Intent
I am looking for the following:
- A solid unit testing methodology
- What am I missing from my approach?
- What am I doing wrong?
- What am I doing which is unnecessary?
- A way to get as much as possible done automatically
Current environment
- Eclipse as IDE
- JUnit as a testing framework, integrated into Eclipse
- Hamcrest as a "matchers" library, for better assertion readability
- Google Guava for precondition validation
Current approach
Structure
- One test class per class to test
- Method testing grouped in static nested classes
- Test method naming to specify behaviour tested + expected result
- Expected exceptions specified by Java Annotation, not in method name
Methodology
- Watch out for
null
values - Watch out for empty List<E>
- Watch out for empty String
- Watch out for empty arrays
- Watch out for object state invariants altered by code (post-conditions)
- Methods accept documented parameter types
- Boundary checks (e.g. Integer.MAX_VALUE, etc...)
- Documenting immutability through specific types (e.g. Google Guava ImmutableList<E>)
- ... is there a list for this? Examples of nice-to-have testing lists:
- Things to check in database projects (e.g. CRUD, connectivity, logging, ...)
- Things to check in multithreaded code
- Things to check for EJBs
- ... ?
Sample code
This is a contrived example to show some techniques.
MyPath.java
import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkArgument;
import static com.google.common.base.Preconditions.checkNotNull;
import java.util.Arrays;
import com.google.common.collect.ImmutableList;
public class MyPath {
public static final MyPath ROOT = MyPath.ofComponents("ROOT");
public static final String SEPARATOR = "/";
public static MyPath ofComponents(String... components) {
checkNotNull(components);
checkArgument(components.length > 0);
checkArgument(!Arrays.asList(components).contains(""));
return new MyPath(components);
}
private final ImmutableList<String> components;
private MyPath(String[] components) {
this.components = ImmutableList.copyOf(components);
}
public ImmutableList<String> getComponents() {
return components;
}
@Override
public String toString() {
StringBuilder stringBuilder = new StringBuilder();
for (String pathComponent : components) {
stringBuilder.append("/" + pathComponent);
}
return stringBuilder.toString();
}
}
MyPathTests.java
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.is;
import static org.hamcrest.collection.IsCollectionWithSize.hasSize;
import static org.hamcrest.collection.IsEmptyCollection.empty;
import static org.hamcrest.collection.IsIterableContainingInOrder.contains;
import static org.hamcrest.core.IsEqual.equalTo;
import static org.hamcrest.core.IsNot.not;
import static org.hamcrest.core.IsNull.notNullValue;
import static org.junit.Assert.assertThat;
import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.experimental.runners.Enclosed;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;
import com.google.common.base.Joiner;
@RunWith(Enclosed.class)
public class MyPathTests {
public static class GetComponents {
@Test
public void componentsCorrespondToFactoryArguments() {
String[] components = { "Test1", "Test2", "Test3" };
MyPath myPath = MyPath.ofComponents(components);
assertThat(myPath.getComponents(), contains(components));
}
}
public static class OfComponents {
@Test
public void acceptsArrayOfComponents() {
MyPath.ofComponents("Test1", "Test2", "Test3");
}
@Test
public void acceptsSingleComponent() {
MyPath.ofComponents("Test1");
}
@Test(expected = IllegalArgumentException.class)
public void emptyStringVarArgsThrows() {
MyPath.ofComponents(new String[] { });
}
@Test(expected = NullPointerException.class)
public void nullStringVarArgsThrows() {
MyPath.ofComponents((String[]) null);
}
@Test(expected = IllegalArgumentException.class)
public void rejectsInterspersedEmptyComponents() {
MyPath.ofComponents("Test1", "", "Test2");
}
@Test(expected = IllegalArgumentException.class)
public void rejectsSingleEmptyComponent() {
MyPath.ofComponents("");
}
@Test
public void returnsNotNullValue() {
assertThat(MyPath.ofComponents("Test"), is(notNullValue()));
}
}
public static class Root {
@Test
public void hasComponents() {
assertThat(MyPath.ROOT.getComponents(), is(not(empty())));
}
@Test
public void hasExactlyOneComponent() {
assertThat(MyPath.ROOT.getComponents(), hasSize(1));
}
@Test
public void hasExactlyOneInboxComponent() {
assertThat(MyPath.ROOT.getComponents(), contains("ROOT"));
}
@Test
public void isNotNull() {
assertThat(MyPath.ROOT, is(notNullValue()));
}
@Test
public void toStringIsSlashSeparatedAbsolutePathToInbox() {
assertThat(MyPath.ROOT.toString(), is(equalTo("/ROOT")));
}
}
public static class ToString {
@Test
public void toStringIsSlashSeparatedPathOfComponents() {
String[] components = { "Test1", "Test2", "Test3" };
String expectedPath =
MyPath.SEPARATOR + Joiner.on(MyPath.SEPARATOR).join(components);
assertThat(MyPath.ofComponents(components).toString(),
is(equalTo(expectedPath)));
}
}
@Test
public void testPathCreationFromComponents() {
String[] pathComponentArguments = new String[] { "One", "Two", "Three" };
MyPath myPath = MyPath.ofComponents(pathComponentArguments);
assertThat(myPath.getComponents(), contains(pathComponentArguments));
}
}
Question, phrased explicitly
Is there a list of techniques to use to build a unit test? Something much more advanced than my oversimplified list above (e.g. check nulls, check boundaries, check expected exceptions, etc.) perhaps available in a book to buy or a URL to visit?
Once I have a method that takes a certain type of parameters, can I get any Eclipse plug-in to generate a stub for my tests for me? Perhaps using a Java Annotation to specify metadata about the method and having the tool materialise the associated checks for me? (e.g. @MustBeLowerCase, @ShouldBeOfSize(n=3), ...)
I find it tedious and robot-like to have to remember all of these "QA tricks" and/or apply them, I find it error-prone to copy and paste and I find it not self-documenting when I code things as I do above. Admittedly, Hamcrest libraries go in the general direction of specialising types of tests (e.g. on String objects using RegEx, on File objects, etc) but obviously do not auto-generate any test stubs and do not reflect on the code and its properties and prepare a harness for me.
Help me make this better, please.
PS
Do not tell me that I am just presenting code which is a silly wrapper around the concept of creating a Path from a list of path steps supplied in a static factory method please, this is a totally made-up example but it shows a "few" cases of argument validation... If I included a much longer example, who would really read this post?
:(
. Plus, all the tools I mention are open-source so there is knowledge sharing aplenty in effect, could this extend to creating unit tests? ThinkFindBugs
, somebody put a list of bug checks at my fingertips... perhaps there is something similar for setting up unit test? Sounds reasonable?