92

I am introducing tests in a project that makes heavy use of IO operations (the file system, in this case). The system constantly opens/closes files, checks if files exist, deletes them, etcetera.

It soon became obvious that regular mocking wouldn't be of much use, as that would make my tests hard to set up and reason about. On the other hand, having a fake file system would be awesome, and I think, pretty easy to set up.

It seems the ruby guys did it again, and there's exactly what I am asking for in ruby: http://ozmm.org/posts/fakefs.html.

Is there anything remotely similar for Java?

4
  • 1
    It looks like one the application level this is easier to do in languages without a static type system. In Java, a File/FileInputStream/FileOutputStream always will refer to the underlying system's file system - if you don't patch the VM. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:05
  • There are interfaces like JavaFileManager or FileSystemView which you could implement, but most programs won't use them. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:08
  • @1st comment: I am well aware of that. I have currently replaced all the uses of File to a Filename of my own that only contain the file name as a string. All the IO logic was concentrated on a IFileSystem interface. The problem I am having is that it'd be still like a full day of work to implement the fake file system the way I needed it(with support for files + folders + hidden files + renames + getting only the path from a file name + ...) and testing it, to know it actually is right. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:09
  • 1
    Since you mentioned Ruby in the OP, I would just like to add here that there is an equivalent in C# also, System.IO.Abstractions which I've started using recently and is quite good.
    – julealgon
    Mar 6, 2014 at 17:02

12 Answers 12

59

Google has an open-source, in-memory implementation of Java 7's FileSystemProvider. The project is called jimfs.


If you use Java 6 or earlier, there is an alternative: I've used Apache Commons VFS before to great success. It seems to be much like the custom FileSystemProvider another answerer mentioned is in Java 7.

It comes pre-loaded with several file-system implementations: File, RAM, S/FTP, and Jar to name a few. I've also seen a plugin for S3.

2
  • 6
    +1 to jimfs, which allowed me to test my code without a single change. (I used Path by accident) Oct 10, 2014 at 4:49
  • Note that if you're working with a library that tries to take a path and do a toFile this is unsupported.
    – buddyp450
    Apr 4, 2021 at 2:27
37

In Java 6 and earlier it is difficult because classes like File and FileInputStream provide no way to dispatch to different "virtual file systems" in Java space.

In Java 7, there is support for virtual file systems; see Developing a Custom File System Provider. I don't know whether this will allow you to do what you want to do, but it is a good place to start looking.


Meh. Being the fact that there doesn't seem to actually be any fake file system, I guess I'll just implement a minimal implementation by myself. I win nothing by using FileSystemProvider

Actually, you DO win by using FileSystemProvider:

  • You implement something that (if released under an open source license) could be very useful to other people in your position, and for other purposes.

  • You make it easier for yourself if you decide to switch to a FileSystemProvider that someone else might be working on right now.

9
  • Interesting, but as it seems I'd still have to implement the file system by myself, not that useful ;-( Aug 7, 2011 at 7:41
  • 7
    At least it allows you to do that. And as you yourself said - "it would be easy to set up".
    – Stephen C
    Aug 7, 2011 at 12:47
  • Meh. Being the fact that there doesn't seem to actually be any fake file system, I guess I'll just implement a minimal implementation by myself. I win nothing by using FileSystemProvider. Aug 7, 2011 at 14:01
  • @devoured elysium - see my update.
    – Stephen C
    Aug 31, 2011 at 23:19
  • 2
    +1 for recommending writing and open source-ing a solution Jun 13, 2012 at 10:40
21

You can use org.junit.rules.TemporaryFolder from the JUnit package:

The TemporaryFolder Rule allows creation of files and folders that are guaranteed to be deleted when the test method finishes (whether it passes or fails):

Example:

final TemporaryFolder testFolder = new TemporaryFolder();
testFolder.create();
final Path filePath = testFolder.newFile("input.txt").toPath();
final Path dirPath = testFolder.newFolder("subfolder").toPath();

Alternatively quit the .toPath() part:

final File filePath = testFolder.newFile("input.txt");
1
  • 2
    TemporaryFolder is not in-memory.
    – progonkpa
    Mar 23, 2019 at 7:59
9

You can abstract the use of File by using the intention of "somewhere to write data" by changing your API to use an OutputStream instead of a File, then pass the API a FileOutputStream in your production code, but pass it a ByteArrayOutputStream from your tests. A ByteArrayOutputStream is an in-memory stream, so it's very fast and you can simply inspect its contents by using its methods - it's perfect for testing. There's also the corresponding ByteArrayInputStream if you want to read data.

File systems are generally pretty fast - unless you were doing a great deal of File I/O in your tests, I wouldn't bother.

