, since they rely on the Servlet container. |
Why HtmlUnit Integration?
The most obvious question that comes to mind is “Why do I need this?” The answer is
best found by exploring a very basic sample application. Assume you have a Spring MVC web
application that supports CRUD operations on a Message
object. The application also
supports paging through all messages. How would you go about testing it?
With Spring MVC Test, we can easily test if we are able to create a Message
, as follows:
MockHttpServletRequestBuilder createMessage = post("/messages/")
.param("summary", "Spring Rocks")
.param("text", "In case you didn't know, Spring Rocks!");
mockMvc.perform(createMessage)
.andExpect(status().is3xxRedirection())
.andExpect(redirectedUrl("/messages/123"));
What if we want to test the form view that lets us create the message? For example, assume our form looks like the following snippet:
<form id="messageForm" action="/messages/" method="post">
<div class="pull-right"><a href="/messages/">Messages</a></div>
<label for="summary">Summary</label>
<input type="text" class="required" id="summary" name="summary" value="" />
<label for="text">Message</label>
<textarea id="text" name="text"></textarea>
<div class="form-actions">
<input type="submit" value="Create" />
</div>
</form>
How do we ensure that our form produce the correct request to create a new message? A naive attempt might resemble the following:
mockMvc.perform(get("/messages/form"))
.andExpect(xpath("//input[@name='summary']").exists())
.andExpect(xpath("//textarea[@name='text']").exists());
This test has some obvious drawbacks. If we update our controller to use the parameter
message
instead of text
, our form test continues to pass, even though the HTML form
is out of synch with the controller. To resolve this we can combine our two tests, as
follows:
String summaryParamName = "summary";
String textParamName = "text";
mockMvc.perform(get("/messages/form"))
.andExpect(xpath("//input[@name='" + summaryParamName + "']").exists())
.andExpect(xpath("//textarea[@name='" + textParamName + "']").exists());
MockHttpServletRequestBuilder createMessage = post("/messages/")
.param(summaryParamName, "Spring Rocks")
.param(textParamName, "In case you didn't know, Spring Rocks!");
mockMvc.perform(createMessage)
.andExpect(status().is3xxRedirection())
.andExpect(redirectedUrl("/messages/123"));
This would reduce the risk of our test incorrectly passing, but there are still some problems:
-
What if we have multiple forms on our page? Admittedly, we could update our XPath expressions, but they get more complicated as we take more factors into account: Are the fields the correct type? Are the fields enabled? And so on.
-
Another issue is that we are doing double the work we would expect. We must first verify the view, and then we submit the view with the same parameters we just verified. Ideally, this could be done all at once.
-
Finally, we still cannot account for some things. For example, what if the form has JavaScript validation that we wish to test as well?
The overall problem is that testing a web page does not involve a single interaction. Instead, it is a combination of how the user interacts with a web page and how that web page interacts with other resources. For example, the result of a form view is used as the input to a user for creating a message. In addition, our form view can potentially use additional resources that impact the behavior of the page, such as JavaScript validation.
Integration Testing to the Rescue?
To resolve the issues mentioned earlier, we could perform end-to-end integration testing, but this has some drawbacks. Consider testing the view that lets us page through the messages. We might need the following tests:
-
Does our page display a notification to the user to indicate that no results are available when the messages are empty?
-
Does our page properly display a single message?
-
Does our page properly support paging?
To set up these tests, we need to ensure our database contains the proper messages. This leads to a number of additional challenges:
-
Ensuring the proper messages are in the database can be tedious. (Consider foreign key constraints.)
-
Testing can become slow, since each test would need to ensure that the database is in the correct state.
-
Since our database needs to be in a specific state, we cannot run tests in parallel.
-
Performing assertions on such items as auto-generated ids, timestamps, and others can be difficult.
These challenges do not mean that we should abandon end-to-end integration testing altogether. Instead, we can reduce the number of end-to-end integration tests by refactoring our detailed tests to use mock services that run much faster, more reliably, and without side effects. We can then implement a small number of true end-to-end integration tests that validate simple workflows to ensure that everything works together properly.
Enter HtmlUnit Integration
So how can we achieve a balance between testing the interactions of our pages and still retain good performance within our test suite? The answer is: “By integrating MockMvc with HtmlUnit.”
HtmlUnit Integration Options
You have a number of options when you want to integrate MockMvc with HtmlUnit:
-
MockMvc and HtmlUnit: Use this option if you want to use the raw HtmlUnit libraries.
