Spring Boot Mockito Support
External
- https://www.baeldung.com/injecting-mocks-in-spring
- https://spring.io/blog/2016/04/15/testing-improvements-in-spring-boot-1-4#mocking-and-spying
Internal
Overview
Spring Boot has built-in Mockito support and no additional dependencies are required in the Gradle build.gradle
file to use Mockito mocks. This article describes the minimal amount of steps to inject Mockito mocks in tests, alongside whatever components and real JPA repositories the application uses. Note that a H2-based JPA repository is better than a Mockito mock, because it tests the real persistence logic.
@MockBean
The org.springframework.boot.test.mock.mockito.MockBean
annotation injects Mockito mocks built around whatever component is specified in the test. Using @MockBean is the key to easily using mocks from Spring Boot unit tests.
Note that mocks will be automatically reset across tests.
Dependencies
dependencies {
...
testImplementation 'org.springframework.boot:spring-boot-starter-test' // no special Mockito dependency is necessary
}
Testing with @MockBean
Annotate the test with @SpringBootTest
. This will automatically allow injections of all real components from the application, including the JPA repositories. This is important, because a H2-based JPA repository is better than a mock.
@SpringBootTest
public class SomeControllerTest {
//
// this is the real controller to test
//
@Autowired
private SomeController someController
@Test
public void test() {
result = someController.someMethod(...);
assertEquals(..., result.someStuff());
}
}
Example
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@SpringBootTest
public class SomeTest {
@Autowired
private TestRestTemplate restTemplate;
@MockBean
private SomeService someService;
@Before
public void setup() {
// this stubs behavior
given(someService.getSomething("blah")).willReturn(new Something("blah"));
}
@Test
public void test() {
restTemplate.getForEntity("/{username}/something, String.class, "blue");
}
}