How to mock Spring bean (version 2)
About a year ago, I wrote a blog post how to mock Spring Bean. Patterns described there were little bit invasive to the production code. As one of the readers Colin correctly pointed out in comment, there is better alternative to spy/mock Spring bean based on @Profile
annotation. This blog post is going to describe this technique. I used this approach with success at work and also in my side projects.
Note that widespread mocking in your application is often considered as design smell.
Introducing production code
First of all we need code under test to demonstrate mocking. We will use these simple classes:
@Repository public class AddressDao { public String readAddress(String userName) { return "3 Dark Corner"; } } @Service public class AddressService { private AddressDao addressDao; @Autowired public AddressService(AddressDao addressDao) { this.addressDao = addressDao; } public String getAddressForUser(String userName){ return addressDao.readAddress(userName); } } @Service public class UserService { private AddressService addressService; @Autowired public UserService(AddressService addressService) { this.addressService = addressService; } public String getUserDetails(String userName){ String address = addressService.getAddressForUser(userName); return String.format("User %s, %s", userName, address); } }
Of course this code doesn’t make much sense, but will be good to demonstrate how to mock Spring bean. AddressDao
just returns string and thus simulates read from some data source. It is autowired into AddressService
. This bean is autowired into UserService
, which is used to construct string with user name and address.
Notice that we are using constructor injection as field injection is considered as bad practice. If you want to enforce constructor injection for your application, Oliver Gierke (Spring ecosystem developer and Spring Data lead) recently created very nice project Ninjector.
Configuration which scans all these beans is pretty standard Spring Boot main class:
@SpringBootApplication public class SimpleApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { SpringApplication.run(SimpleApplication.class, args); } }
Mock Spring bean (without AOP)
Let’s test the AddressService
class where we mock AddressDao
. We can create this mock via Spring’ @Profiles
and @Primary annotations this way:
@Profile("AddressService-test") @Configuration public class AddressDaoTestConfiguration { @Bean @Primary public AddressDao addressDao() { return Mockito.mock(AddressDao.class); } }
This test configuration will be applied only when Spring profile AddressService-test
is active. When it’s applied, it registers bean of type AddressDao
, which is mock instance created by Mockito. @Primary
annotation tells Spring to use this instance instead of real one when somebody autowire AddressDao
bean.
Test class is using JUnit framework:
@ActiveProfiles("AddressService-test") @RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @SpringApplicationConfiguration(SimpleApplication.class) public class AddressServiceITest { @Autowired private AddressService addressService; @Autowired private AddressDao addressDao; @Test public void testGetAddressForUser() { // GIVEN Mockito.when(addressDao.readAddress("john")) .thenReturn("5 Bright Corner"); // WHEN String actualAddress = addressService.getAddressForUser("john"); // THEN Assert.assertEquals("5 Bright Corner", actualAddress); } }
We activate profile AddressService-test
to enable AddressDao
mocking. Annotation @RunWith
is needed for Spring integration tests and @SpringApplicationConfiguration
defines which Spring configuration will be used to construct context for testing. Before the test, we autowire instance of AddressService
under test and AddressDao
mock.
Subsequent testing method should be clear if you are using Mockito. In GIVEN
phase, we record desired behavior into mock instance. In WHEN
phase, we execute testing code and in THEN
phase, we verify if testing code returned value we expect.
Spy on Spring Bean (without AOP)
For spying example, will be spying on AddressService
instance:
@Profile("UserService-test") @Configuration public class AddressServiceTestConfiguration { @Bean @Primary public AddressService addressServiceSpy(AddressService addressService) { return Mockito.spy(addressService); } }
This Spring configuration will be component scanned only if profile UserService-test
will be active. It defines primary bean of type AddressService
. @Primary
tells Spring to use this instance in case two beans of this type are present in Spring context. During construction of this bean we autowire existing instance of AddressService
from Spring context and use Mockito’s spying feature. The bean we are registering is effectively delegating all the calls to original instance, but Mockito spying allows us to verify interactions on spied instance.