-
MockMvc and WebDriver: Use this option to ease development and reuse code between integration and end-to-end testing.
-
MockMvc and Geb: Use this option if you want to use Groovy for testing, ease development, and reuse code between integration and end-to-end testing.
MockMvc and HtmlUnit
This section describes how to integrate MockMvc and HtmlUnit. Use this option if you want to use the raw HtmlUnit libraries.
MockMvc and HtmlUnit Setup
First, make sure that you have included a test dependency on
net.sourceforge.htmlunit:htmlunit
. In order to use HtmlUnit with Apache HttpComponents
4.5+, you need to use HtmlUnit 2.18 or higher.
We can easily create an HtmlUnit WebClient
that integrates with MockMvc by using the
MockMvcWebClientBuilder
, as follows:
@Autowired
WebApplicationContext context;
WebClient webClient;
@Before
public void setup() {
webClient = MockMvcWebClientBuilder
.webAppContextSetup(context)
.build();
}
This is a simple example of using MockMvcWebClientBuilder . For advanced usage,
see Advanced MockMvcWebClientBuilder .
|
This ensures that any URL that references localhost
as the server is directed to our
MockMvc
instance without the need for a real HTTP connection. Any other URL is
requested by using a network connection, as normal. This lets us easily test the use of
CDNs.
MockMvc and HtmlUnit Usage
Now we can use HtmlUnit as we normally would but without the need to deploy our application to a Servlet container. For example, we can request the view to create a message with the following:
HtmlPage createMsgFormPage = webClient.getPage("http://localhost/messages/form");
The default context path is "" . Alternatively, we can specify the context path,
as described in Advanced MockMvcWebClientBuilder .
|
Once we have a reference to the HtmlPage
, we can then fill out the form and submit it
to create a message, as the following example shows:
HtmlForm form = createMsgFormPage.getHtmlElementById("messageForm");
HtmlTextInput summaryInput = createMsgFormPage.getHtmlElementById("summary");
summaryInput.setValueAttribute("Spring Rocks");
HtmlTextArea textInput = createMsgFormPage.getHtmlElementById("text");
textInput.setText("In case you didn't know, Spring Rocks!");
HtmlSubmitInput submit = form.getOneHtmlElementByAttribute("input", "type", "submit");
HtmlPage newMessagePage = submit.click();
Finally, we can verify that a new message was created successfully. The following assertions use the AssertJ library:
assertThat(newMessagePage.getUrl().toString()).endsWith("/messages/123");
String id = newMessagePage.getHtmlElementById("id").getTextContent();
assertThat(id).isEqualTo("123");
String summary = newMessagePage.getHtmlElementById("summary").getTextContent();
assertThat(summary).isEqualTo("Spring Rocks");
String text = newMessagePage.getHtmlElementById("text").getTextContent();
assertThat(text).isEqualTo("In case you didn't know, Spring Rocks!");
The preceding code improves on our MockMvc test in a number of ways. First, we no longer have to explicitly verify our form and then create a request that looks like the form. Instead, we request the form, fill it out, and submit it, thereby significantly reducing the overhead.
Another important factor is that HtmlUnit uses the Mozilla Rhino engine to evaluate JavaScript. This means that we can also test the behavior of JavaScript within our pages.
See the HtmlUnit documentation for additional information about using HtmlUnit.
Advanced MockMvcWebClientBuilder
In the examples so far, we have used MockMvcWebClientBuilder
in the simplest way
possible, by building a WebClient
based on the WebApplicationContext
loaded for us by
the Spring TestContext Framework. This approach is repeated in the following example:
@Autowired
WebApplicationContext context;
WebClient webClient;
@Before
public void setup() {
webClient = MockMvcWebClientBuilder
.webAppContextSetup(context)
.build();
}
We can also specify additional configuration options, as the following example shows:
WebClient webClient;
@Before
public void setup() {
webClient = MockMvcWebClientBuilder
// demonstrates applying a MockMvcConfigurer (Spring Security)
.webAppContextSetup(context, springSecurity())
// for illustration only - defaults to ""
.contextPath("")
// By default MockMvc is used for localhost only;
// the following will use MockMvc for example.com and example.org as well
.useMockMvcForHosts("example.com","example.org")
.build();
}
As an alternative, we can perform the exact same setup by configuring the MockMvc
instance separately and supplying it to the MockMvcWebClientBuilder
, as follows:
MockMvc mockMvc = MockMvcBuilders
.webAppContextSetup(context)
.apply(springSecurity())
.build();
webClient = MockMvcWebClientBuilder
.mockMvcSetup(mockMvc)
// for illustration only - defaults to ""
.contextPath("")
// By default MockMvc is used for localhost only;
// the following will use MockMvc for example.com and example.org as well
.useMockMvcForHosts("example.com","example.org")
.build();
This is more verbose, but, by building the WebClient
with a MockMvc
instance, we have
the full power of MockMvc at our fingertips.
