public class JUnitParamsRunner
extends org.junit.runners.BlockJUnit4ClassRunner
This is a JUnit runner for parameterised tests that don't suck. Annotate your test class with
@RunWith(JUnitParamsRunner.class)
and place
@Parameters
annotation on each test method which requires
parameters. Nothing more needed - no special structure, no dirty tricks.
You can parameterise your test with values defined in annotations. Just pass sets of test method argument values as an array of Strings, where each string contains the argument values separated by a comma or a pipe "|".
@Test @Parameters({ "20, Tarzan", "0, Jane" }) public void cartoonCharacters(int yearsInJungle, String person) { ... }Sometimes you may be interested in passing enum values as parameters, then you can just write them as Strings like this:
@Test @Parameters({ "FROM_JUNGLE", "FROM_CITY" }) public void passEnumAsParam(PersonType person) { }
Obivously passing parameters as strings is handy only for trivial situations, that's why for normal cases you have a method that gives you a collection of parameters:
@Test @Parameters(method = "cartoonCharacters") public void cartoonCharacters(int yearsInJungle, String person) { ... } private Object[] cartoonCharacters() { return $( $(0, "Tarzan"), $(20, "Jane") ); }Where
$(...)
is a static method defined in
JUnitParamsRunner
class, which returns its parameters as a
Object[]
array. Just a shortcut, so that you don't need to write the ugly new Object[] {}
kind of stuff.
method
can take more than one method name - you can pass as many
of them as you want, separated by commas. This enables you to divide your
test cases e.g. into categories.
@Test @Parameters(method = "menCharactes, womenCharacters") public void cartoonCharacters(int yearsInJungle, String person) { ... } private Object[] menCharacters() { return $( $(20, "Tarzan"), $(2, "Chip"), $(2, "Dale") ); } private Object[] womenCharacters() { return $( $(0, "Jane"), $(18, "Pocahontas") ); }
The method
argument of a @Parameters
annotation can
be ommited if the method that provides parameters has a the same name as the
test, but prefixed by parametersFor
. So our example would look
like this:
@Test @Parameters public void cartoonCharacters(int yearsInJungle, String person) { ... } private Object[] parametersForCartoonCharacters() { return $( $(0, "Tarzan"), $(20, "Jane") ); }
If you don't like returning untyped values and arrays, you can equally well return any Iterable of concrete objects:
@Test @Parameters public void cartoonCharacters(Person character) { ... } private List<Person> parametersForCartoonCharacters() { return Arrays.asList( new Person(0, "Tarzan"), new Person(20, "Jane") ); }If we had more than just two Person's to make, we would get redundant, so JUnitParams gives you a simplified way of creating objects to be passed as params. You can omit the creation of the objects and just return their constructor argument values like this:
@Test @Parameters public void cartoonCharacters(Person character) { ... } private List<?> parametersForCartoonCharacters() { return Arrays.asList( $(0, "Tarzan"), $(20, "Jane") ); }And JUnitParams will invoke the appropriate constructor (
new Person(int age, String name)
in this case.)
If you want to use it, watch out! Automatic refactoring of constructor
arguments won't be working here!
You can also define methods that provide parameters in subclasses and use them in test methods defined in superclasses, as well as redefine data providing methods in subclasses to be used by test method defined in a superclass. That you can doesn't mean you should. Inheritance in tests is usually a code smell (readability hurts), so make sure you know what you're doing.
For more complex cases you may want to externalise the method that provides parameters or use more than one method to provide parameters to a single test method. You can easily do that like this:
@Test @Parameters(source = CartoonCharactersProvider.class) public void testReadyToLiveInJungle(int yearsInJungle, String person) { ... } ... class CartoonCharactersProvider { public static Object[] provideCartoonCharactersManually() { return $( $(0, "Tarzan"), $(20, "Jane") ); } public static Object[] provideCartoonCharactersFromDB() { return cartoonsRepository.loadCharacters(); } }All methods starting with
provide
are used as parameter
providers.
Sometimes though you may want to use just one or few methods of some class to provide you parameters. This can be done as well like this:
@Test @Parameters(source = CartoonCharactersProvider.class, method = "cinderellaCharacters,snowwhiteCharacters") public void testPrincesses(boolean isAPrincess, String characterName) { ... }
@Test @FileParameters("cartoon-characters.csv") public void shouldSurviveInJungle(int yearsInJungle, String person) { ... }But if you want to process the data from the CSV file a bit to use it in the test method arguments, you need to use an
IdentityMapper
. Look:
@Test @FileParameters(value = "cartoon-characters.csv", mapper = CartoonMapper.class) public void shouldSurviveInJungle(Person person) { ... } public class CartoonMapper extends IdentityMapper { @Override public Object[] map(Reader reader) { Object[] map = super.map(reader); List<Object[]> result = new LinkedList<Object[]>(); for (Object lineObj : map) { String line = (String) lineObj; // line in a format just like in the file result.add(new Object[] { ..... }); // some format edible by the test method } return result.toArray(); } }A CSV files with a header are also supported with the use of
CsvWithHeaderMapper
class.