We will test behavior of UserService
this way:
@ActiveProfiles("UserService-test") @RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @SpringApplicationConfiguration(SimpleApplication.class) public class UserServiceITest { @Autowired private UserService userService; @Autowired private AddressService addressService; @Test public void testGetUserDetails() { // GIVEN - Spring scanned by SimpleApplication class // WHEN String actualUserDetails = userService.getUserDetails("john"); // THEN Assert.assertEquals("User john, 3 Dark Corner", actualUserDetails); Mockito.verify(addressService).getAddressForUser("john"); } }
For testing we activate UserService-test
profile so our spying configuration will be applied. We autowire UserService
which is under test and AddressService
, which is being spied via Mockito.
We don’t need to prepare any behavior for testing in GIVEN
phase. W
HEN
phase is obviously executing code under test. In THEN
phase we verify if testing code returned value we expect and also if addressService
call was executed with correct parameter.
Problems with Mockito and Spring AOP
Let say now we want to use Spring AOP module to handle some cross-cutting concerns. For example to log calls on our Spring beans this way:
package net.lkrnac.blog.testing.mockbeanv2.aoptesting; import org.aspectj.lang.JoinPoint; import org.aspectj.lang.annotation.Aspect; import org.aspectj.lang.annotation.Before; import org.springframework.context.annotation.Profile; import org.springframework.stereotype.Component; import lombok.extern.slf4j.Slf4j; @Aspect @Component @Slf4j @Profile("aop") //only for example purposes public class AddressLogger { @Before("execution(* net.lkrnac.blog.testing.mockbeanv2.beans.*.*(..))") public void logAddressCall(JoinPoint jp){ log.info("Executing method {}", jp.getSignature()); } }
This AOP Aspect is applied before call on Spring beans from package net.lkrnac.blog.testing.mockbeanv2
. It is using Lombok’s annotation @Slf4j
to log signature of called method. Notice that this bean is created only when aop
profile is defined. We are using this profile to separate AOP and non-AOP testing examples. In a real application you wouldn’t want to use such profile.
We also need to enable AspectJ for our application, therefore all the following examples will be using this Spring Boot main class:
@SpringBootApplication @EnableAspectJAutoProxy public class AopApplication { public static void main(String[] args) { SpringApplication.run(AopApplication.class, args); } }
AOP constructs are enabled by @EnableAspectJAutoProxy
.
But such AOP constructs may be problematic if we combine Mockito for mocking with Spring AOP. It is because both use CGLIB to proxy real instances and when Mockito proxy is wrapped into Spring proxy, we can experience type mismatch problems. These can be mitigated by configuring bean’s scope with ScopedProxyMode.TARGET_CLASS
, but Mockito verify
()
calls still fail with NotAMockException
. Such problems can be seen if we enable aop
profile for UserServiceITest
.
Mock Spring bean proxied by Spring AOP
To overcome these problems, we will wrap mock into this Spring bean:
package net.lkrnac.blog.testing.mockbeanv2.aoptesting; import org.mockito.Mockito; import org.springframework.context.annotation.Primary; import org.springframework.context.annotation.Profile; import org.springframework.stereotype.Repository; import lombok.Getter; import net.lkrnac.blog.testing.mockbeanv2.beans.AddressDao; @Primary @Repository @Profile("AddressService-aop-mock-test") public class AddressDaoMock extends AddressDao{ @Getter private AddressDao mockDelegate = Mockito.mock(AddressDao.class); public String readAddress(String userName) { return mockDelegate.readAddress(userName); } }
@Primary
annotation makes sure that this bean will take precedence before real AddressDao
bean during injection. To make sure it will be applied only for specific test, we define profile AddressService-aop-mock-test
for this bean. It inherits AddressDao
class, so that it can act as full replacement of that type.
In order to fake behavior, we define mock instance of type AddressDao
, which is exposed via getter defined by Lombok’s @Getter
annotation. We also implement readAddress()
method which is expected to be called during test. This method just delegates the call to mock instance.