For additional information on creating a MockMvc instance, see
Setup Choices.
|
MockMvc and WebDriver
In the previous sections, we have seen how to use MockMvc in conjunction with the raw HtmlUnit APIs. In this section, we use additional abstractions within the Selenium WebDriver to make things even easier.
Why WebDriver and MockMvc?
We can already use HtmlUnit and MockMvc, so why would we want to use WebDriver? The Selenium WebDriver provides a very elegant API that lets us easily organize our code. To better show how it works, we explore an example in this section.
Despite being a part of Selenium, WebDriver does not require a Selenium Server to run your tests. |
Suppose we need to ensure that a message is created properly. The tests involve finding the HTML form input elements, filling them out, and making various assertions.
This approach results in numerous separate tests because we want to test error conditions as well. For example, we want to ensure that we get an error if we fill out only part of the form. If we fill out the entire form, the newly created message should be displayed afterwards.
If one of the fields were named “summary”, we might have something that resembles the following repeated in multiple places within our tests:
HtmlTextInput summaryInput = currentPage.getHtmlElementById("summary");
summaryInput.setValueAttribute(summary);
So what happens if we change the id
to smmry
? Doing so would force us to update all
of our tests to incorporate this change. This violates the DRY principle, so we should
ideally extract this code into its own method, as follows:
public HtmlPage createMessage(HtmlPage currentPage, String summary, String text) {
setSummary(currentPage, summary);
// ...
}
public void setSummary(HtmlPage currentPage, String summary) {
HtmlTextInput summaryInput = currentPage.getHtmlElementById("summary");
summaryInput.setValueAttribute(summary);
}
Doing so ensures that we do not have to update all of our tests if we change the UI.
We might even take this a step further and place this logic within an Object
that
represents the HtmlPage
we are currently on, as the following example shows:
public class CreateMessagePage {
final HtmlPage currentPage;
final HtmlTextInput summaryInput;
final HtmlSubmitInput submit;
public CreateMessagePage(HtmlPage currentPage) {
this.currentPage = currentPage;
this.summaryInput = currentPage.getHtmlElementById("summary");
this.submit = currentPage.getHtmlElementById("submit");
}
public <T> T createMessage(String summary, String text) throws Exception {
setSummary(summary);
HtmlPage result = submit.click();
boolean error = CreateMessagePage.at(result);
return (T) (error ? new CreateMessagePage(result) : new ViewMessagePage(result));
}
public void setSummary(String summary) throws Exception {
summaryInput.setValueAttribute(summary);
}
public static boolean at(HtmlPage page) {
return "Create Message".equals(page.getTitleText());
}
}
Formerly, this pattern was known as the Page Object Pattern. While we can certainly do this with HtmlUnit, WebDriver provides some tools that we explore in the following sections to make this pattern much easier to implement.
MockMvc and WebDriver Setup
To use Selenium WebDriver with the Spring MVC Test framework, make sure that your project
includes a test dependency on org.seleniumhq.selenium:selenium-htmlunit-driver
.
We can easily create a Selenium WebDriver that integrates with MockMvc by using the
MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder
as the following example shows:
@Autowired
WebApplicationContext context;
WebDriver driver;
@Before
public void setup() {
driver = MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder
.webAppContextSetup(context)
.build();
}
This is a simple example of using MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder . For more advanced
usage, see Advanced MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder .
|
The preceding example ensures that any URL that references localhost
as the server is
directed to our MockMvc
instance without the need for a real HTTP connection. Any other
URL is requested by using a network connection, as normal. This lets us easily test the
use of CDNs.