You may also want to use a completely different file format, like excel or
something. Then just parse it yourself:
@Test @FileParameters(value = "cartoon-characters.xsl", mapper = ExcelCartoonMapper.class) public void shouldSurviveInJungle(Person person) { ... } public class CartoonMapper implements DataMapper { @Override public Object[] map(Reader fileReader) { ... } }As you see, you don't need to open or close the file. Just read it from the reader and parse it the way you wish. By default the file is loaded from the file system, relatively to where you start the tests from. But you can also use a resource from the classpath by prefixing the file name with
classpath:
@ConvertParam
annotation, give it a converter class and possibly some options (like date format in this case) and
you're done. Here's an example:
@Test @Parameters({ "01.12.2012, A" }) public void convertMultipleParams( @ConvertParam(value = StringToDateConverter.class, options = "dd.MM.yyyy") Date date, @ConvertParam(LetterToASCIIConverter.class) int num) { Calendar calendar = Calendar.getInstance(); calendar.setTime(date); assertEquals(2012, calendar.get(Calendar.YEAR)); assertEquals(11, calendar.get(Calendar.MONTH)); assertEquals(1, calendar.get(Calendar.DAY_OF_MONTH)); assertEquals(65, num); }
You can easily use JUnitParams together with Spring. The only problem is that Spring's test framework is based on JUnit runners, and JUnit allows only one runner to be run at once. Which would normally mean that you could use only one of Spring or JUnitParams. Luckily we can cheat Spring a little by adding this to your test class:
private TestContextManager testContextManager; @Before public void init() throws Exception { this.testContextManager = new TestContextManager(getClass()); this.testContextManager.prepareTestInstance(this); }This lets you use in your tests anything that Spring provides in its test framework.
Tests show up in your IDE as a tree with test class name being the root, test methods being nodes, and parameter sets being the leaves. If you want to customize the way an parameter object is shown, create a toString method for it.
If you create a parameterised test, but won't give it any parameter sets, it will be ignored and you'll be warned about it.
If for some reason you want to have a normal non-parameterised method to be annotated with @Parameters, then fine, you can do it. But it will be ignored then, since there won't be any params for it, and parameterised tests need parameters to execute properly (parameters are a part of test setup, right?)
The runner for parameterised test is trying to keep all the @Rule's running, but if something doesn't work - let me know. It's pretty tricky, since the rules in JUnit are chained, but the chain is kind of... unstructured, so sometimes I need to guess how to call the next element in chain. If you have your own rule, make sure it has a field of type Statement which is the next statement in chain to call.
Although usually a bad idea, since it makes tests less readable, sometimes inheritance is the best way to remove repetitions from tests. JUnitParams is fine with inheritance - you can define a common test in the superclass, and have separate parameters provider methods in the subclasses. Also the other way around is ok, you can define parameter providers in superclass and have tests in subclasses uses them as their input.
Constructor and Description |
---|
JUnitParamsRunner(Class<?> klass) |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
static Object[] |
$(Object... params)
Shortcut for returning an array of objects.
|
protected void |
collectInitializationErrors(List<Throwable> errors) |
protected List<org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod> |
computeTestMethods() |
protected org.junit.runner.Description |
describeMethod(org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod method) |
org.junit.runner.Description |
getDescription() |
protected org.junit.runners.model.Statement |
methodInvoker(org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod method,
Object test) |
protected void |
runChild(org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod method,
org.junit.runner.notification.RunNotifier notifier) |
createTest, describeChild, getChildren, getTestRules, methodBlock, possiblyExpectingExceptions, rules, testName, validateConstructor, validateFields, validateInstanceMethods, validateNoNonStaticInnerClass, validateOnlyOneConstructor, validateTestMethods, validateZeroArgConstructor, withAfters, withBefores, withPotentialTimeout
public JUnitParamsRunner(Class<?> klass) throws org.junit.runners.model.InitializationError
org.junit.runners.model.InitializationError
protected void collectInitializationErrors(List<Throwable> errors)
collectInitializationErrors
in class org.junit.runners.BlockJUnit4ClassRunner
protected void runChild(org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod method, org.junit.runner.notification.RunNotifier notifier)
runChild
in class org.junit.runners.BlockJUnit4ClassRunner
protected List<org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod> computeTestMethods()
computeTestMethods
in class org.junit.runners.BlockJUnit4ClassRunner
protected org.junit.runners.model.Statement methodInvoker(org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod method, Object test)
methodInvoker
in class org.junit.runners.BlockJUnit4ClassRunner
public org.junit.runner.Description getDescription()
getDescription
in interface org.junit.runner.Describable
getDescription
in class org.junit.runners.ParentRunner<org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod>
protected org.junit.runner.Description describeMethod(org.junit.runners.model.FrameworkMethod method)
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