Since Spock 1.1, you can create mocks outside of a specification class (detached mocks). One of the options is DetachedMockFactory
. Take a look at the documentation or my answer to the question you linked.
Testing Mock Bean in Spring with Spock
题
I'm being hit with the issue that spock doesn't allow Mocks to be created outside of the specification - How to create Spock mocks outside of a specification class?
This seems to be still outstanding so am asking is that giving that i've got a complex and nested DI graph what is the most efficient way to 'inject' a mock representation deep in the graph?
Ideally, I have one bean definition set for normal deployment and another when running unit tests and it is this definition set being the applicable Mocks
e.g.
@Configuration
@Profile("deployment")
public class MyBeansForDeployment {
@Bean
public MyInterface myBean() {
return new MyConcreateImplmentation();
}
}
&&
@Configuration
@Profile("test")
public class MyBeansForUnitTests {
@Bean
public MyInterface myBean() {
return new MyMockImplementation();
}
}
解决方案
其他提示
You could try to implement a BeanPostProcessor that will replace the beans that you want with test doubles, such as shown below:
public class TestDoubleInjector implements BeanPostProcessor {
...
private static Map<String, Object[]> testDoubleBeanReplacements = new HashMap<>();
public void replaceBeanWithTestDouble(String beanName, Object testDouble, Class testDoubleType) {
testDoubleBeanReplacements.put(beanName, new Object[]{testDouble, testDoubleType});
}
@Override
public Object postProcessAfterInitialization(Object bean, String beanName) throws BeansException {
if (testDoubleBeanReplacements.containsKey(beanName)) {
return testDoubleBeanReplacements.get(beanName)[TEST_DOUBLE_OBJ];
}
return bean;
}
In your test, setup your mocks like shown below before initializing the application context. Make sure to include the TestDoubleInjector as a bean in your test context.
TestDoubleInjector testDoubleInjector = new TestDoubleInjector()
testDoubleInjector.replaceBeanWithTestDouble('beanToReplace', mock(MyBean.class), MyBean.class)
It could be done using HotSwappableTargetSource
@WebAppConfiguration
@SpringApplicationConfiguration(TestApp)
@IntegrationTest('server.port:0')
class HelloSpec extends Specification {
@Autowired
@Qualifier('swappableHelloService')
HotSwappableTargetSource swappableHelloService
def "test mocked"() {
given: 'hello service is mocked'
def mockedHelloService = Mock(HelloService)
and:
swappableHelloService.swap(mockedHelloService)
when:
//hit endpoint
then:
//asserts
and: 'check interactions'
interaction {
1 * mockedHelloService.hello(postfix) >> { ""Mocked, $postfix"" as String }
}
where:
postfix | _
randomAlphabetic(10) | _
}
}
And this is TestApp (override the bean you want to mock with proxy)
class TestApp extends App {
//override hello service bean
@Bean(name = HelloService.HELLO_SERVICE_BEAN_NAME)
public ProxyFactoryBean helloService(@Qualifier("swappableHelloService") HotSwappableTargetSource targetSource) {
def proxyFactoryBean = new ProxyFactoryBean()
proxyFactoryBean.setTargetSource(targetSource)
proxyFactoryBean
}
@Bean
public HotSwappableTargetSource swappableHelloService() {
new HotSwappableTargetSource(new HelloService());
}
}
Have a look at this example https://github.com/sf-git/spock-spring