MockMvc and WebDriver Usage
Now we can use WebDriver as we normally would but without the need to deploy our application to a Servlet container. For example, we can request the view to create a message with the following:
CreateMessagePage page = CreateMessagePage.to(driver);
We can then fill out the form and submit it to create a message, as follows:
ViewMessagePage viewMessagePage =
page.createMessage(ViewMessagePage.class, expectedSummary, expectedText);
This improves on the design of our HtmlUnit
test by leveraging the Page Object Pattern. As we mentioned in
Why WebDriver and MockMvc?, we can use the Page Object Pattern
with HtmlUnit, but it is much easier with WebDriver. Consider the following
CreateMessagePage
implementation:
public class CreateMessagePage
extends AbstractPage { (1)
(2)
private WebElement summary;
private WebElement text;
(3)
@FindBy(css = "input[type=submit]")
private WebElement submit;
public CreateMessagePage(WebDriver driver) {
super(driver);
}
public <T> T createMessage(Class<T> resultPage, String summary, String details) {
this.summary.sendKeys(summary);
this.text.sendKeys(details);
this.submit.click();
return PageFactory.initElements(driver, resultPage);
}
public static CreateMessagePage to(WebDriver driver) {
driver.get("http://localhost:9990/mail/messages/form");
return PageFactory.initElements(driver, CreateMessagePage.class);
}
}
1 | CreateMessagePage extends the AbstractPage . We do not go over the details of
AbstractPage , but, in summary, it contains common functionality for all of our pages.
For example, if our application has a navigational bar, global error messages, and other
features, we can place this logic in a shared location. |
2 | We have a member variable for each of the parts of the HTML page in which we are
interested. These are of type WebElement . WebDriver’s
PageFactory lets us remove a
lot of code from the HtmlUnit version of CreateMessagePage by automatically resolving
each WebElement . The
PageFactory#initElements(WebDriver,Class<T>)
method automatically resolves each WebElement by using the field name and looking it up
by the id or name of the element within the HTML page. |
3 | We can use the
@FindBy annotation
to override the default lookup behavior. Our example shows how to use the @FindBy
annotation to look up our submit button with a css selector (input[type=submit]). |
Finally, we can verify that a new message was created successfully. The following assertions use the AssertJ assertion library:
assertThat(viewMessagePage.getMessage()).isEqualTo(expectedMessage);
assertThat(viewMessagePage.getSuccess()).isEqualTo("Successfully created a new message");
We can see that our ViewMessagePage
lets us interact with our custom domain model. For
example, it exposes a method that returns a Message
object:
public Message getMessage() throws ParseException {
Message message = new Message();
message.setId(getId());
message.setCreated(getCreated());
message.setSummary(getSummary());
message.setText(getText());
return message;
}
We can then use the rich domain objects in our assertions.
Lastly, we must not forget to close the WebDriver
instance when the test is complete,
as follows:
@After
public void destroy() {
if (driver != null) {
driver.close();
}
}
For additional information on using WebDriver, see the Selenium WebDriver documentation.
Advanced MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder
In the examples so far, we have used MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder
in the simplest way
possible, by building a WebDriver
based on the WebApplicationContext
loaded for us by
the Spring TestContext Framework. This approach is repeated here, as follows:
@Autowired
WebApplicationContext context;
WebDriver driver;
@Before
public void setup() {
driver = MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder
.webAppContextSetup(context)
.build();
}
We can also specify additional configuration options, as follows:
WebDriver driver;
@Before
public void setup() {
driver = MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder
// demonstrates applying a MockMvcConfigurer (Spring Security)
.webAppContextSetup(context, springSecurity())
// for illustration only - defaults to ""
.contextPath("")
// By default MockMvc is used for localhost only;
// the following will use MockMvc for example.com and example.org as well
.useMockMvcForHosts("example.com","example.org")
.build();
}
As an alternative, we can perform the exact same setup by configuring the MockMvc
instance separately and supplying it to the MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder
, as follows:
MockMvc mockMvc = MockMvcBuilders
.webAppContextSetup(context)
.apply(springSecurity())
.build();
driver = MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder
.mockMvcSetup(mockMvc)
// for illustration only - defaults to ""
.contextPath("")
// By default MockMvc is used for localhost only;
// the following will use MockMvc for example.com and example.org as well
.useMockMvcForHosts("example.com","example.org")
.build();
This is more verbose, but, by building the WebDriver
with a MockMvc
instance, we have
the full power of MockMvc at our fingertips.