The test where this mock is used can look like this:
@ActiveProfiles({"AddressService-aop-mock-test", "aop"}) @RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @SpringApplicationConfiguration(AopApplication.class) public class AddressServiceAopMockITest { @Autowired private AddressService addressService; @Autowired private AddressDao addressDao; @Test public void testGetAddressForUser() { // GIVEN AddressDaoMock addressDaoMock = (AddressDaoMock) addressDao; Mockito.when(addressDaoMock.getMockDelegate().readAddress("john")) .thenReturn("5 Bright Corner"); // WHEN String actualAddress = addressService.getAddressForUser("john"); // THEN Assert.assertEquals("5 Bright Corner", actualAddress); } }
In the test we define AddressService-aop-mock-test
profile to activate AddressDaoMock
and aop
profile to activate AddressLogger
AOP aspect. For testing, we autowire testing bean addressService
and its faked dependency addressDao
. As we know, addressDao
will be of type AddressDaoMock
, because this bean was marked as @Primary
. Therefore we can cast it and record behavior into mockDelegate
.
When we call testing method, recorded behavior should be used because we expect testing method to use AddressDao
dependency.
Spy on Spring bean proxied by Spring AOP
Similar pattern can be used for spying the real implementation. This is how our spy can look like:
package net.lkrnac.blog.testing.mockbeanv2.aoptesting; import org.mockito.Mockito; import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired; import org.springframework.context.annotation.Primary; import org.springframework.context.annotation.Profile; import org.springframework.stereotype.Service; import lombok.Getter; import net.lkrnac.blog.testing.mockbeanv2.beans.AddressDao; import net.lkrnac.blog.testing.mockbeanv2.beans.AddressService; @Primary @Service @Profile("UserService-aop-test") public class AddressServiceSpy extends AddressService{ @Getter private AddressService spyDelegate; @Autowired public AddressServiceSpy(AddressDao addressDao) { super(null); spyDelegate = Mockito.spy(new AddressService(addressDao)); } public String getAddressForUser(String userName){ return spyDelegate.getAddressForUser(userName); } }
As we can see this spy is very similar to AddressDaoMock
. But in this case real bean is using constructor injection to autowire its dependency. Therefore we’ll need to define non-default constructor and do constructor injection also. But we wouldn’t pass injected dependency into parent constructor.
To enable spying on real object, we construct new instance with all the dependencies, wrap it into Mockito spy instance and store it into spyDelegate
property. We expect call of method getAddressForUser()
during test, therefore we delegate this call to spyDelegate
. This property can be accessed in test via getter defined by Lombok’s @Getter
annotation.
Test itself would look like this:
@ActiveProfiles({"UserService-aop-test", "aop"}) @RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @SpringApplicationConfiguration(AopApplication.class) public class UserServiceAopITest { @Autowired private UserService userService; @Autowired private AddressService addressService; @Test public void testGetUserDetails() { // GIVEN AddressServiceSpy addressServiceSpy = (AddressServiceSpy) addressService; // WHEN String actualUserDetails = userService.getUserDetails("john"); // THEN Assert.assertEquals("User john, 3 Dark Corner", actualUserDetails); Mockito.verify(addressServiceSpy.getSpyDelegate()).getAddressForUser("john"); } }
It is very straight forward. Profile UserService-aop-test
ensures that AddressServiceSpy
will be scanned. Profile aop
ensures same for AddressLogger
aspect. When we autowire testing object UserService
and its dependency AddressService
, we know that we can cast it to AddressServiceSpy
and verify the call on its spyDelegate
property after calling the testing method.
Fake Spring bean proxied by Spring AOP
It is obvious that delegating calls into Mockito mocks or spies complicates the testing. These patterns are often overkill if we simply need to fake the logic. We can use such fake in that case:
@Primary @Repository @Profile("AddressService-aop-fake-test") public class AddressDaoFake extends AddressDao{ public String readAddress(String userName) { return userName + "'s address"; } }
and used it for testing this way:
@ActiveProfiles({"AddressService-aop-fake-test", "aop"}) @RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class) @SpringApplicationConfiguration(AopApplication.class) public class AddressServiceAopFakeITest { @Autowired private AddressService addressService; @Test public void testGetAddressForUser() { // GIVEN - Spring context // WHEN String actualAddress = addressService.getAddressForUser("john"); // THEN Assert.assertEquals("john's address", actualAddress); } }
I don’t think this test needs explanation.
Reference: | How to mock Spring bean (version 2) from our JCG partner Lubos Krnac at the Lubos Krnac Java blog blog. |