9

I found this example where they used PowerMock and EasyMock to stub/mock the Menu and MenuItem classes for android. I have been trying to do something similar with PowerMock and Mockito with the Activity class.

I understand that a lot of the methods are final and that in the Android.jar they all just throw RuntimeException("Stub!").

I also understand that this test isn't complete but I just wanting to see if it is possible to mock the android Activity class.

But given that PowerMock allows you to mock classes with final methods shouldn't this code work?

@RunWith(PowerMockRunner.class)
@PrepareForTest(Activity.class)
public class MyTestCase extends TestCase {

    public void testPlease_JustWork() throws Exception {
        Activity mockActivity = PowerMockito.mock(Activity.class);

        PowerMockito.when(mockActivity.getTitle()).thenReturn("Title");
    }
}

I would think that the RuntimeException would no longer occur and "Title" would be returned but it still throws the exception.

I have tried all sorts of different things like doReturn("Title").when(mockActivity).getTitle(); and suppress(constructor(Activity.class));

Am I doing something wrong or is this just not possible?

0

3 Answers 3

5

Probably not a direct answer to your question, but you could try Robolectric in order to test parts of your Android app on your PC.

Roboelectric avoids the Stub! exception and gives you some minimal Android classes implementation

2

I think the answer is that the order of your referenced libraries matters because the android.jar includes some stubs for junit.

You have to ensure that on your test project, if you go to 'properties' and then 'Java Build Path' that the junit jar associated with the full version of powermock you downloaded show up on the 'Order and Export' tab above the android.jar. If it does not, the system resolves the junit.framework and junit.runner packages from android.jar before it resolves them from the junit.jar included in powermock.

I realize this question is old, but I think this is the proper answer so i wanted to make sure to document it on the question.

0
+50

I just tried your code sample and it works here, strange. I downloaded PowerMock 1.4.5 with Mockito and JUnit including dependencies and used the android.jar from the sdk (2.2). It only fails with the exception if i remove the @PrepareForTest.

EDIT

You could use the android.jar with the removed exception code, provided in the article you referenced.

3
  • i've uploaded the whole eclipse project to maik.0x2a.at/PowerMockTests.zip . You may need to adapt the path to the android.jar
    – Maik
    Sep 27, 2010 at 22:59
  • Well... I was using the separate junit library that I had downloaded so once I just got the whole package from power mock that included everything and got rid of the refrences to the other junit library, created a new test class I got a green bar. So Thanks!
    – bytebender
    Sep 27, 2010 at 23:16
  • I also had some problems in case anyone else is trying this. I noticed that the order of the Java build path is important. If you go to the order and export tab in Eclipse, make sure your src folder is at the top, then JavaSE-1.6, then the PowerMock jars, then finally android.jar. Oct 26, 2010 at 4:37

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