For additional information on creating a MockMvc instance, see
Setup Choices.
|
MockMvc and Geb
In the previous section, we saw how to use MockMvc with WebDriver. In this section, we use Geb to make our tests even Groovy-er.
Why Geb and MockMvc?
Geb is backed by WebDriver, so it offers many of the same benefits that we get from WebDriver. However, Geb makes things even easier by taking care of some of the boilerplate code for us.
MockMvc and Geb Setup
We can easily initialize a Geb Browser
with a Selenium WebDriver that uses MockMvc, as
follows:
def setup() {
browser.driver = MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder
.webAppContextSetup(context)
.build()
}
This is a simple example of using MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder . For more advanced
usage, see Advanced MockMvcHtmlUnitDriverBuilder .
|
This ensures that any URL referencing localhost
as the server is directed to our
MockMvc
instance without the need for a real HTTP connection. Any other URL is
requested by using a network connection as normal. This lets us easily test the use of
CDNs.
MockMvc and Geb Usage
Now we can use Geb as we normally would but without the need to deploy our application to a Servlet container. For example, we can request the view to create a message with the following:
to CreateMessagePage
We can then fill out the form and submit it to create a message, as follows:
when:
form.summary = expectedSummary
form.text = expectedMessage
submit.click(ViewMessagePage)
Any unrecognized method calls or property accesses or references that are not found are forwarded to the current page object. This removes a lot of the boilerplate code we needed when using WebDriver directly.
As with direct WebDriver usage, this improves on the design of our
HtmlUnit test by using the Page Object
Pattern. As mentioned previously, we can use the Page Object Pattern with HtmlUnit and
WebDriver, but it is even easier with Geb. Consider our new Groovy-based
CreateMessagePage
implementation:
class CreateMessagePage extends Page {
static url = 'messages/form'
static at = { assert title == 'Messages : Create'; true }
static content = {
submit { $('input[type=submit]') }
form { $('form') }
errors(required:false) { $('label.error, .alert-error')?.text() }
}
}
Our CreateMessagePage
extends Page
. We do not go over the details of Page
, but, in
summary, it contains common functionality for all of our pages. We define a URL in which
this page can be found. This lets us navigate to the page, as follows:
to CreateMessagePage
We also have an at
closure that determines if we are at the specified page. It should
return true
if we are on the correct page. This is why we can assert that we are on the
correct page, as follows:
then:
at CreateMessagePage
errors.contains('This field is required.')
We use an assertion in the closure so that we can determine where things went wrong if we were at the wrong page. |
Next, we create a content
closure that specifies all the areas of interest within the
page. We can use a
jQuery-ish Navigator
API to select the content in which we are interested.
Finally, we can verify that a new message was created successfully, as follows:
then:
at ViewMessagePage
success == 'Successfully created a new message'
id
date
summary == expectedSummary
message == expectedMessage
For further details on how to get the most out of Geb, see The Book of Geb user’s manual.
3.6.3. Client-Side REST Tests
You can use client-side tests to test code that internally uses the RestTemplate
. The
idea is to declare expected requests and to provide “stub” responses so that you can
focus on testing the code in isolation (that is, without running a server). The following
example shows how to do so:
RestTemplate restTemplate = new RestTemplate();
MockRestServiceServer mockServer = MockRestServiceServer.bindTo(restTemplate).build();
mockServer.expect(requestTo("/greeting")).andRespond(withSuccess());
// Test code that uses the above RestTemplate ...
mockServer.verify();
In the preceding example, MockRestServiceServer
(the central class for client-side REST
tests) configures the RestTemplate
with a custom ClientHttpRequestFactory
that
asserts actual requests against expectations and returns “stub” responses. In this
case, we expect a request to /greeting
and want to return a 200 response with
text/plain
content. We can define additional expected requests and stub responses as
needed. When we define expected requests and stub responses, the RestTemplate
can be
used in client-side code as usual. At the end of testing, mockServer.verify()
can be
used to verify that all expectations have been satisfied.
By default, requests are expected in the order in which expectations were declared. You
can set the ignoreExpectOrder
option when building the server, in which case all
expectations are checked (in order) to find a match for a given request. That means
requests are allowed to come in any order. The following example uses ignoreExpectOrder
:
server = MockRestServiceServer.bindTo(restTemplate).ignoreExpectOrder(true).build();
Even with unordered requests by default, each request is allowed to execute once only.
