There's probably somewhere in the code a mockito Matcher used outside of stubbed invocation or verified invocation.
If your code base use JUnit I recommend the use of the mockito runner, it will validate the mockito use for each test method, which means any issue can be pinpointed to the test incorrectly written.
@RunWith(MockitoJUnitRunner.class)
public class TheTest {
@Test public void shoudl_perform_something() { ... }
}
Or with a mockito rule (since 1.10.17)
public class TheTest {
@Rule MockitoRule mockitoRule = MockitoJUnit.rule();
@Test public void should_perform_something() { ... }
}
You don't have to use have @Mock
s in your test to benefit from this framework validation.
And anyway both are the preferred ways to instantiate mocks compared to MockitoAnnotations.initMocks(...)
Also which version of mockito are you using ? I believe Mockito has improved some messages with the location of the bad code.
Note that this code cannot work properly, because indProvider.asProvider()
is not stubbed so mockito will use the default value which is null
. You have to do this either way (deep stubs is here for legacy code, a mock returning a mock is usually considered a code smell and it shows the tested code breaks the Law of Demeter) :
@Mock(answer = RETURNS_DEEP_STUBS) Individual indProvider;
// ...
when(indProvider.asProvider().getProviderId()).thenReturn("795316051750");
or as answered by @przemek, it's more verbose and shows the same weakness in the tested code.
@Mock(answer = RETURNS_DEEP_STUBS) Individual indProvider;
@Mock Provider provider;
// ...
when(indProvider.asProvider()).thenReturn(provider);
when(provider.getProviderId()).thenReturn("795316051750");
I advise you to read this book (Growing Object Oriented Software Guided by Tests), it's one of the very best book you can read about writing softwares guided by tests. I find it even more important than infamous Effective Java book.