Note that creating a java File object does not create a file on disk, ie the following code doesn't cause any change to disk:

File f = new File("somepath"); // doesn't create a file on disk
7
  • new File("something") won't create a file on disk but if you try to run almost any of its methods it will use the file system. Try new File("xyz").getAbsolutePath() to see what I mean.. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:35
  • 1
    I think people are assuming my main concern is speed. It is not. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:38
  • 1
    i find it's always good practice to abstract away any resources like file systems (same way you would write a data access layer to the DB). this is usually achieved by writing an interface and a thin wrapper around the lowest level class. if you use dependency injection at the highest level of your program you can very easily propagate a mock file system (note it doesn't have to be using a mock framework, just a "dummy" implementation of the interface) through your application. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:39
  • @devouredelysium new File("xyz").getAbsolutePath() does absolutely nothing whatsoever except return the path that the file would have if it existed. It doesn't change the file system; if the file doesn't exist, it still returns the String of the path and doesn't create a File. What did you mean by "see what happens"?
    – Bohemian
    Jun 13, 2012 at 7:20
  • 1
    File is not final in my OpenJDK 7. Aug 15, 2013 at 3:20
6

Jimfs, by Google, is an in memory NIO filesystem, that's great for tests.

4

A simple way would be to use your system's way of providing a file system based totally on RAM - tempfs on Linux, a RAM disk on Windows.

3
  • I don't see how that would be any better than using the true file system (other than speed). Aug 7, 2011 at 2:22
  • Yeah, speed (and disk wear) would be the main reason. Sorry, maybe I did misunderstand your goal. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:30
  • 1
    My goal is to easy my testing. I am currently not concerned with performance. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:37
4

MockFTPServer appears to have a couple of Fake Filesystem implementations (Unix/Windows)

It looks like you can use these fake filesystem implementations quite seperately from any FTP concepts. I'm trying this now for exactly the same pursposes as you've outlined.

1
  • I'm using UnixFakeFileSystem. Working very well as a fake implementation for my FileSystem abstraction.
    – Deano
    Sep 2, 2011 at 3:28
2

i'm not sure about specific frameworks, but a general approach in terms of OOP would be to write some abstracted layers on top of any file access code (interfaces galore!) and perhaps a facade to ease use of common operations. then you just mock one layer below the code you are currently testing and it then essentially a fake file system (or at least the code you're testing won't know otherwise).

if you look into using a dependency injection framework to handle this for you it will ease the ability to switch out components for a faked implementation of an interface. if you follow the patterns of inversion of control, passing in any dependencies into the constructor of the class you are testing this will also make for easy testing.

public interface IFileSystem {
   IFileHandle Load(string path);
   //etc
}

public class ClassBeingTested {
   public ClassBeingTested(IFileSystem fileSystem) {
      //assign to private field
   }

   public void DoSomethingWithFileSystem() {
       //utilise interface to file system here
       //which you could easily mock for testing purposes
       //by passing a fake implementation to the constructor
   }
}

i hope my java is correct, i haven't written java in a long while, but you will hopefully get the drift. hopefully i'm not underestimating the issue here and being overly simplistic!

of course this is all assuming you mean true unit testing, that is, testing the smallest possible units of code, and not an entire system. for integration testing a different approach is needed.

6
  • 1
    A fake file system needs to have logic of its own -- it's a file system like any other, but that only exists in memory. I'd like to avoid having to program myself such a file system. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:06
  • what type of file system operations are you looking to imitate? locking of files? reading/writing? or simple stuff like opening files, checking directories exist, creating files? Aug 7, 2011 at 2:26
  • Mostly simple operations that deal with checking whether the files are files or directories, if they exist, to create files, to delete files. This, of course, while supporting multiple folders and operations such as "get the path from this filename", "get the relative path from the absolute path", etc. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:35
  • i think as i have stated, creating an absrtaction around the physical file system and always use that (always coding against the interface) throughout your app. then just use dependency injection to propogate through your test subject. i know it's monotonous work but as programmers we have to do these things to gain a clean separation of concerns and allow for ease of testability :) Aug 7, 2011 at 2:41
  • You are really not getting what is being asked here. If I'm looking for a fake file system, it must be because I already have made an abstraction of the whole file system in my app (as stated in a comment of the OP). I just need a fake implementation of the file system to use in my tests.. Aug 7, 2011 at 2:45
2

ShrinkWrap from the Arquillian project looks to include a NIO compliant in memory FileSystem

You can create a simple in memory FileSystem by doing the following:

FileSystem fs = ShrinkWrapFileSystems.newFileSystem(ShrinkWrap.create(GenericArchive.class))
1
  • Does it support file:// protocol, can't find documentation.... Oct 31, 2015 at 11:33
1

Two other in memory file systems for java are,

memoryfilesystem

ephemeralfs

Both implement the NIO.2 File system api.

0

I was googling "Fake java FileSystem" and found this question. Unfortunately this is all I found. So I wrote this fake FileSystem myself: https://github.com/dernasherbrezon/mockfs

I'm using it for simulating IOExceptions during read/write to files. IOException could happen for example due to "no disk space", which is nearly impossible to simulate by other means.

-1

Its a bit old and this solution seems to be linux only but it looks good https://www.google.co.il/webhp?sourceid=chrome-instant&ion=1&espv=2&ie=UTF-8#q=tmpfs%20on%20ubuntu

tmpfs is an in-memory mapped directory (data disappears on reboot). Once mounted, Data can be copied into it and be worked on from memory.

0

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