The expect
method provides an overloaded variant that accepts an ExpectedCount
argument that specifies a count range (for example, once
, manyTimes
, max
, min
,
between
, and so on). The following example uses times
:
RestTemplate restTemplate = new RestTemplate();
MockRestServiceServer mockServer = MockRestServiceServer.bindTo(restTemplate).build();
mockServer.expect(times(2), requestTo("/something")).andRespond(withSuccess());
mockServer.expect(times(3), requestTo("/somewhere")).andRespond(withSuccess());
// ...
mockServer.verify();
Note that, when ignoreExpectOrder
is not set (the default), and, therefore, requests
are expected in order of declaration, then that order applies only to the first of any
expected request. For example if "/something" is expected two times followed by
"/somewhere" three times, then there should be a request to "/something" before there is
a request to "/somewhere", but, aside from that subsequent "/something" and "/somewhere",
requests can come at any time.
As an alternative to all of the above, the client-side test support also provides a
ClientHttpRequestFactory
implementation that you can configure into a RestTemplate
to
bind it to a MockMvc
instance. That allows processing requests using actual server-side
logic but without running a server. The following example shows how to do so:
MockMvc mockMvc = MockMvcBuilders.webAppContextSetup(this.wac).build();
this.restTemplate = new RestTemplate(new MockMvcClientHttpRequestFactory(mockMvc));
// Test code that uses the above RestTemplate ...
Static Imports
As with server-side tests, the fluent API for client-side tests requires a few static
imports. Those are easy to find by searching for MockRest*
. Eclipse users should add
MockRestRequestMatchers.*
and MockRestResponseCreators.*
as
“favorite static members” in the Eclipse preferences under Java → Editor → Content
Assist → Favorites. That allows using content assist after typing the first character of
the static method name. Other IDEs (such IntelliJ) may not require any additional
configuration. Check for the support for code completion on static members.
Further Examples of Client-side REST Tests
Spring MVC Test’s own tests include example tests of client-side REST tests.
3.7. WebTestClient
WebTestClient
is a thin shell around WebClient,
using it to perform requests and exposing a dedicated, fluent API for verifying responses.
WebTestClient
binds to a WebFlux application by using a
mock request and response, or it can test any
web server over an HTTP connection.
Kotlin users: See this section
related to use of the WebTestClient .
|
3.7.1. Setup
To create a WebTestClient
you must choose one of several server setup options.
Effectively you’re either configuring the WebFlux application to bind to, or using
a URL to connect to a running server.
Bind to Controller
The following example shows how to create a server setup to test one @Controller
at a time:
client = WebTestClient.bindToController(new TestController()).build();
The preceding example loads the WebFlux Java configuration and registers the given controller. The resulting WebFlux application is tested without an HTTP server by using mock request and response objects. There are more methods on the builder to customize the default WebFlux Java configuration.
Bind to Router Function
The following example shows how to set up a server from a RouterFunction:
RouterFunction<?> route = ...
client = WebTestClient.bindToRouterFunction(route).build();
Internally, the configuration is passed to RouterFunctions.toWebHandler
.
The resulting WebFlux application is tested without an HTTP server by using mock
request and response objects.
Bind to ApplicationContext
The following example shows how to setup a server from the Spring configuration of your application or some subset of it:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration(classes = WebConfig.class) (1)
public class MyTests {
@Autowired
private ApplicationContext context; (2)
private WebTestClient client;
@Before
public void setUp() {
client = WebTestClient.bindToApplicationContext(context).build(); (3)
}
}
1 | Specify the configuration to load |
2 | Inject the configuration |
3 | Create the WebTestClient |
Internally, the configuration is passed to WebHttpHandlerBuilder
to set up
the request processing chain. See
WebHandler API for more details. The
resulting WebFlux application is tested without an HTTP server by using mock request
and response objects.
Bind to Server
The following server setup option lets you connect to a running server:
client = WebTestClient.bindToServer().baseUrl("http://localhost:8080").build();
Client Builder
In addition to the server setup options described earlier, you can also configure client
options, including base URL, default headers, client filters, and others. These options
are readily available following bindToServer
. For all others, you need to use
configureClient()
to transition from server to client configuration, as follows:
client = WebTestClient.bindToController(new TestController())
.configureClient()
.baseUrl("/test")
.build();
3.7.2. Writing Tests
WebTestClient
is a thin shell around WebClient.
