Mockito Programming Model

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Internal

Overview

API

import static org.mockito.Mockito.mock;
import com.example.ExternalDependency;

public class SomeClassTest {

  private ExternalDependency mockExternalDependency;

  @Before
  public void setUp() {
    mockExternalDependency = mock(ExternalDependency.class);
  }

  @Test
  public void someTest() throws Exception {
    ...
  }
}

Annotations

import org.mockito.Mock;
import org.mockito.MockitoAnnotations;
import com.example.ExternalDependency;
import static org.mockito.Mockito.when;

public class SomeClassTest {

  private AutoCloseable mocks;

  @Mock
  private ExternalDependency mockExternalDependency;

  @Before
  public void openMocks() {
    mocks = MockitoAnnotations.openMocks(this);
  }

  @After
  public void releaseMocks() throws Exception {
    mocks.close();
  }

  @Test
  public void someTest() throws Exception {
    when(mockExternalDependency.someMethod()).thenReturn(...);
    ...
  }
}

Implementing Stub Functionality

https://github.com/ovidiuf/playground/tree/master/java/mockito/annotation-stub

A stub returns synthetic responses or throws exceptions when its methods are invoked. Mockito supports stubbing and by returning a given value when a specific method of the managed test double is called. Mockito implements the stub functionality with Mockito.when(<method>).thenReturn(...) pattern:

public class ExternalDependency {
  public String someMethod() {
    ...
  }
}
import static org.mockito.Mockito.when;
public class SomeClassTest {

  @Mock
  private ExternalDependency mockExternalDependency;

  @Test
  public void someTest() throws Exception {
    when(mockExternalDependency.someMethod()).thenReturn("some synthetic result");
    ...
  }
}

The when() configures the method(s) to stub, or the trigger action. The then*() methods specify what to do when the trigger is activated. Void methods are a special case.

Void Methods

By default, the managed test double does nothing on void methods, so there's no need to configure anything on it. The invocation on a void method will just complete successfully. If we need to simulate an exception that is thrown by a void method, use this pattern:

Throwing Exceptions for Void Methods

doThrow(exception).when(mock).<void-method-name>(arguments);
doThrow(IOException.class).when(mockExternalDependency).writeLine("....");

Stub Responses for Non-Void Methods

thenReturn()

thenReturn(...) returns the given value. It has several variants:

  • thenReturn(value): return the same value every time.
  • thenReturn(value1, value2, value3, ...): return the first value on first invocation, second value on the second invocation, etc. The equivalent is: thenReturn(value1).thenReturn(value2).thenReturn(value3). ...

thenThrow()

thenThrow(Throwable) throws the given exception. This can be used together with JUnit feature that provides syntactic support for tests that are supposed to check exceptions (@Test(expected = <exception-class>)).

when(mockExternalDependency.someMethod()).thenThrow(IOException.class);

There is alternative syntax for throwing exceptions on void methods.

thenAnswer()

thenAnswer(Answer answer) executes custom logic and compute a value to return. This turns the stub object into a fake.

thenCallRealMethod()

thenCallRealMethod() delegates the invocation to the real external dependency.

Argument Matchers

The test double can be configured prior to running the test and programmed how to react when a specific method is invoked with various arguments. This is achieved using a mechanism called argument matchers.



isA()

public class ExternalDependency {
  public String someMethodWithArg(String s) {
    ...
  }
}
import static org.mockito.ArgumentMatchers.isA;
  ...
  Mockito.when(mockExternalDependency.someMethodWithArg(isA(String.class))).thenReturn(...);
}

Why is isA() needed, why not provide the class, directly?

anyString()