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So, I'm using moq for testing, but I ran into a problem that prevents me from mocking correctly, at least I think so. This is my repository class:

public interface IAccountsRepository
    {
    	IQueryable<Account> Accounts { get; }
    	IQueryable<Account> AccountsPaged(int pageSize, int selectedPage);
    }

This is one of the implementations (fake):

public class FakeAccountsRepository : IAccountsRepository
    {
    	private static readonly IQueryable<Account> FakeAccounts = new List<Account> {
    	new Account {RegistrationEmail = "first@demo.org"},
    	new Account {RegistrationEmail = "second@demo.org"},
    	new Account {RegistrationEmail = "third@demo.org"},
    	new Account {RegistrationEmail = "fourth@demo.org"},
    	new Account {RegistrationEmail = "fifth@demo.org"}
    	}.AsQueryable();

    	public IQueryable<Account> Accounts
    	{
    		get { return FakeAccounts; }
    	}

    	public IQueryable<Account> AccountsPaged(int pageSize, int selectedPage)
    	{
    		return FakeAccounts.Skip((selectedPage - 1)*pageSize).Take(pageSize).AsQueryable();
    	}
    }

This is a Controller definition that works perfectly with real page and fake or sql data (IoC) inside a real web page:

public class AccountsController : Controller
    {
    	private IAccountsRepository _accountsRepository;
        public int PageSize = 3;

    	public AccountsController(IAccountsRepository accountsRepository)
    	{
    		this._accountsRepository = accountsRepository;
    	}

    	public ViewResult List(int selectedPage)
    	{
               return View(_accountsRepository.AccountsPaged(PageSize, selectedPage).ToList());
    	}
    }

This is a moq method:

static IAccountsRepository MockAccountsRepository(params Account[] accs)
    	{
    		// Generate an implementor of IAccountsRepository at runtime using Moq
    		var mockProductsRepos = new Moq.Mock<IAccountsRepository>();
    		mockProductsRepos.Setup(x => x.Accounts).Returns(accs.AsQueryable());
    		return mockProductsRepos.Object;
    	}

it works fine with this implementation of List pagination:

public ViewResult List(int selectedPage)
    	{
    		return View(_accountsRepository.Accounts.Skip((selectedPage - 1) * PageSize).Take(PageSize).ToList());

    	}

but it fails when using this:

public ViewResult List(int selectedPage)
    	{
    		return View(_accountsRepository.AccountsPaged(PageSize, selectedPage).ToList());
    	}

Without changing test and changing only List implementation (doing pagination only on .Accounts) it all works, but when I try to use AccountsPaged method, it Fails returning no elements. In real usage, on a web page, it works both ways.

Please advise, thank you.

EDIT: If I do this:

mockProductsRepos.Setup(x => x.AccountsPaged(Moq.It.IsAny<int>(), Moq.It.IsAny<int>())).Returns(accs.AsQueryable());

I get 5 items returned instead of 2.

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2 Answers

vote up 1 vote down check

You didn't setup AccountsPaged method in your mock

EDIT: Now that you setup AccountsPaged, you didn't setup it properly. Here how to setup it properly:

mockProductsRepos
   .Setup(x => x.AccountsPaged(Moq.It.IsAny<int>(), Moq.It.IsAny<int>()))
   .Returns( (int pageSize, int selectedPage) => accs.Skip((selectedPage-1)*pageSize).Take(pageSize).AsQueryable() );
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I did setup it now, like I've added to the post above, but it gives me 5 items instead of 2 - which would be expected if .List() call worked correctly. I don't know how could it be and why does it return full members? Is there a way to step by step debug of the moq setup? – BuzzBubba Aug 9 at 10:40
vote up 0 vote down

I didn't parse through your code in any depth, but a general rule of thumb is - When in doubt regarding mock correctness, use strict mocking to flush out any missing expectations:

var mock = new Mock(MockBehavior.Strict);

that way you will get explicit indications of any unexpected calls issued by the SUT which you forgot to mock.

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