It provides an identical API up to the point of performing a request by using exchange()
.
What follows after exchange()
is a chained API workflow to verify responses.
Typically, you start by asserting the response status and headers, as follows:
client.get().uri("/persons/1")
.accept(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON_UTF8)
.exchange()
.expectStatus().isOk()
.expectHeader().contentType(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON_UTF8)
// ...
Then you specify how to decode and consume the response body:
-
expectBody(Class<T>)
: Decode to single object. -
expectBodyList(Class<T>)
: Decode and collect objects toList<T>
. -
expectBody()
: Decode tobyte[]
for JSON Content or an empty body.
Then you can use built-in assertions for the body. The following example shows one way to do so:
client.get().uri("/persons")
.exchange()
.expectStatus().isOk()
.expectBodyList(Person.class).hasSize(3).contains(person);
You can also go beyond the built-in assertions and create your own, as the following example shows:
client.get().uri("/persons/1") .exchange() .expectStatus().isOk() .expectBody(Person.class) .consumeWith(result -> { // custom assertions (e.g. AssertJ)... });
You can also exit the workflow and get a result, as follows:
EntityExchangeResult<Person> result = client.get().uri("/persons/1") .exchange() .expectStatus().isOk() .expectBody(Person.class) .returnResult();
When you need to decode to a target type with generics, look for the overloaded methods
that accept
ParameterizedTypeReference
instead of Class<T> .
|
No Content
If the response has no content (or you do not care if it does) use Void.class
, which ensures
that resources are released. The following example shows how to do so:
client.get().uri("/persons/123")
.exchange()
.expectStatus().isNotFound()
.expectBody(Void.class);
Alternatively, if you want to assert there is no response content, you can use code similar to the following:
client.post().uri("/persons")
.body(personMono, Person.class)
.exchange()
.expectStatus().isCreated()
.expectBody().isEmpty();
JSON Content
When you use expectBody()
, the response is consumed as a byte[]
. This is useful for
raw content assertions. For example, you can use
JSONAssert to verify JSON content, as follows:
client.get().uri("/persons/1")
.exchange()
.expectStatus().isOk()
.expectBody()
.json("{\"name\":\"Jane\"}")
You can also use JSONPath expressions, as follows:
client.get().uri("/persons")
.exchange()
.expectStatus().isOk()
.expectBody()
.jsonPath("$[0].name").isEqualTo("Jane")
.jsonPath("$[1].name").isEqualTo("Jason");
Streaming Responses
To test infinite streams (for example, "text/event-stream"
or "application/stream+json"
),
you need to exit the chained API (by using returnResult
), immediately after the response status
and header assertions, as the following example shows:
FluxExchangeResult<MyEvent> result = client.get().uri("/events")
.accept(TEXT_EVENT_STREAM)
.exchange()
.expectStatus().isOk()
.returnResult(MyEvent.class);
Now you can consume the Flux<T>
, assert decoded objects as they come, and then
cancel at some point when test objectives are met. We recommend using the StepVerifier
from the reactor-test
module to do that, as the following example shows:
Flux<Event> eventFux = result.getResponseBody();
StepVerifier.create(eventFlux)
.expectNext(person)
.expectNextCount(4)
.consumeNextWith(p -> ...)
.thenCancel()
.verify();
Request Body
When it comes to building requests, the WebTestClient
offers an API identical to the
WebClient
, and the implementation is mostly a simple pass-through. See
the WebClient documentation for examples on
how to prepare a request with a body, including submitting form data, multipart requests,
and more.
3.8. PetClinic Example
The PetClinic application, available on
GitHub, shows several features of
the Spring TestContext Framework in a JUnit 4 environment. Most test functionality is
included in the AbstractClinicTests
, for which a partial listing follows:
import static org.junit.Assert.assertEquals;
// import ...
@ContextConfiguration (1)
public abstract class AbstractClinicTests extends AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests { (2)
@Autowired (3)
protected Clinic clinic;
@Test
public void getVets() {
Collection<Vet> vets = this.clinic.getVets();
assertEquals("JDBC query must show the same number of vets",
super.countRowsInTable("VETS"), vets.size()); (4)
Vet v1 = EntityUtils.getById(vets, Vet.class, 2);
assertEquals("Leary", v1.getLastName());
assertEquals(1, v1.getNrOfSpecialties());
assertEquals("radiology", (v1.getSpecialties().get(0)).getName());
// ...
