Mock private method in the same class that is being tested
I have a Java class named, MyClass
, that I want to test with JUnit. The public method, methodA
, that I want to test calls a private method, methodB
, in the same class to determine which conditional path to follow. My goal is to write JUnit tests for the different paths in methodA
. Also, methodB
calls a service, so I do not want it to actually be executed when I run the JUnit tests.
What is the best way to mock methodB
and control its return so that I can test different paths for 'methodA'?
I prefer to use JMockit when writing mocks, so I am specifically interested in any answer that applies to JMockit.
Here is my example class:
public class MyClass {
public String methodA(CustomObject object1, CustomObject object2) {
if(methodB(object1, object2)) {
// Do something.
return "Result";
}
// Do something different.
return "Different Result";
}
private boolean methodB(CustomObject custObject1, CustomObject custObject2) {
/* For the sake of this example, assume the CustomObject.getSomething()
* method makes a service call and therefore is placed in this separate
* method so that later an integration test can be written.
*/
Something thing1 = cobject1.getSomething();
Something thing2 = cobject2.getSomething();
if(thing1 == thing2) {
return true;
}
return false;
}
}
This is what I have so far:
public class MyClassTest {
MyClass myClass = new MyClass();
@Test
public void test_MyClass_methodA_enters_if_condition() {
CustomObject object1 = new CustomObject("input1");
CustomObject object2 = new CustomObject("input2");
// How do I mock out methodB here to return true?
assertEquals(myClass.methodA(object1, object2), "Result");
}
@Test
public void test_MyClass_methodA_skips_if_condition() {
CustomObject object1 = new CustomObject("input1");
CustomObject object2 = new CustomObject("input2");
// How do I mock out methodB here to return false?
assertEquals(myClass.methodA(object1, object2), "Different Result");
}
}
Thanks!
To give the answer you asked for (using JMockit's partial mocking):
public class MyClassTest
{
@Tested MyClass myClass;
@Test
public void test_MyClass_methodA_enters_if_condition() {
final CustomObject object1 = new CustomObject("input1");
final CustomObject object2 = new CustomObject("input2");
new NonStrictExpectations(myClass) {{
invoke(myClass, "methodB", object1, object2); result = true;
}};
assertEquals("Result", myClass.methodA(object1, object2));
}
@Test
public void test_MyClass_methodA_skips_if_condition() {
final CustomObject object1 = new CustomObject("input1");
final CustomObject object2 = new CustomObject("input2");
new NonStrictExpectations(myClass) {{
invoke(myClass, "methodB", object1, object2); result = false;
}};
assertEquals("Different Result", myClass.methodA(object1, object2));
}
}
However, I would not recommend doing it like that. In general, private
methods should not be mocked. Instead, mock the actual external dependency of your unit under test (the CustomObject
in this case):
public class MyTestClass
{
@Tested MyClass myClass;
@Mocked CustomObject object1;
@Mocked CustomObject object2;
@Test
public void test_MyClass_methodA_enters_if_condition() {
new NonStrictExpectations() {{
Something thing = new Something();
object1.getSomething(); result = thing;
object2.getSomething(); result = thing;
}};
assertEquals("Result", myClass.methodA(object1, object2));
}
@Test
public void test_MyClass_methodA_skips_if_condition() {
new NonStrictExpectations() {{
object1.getSomething(); result = new Something();
object2.getSomething(); result = new Something();
}};
assertEquals("Different Result", myClass.methodA(object1, object2));
}
}
Do not be tempted to mock private methods, even if you can engaging in trickery to do so using a mocking tool. Private members are implementation details, which you should be free to change. Instead use the non-private API to exercise the class. If this is troublesome, consider moving the troublesome code into a different class, if it is not there already, and use dependency injection to inject a mock implementation of the troublesome code.
Make methodB a member of a separate class, and have a private reference to that class within MyClass
.
public class MyClass {
private MyOtherClass otherObject = new MyOtherClass();
public String methodA(CustomObject object1, CustomObject object2) {
if(otherObject.methodB(object1, object2)) {
// Do something.
return "Result";
}
// Do something different.
return "Different Result";
}
}
class MyOtherClass {
public boolean methodB(CustomObject custObject1, CustomObject custObject2) {
// Yada yada code
}
}
Personally, I usually only test public methods and look at coverage reports to ensure that all paths have been visited in my private methods. If I really need to test a private method, that's a smell that requires a refactoring as I have above.
You could also use reflection, but I'd feel dirty doing that. If you REALLY want the solution to that let me know and I'll add it to this answer.
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