}
// ...
}
1 | Load the application context from the default location: AbstractClinicTests-context.xml . |
2 | This test case extends the AbstractTransactionalJUnit4SpringContextTests class, from
which it inherits configuration for Dependency Injection (through the
DependencyInjectionTestExecutionListener ) and transactional behavior (through the
TransactionalTestExecutionListener ). |
3 | The clinic instance variable (the application object being tested) is set by
Dependency Injection through @Autowired semantics. |
4 | The getVets() method shows how you can use the inherited countRowsInTable()
method to easily verify the number of rows in a given table, thus verifying correct
behavior of the application code being tested. This allows for stronger tests and
lessens dependency on the exact test data. For example, you can add additional rows in
the database without breaking tests. |
Like many integration tests that use a database, most of the tests in
AbstractClinicTests
depend on a minimum amount of data already being in the database
before the test cases run. Alternatively, you can populate the database within the test
fixture set up of your test cases (again, within the same transaction as the tests).
The PetClinic application supports three data access technologies: JDBC, Hibernate, and
JPA. By declaring @ContextConfiguration
without any specific resource locations, the
AbstractClinicTests
class has its application context loaded from the default location,
AbstractClinicTests-context.xml
, which declares a common DataSource
. Subclasses
specify additional context locations that must declare a PlatformTransactionManager
and
a concrete implementation of Clinic
.
For example, the Hibernate implementation of the PetClinic tests contains the following
implementation. For this example, HibernateClinicTests
does not contain a single line
of code. We need only to declare @ContextConfiguration
, and the tests are inherited
from AbstractClinicTests
. Because @ContextConfiguration
is declared without any
specific resource locations, the Spring TestContext Framework loads an application
context from all the beans defined in AbstractClinicTests-context.xml
(that is, the
inherited locations) and HibernateClinicTests-context.xml
, with
HibernateClinicTests-context.xml
possibly overriding beans defined in
AbstractClinicTests-context.xml
. The following listing shows the definition of the
HibernateClinicTests
class:
@ContextConfiguration (1)
public class HibernateClinicTests extends AbstractClinicTests { }
1 | Load the application context from AbstractClinicTests-context.xml and HibernateClinicTests-context.xml . |
In a large-scale application, the Spring configuration is often split across multiple
files. Consequently, configuration locations are typically specified in a common base
class for all application-specific integration tests. Such a base class can also add
useful instance variables (populated by Dependency Injection, naturally), such as a
SessionFactory
in the case of an application that uses Hibernate.
As far as possible, you should have exactly the same Spring configuration files in your
integration tests as in the deployed environment. One likely point of difference concerns
database connection pooling and transaction infrastructure. If you are deploying to a
full-blown application server, you probably use its connection pool (available through
JNDI) and JTA implementation. Thus, in production, you can use a JndiObjectFactoryBean
or <jee:jndi-lookup>
for the DataSource
and JtaTransactionManager
. JNDI and JTA are
not available in out-of-container integration tests, so you should use a combination such
as the Commons DBCP BasicDataSource
and DataSourceTransactionManager
or
HibernateTransactionManager
for them. You can factor out this variant behavior into a
single XML file, having the choice between application server and a “local”
configuration separated from all other configuration, which will not vary between the
test and production environments. In addition, we recommend that you use properties files
for connection settings. See the PetClinic application for an example.
4. Further Resources
See the following resources for more information about testing:
-
JUnit: “A programmer-oriented testing framework for Java”. Used by the Spring Framework in its test suite.
-
TestNG: A testing framework inspired by JUnit with added support for annotations, test groups, data-driven testing, distributed testing, and other features.
-
AssertJ: “Fluent assertions for Java”, including support for Java 8 lambdas, streams, and other features.
-
Mock Objects: Article in Wikipedia.
-
MockObjects.com: Web site dedicated to mock objects, a technique for improving the design of code within test-driven development.
-
EasyMock: Java library “that provides Mock Objects for interfaces (and objects through the class extension) by generating them on the fly using Java’s proxy mechanism.” Used by the Spring Framework in its test suite.
-
JMock: Library that supports test-driven development of Java code with mock objects.
-
DbUnit: JUnit extension (also usable with Ant and Maven) that is targeted at database-driven projects and, among other things, puts your database into a known state between test runs.
-
The Grinder: Java load testing framework.