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I want to write unit tests with NUnit that hit the database. I'd like to have the database in a consistent state for each test. I thought transactions would allow me to "undo" each test so I searched around and found several articles from 2004-05 on the topic:

These seem to resolve around implementing a custom attribute for NUnit which builds in the ability to rollback DB operations after each test executes.

That's great but...

  1. Does this functionality exists somewhere in NUnit natively?
  2. Has this technique been improved upon in the last 4 years?
  3. Is this still the best way to test database-related code?


Edit: it's not that I want to test my DAL specifically, it's more that I want to test pieces of my code that interact with the database. For these tests to be "no-touch" and repeatable, it'd be awesome if I could reset the database after each one.

Further, I want to ease this into an existing project that has no testing place at the moment. For that reason, I can't practically script up a database and data from scratch for each test.

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4 Answers

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NUnit now has a [Rollback] attribute, but I prefer to do it a different way. I use the TransactionScope class. There are a couple of ways to use it.

[Test]
public void YourTest() 
{
    using (TransactionScope scope = new TransactionScope())
    {
        // your test code here
    }
}

Since you didn't tell the TransactionScope to commit it will rollback automatically. It works even if an assertion fails or some other exception is thrown.

The other way is to use the [SetUp] to create the TransactionScope and [TearDown] to call Dispose on it. It cuts out some code duplication, but accomplishes the same thing.

[TestFixture]
public class YourFixture
{
    private TransactionScope scope;

    [SetUp]
    public void SetUp()
    {
        scope = new TransactionScope();
    }

    [TearDown]
    public void TearDown()
    {
        scope.Dispose();
    }


    [Test]
    public void YourTest() 
    {
        // your test code here
    }
}

This is as safe as the using statement in an individual test because NUnit will guarantee that TearDown is called.

Having said all that I do think that tests that hit the database are not really unit tests. I still write them, but I think of them as integration tests. I still see them as providing value. One place I use them often is in testing LINQ to SQL code. I don't use the designer. I hand write the DTO's and attributes. I've been known to get it wrong. The integration tests help catch my mistake.

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After using this approach for a couple weeks, I'm very happy with it, thanks again! – Michael Haren Dec 30 '08 at 20:36
I ended up using a very similar pattern, but with a base class that deals with the database trivia, including setting up the connections and whatnot. – Bruno Lopes Jan 2 at 23:46
vote up 1 vote down

I just went to a .NET user group and the presenter said he used SQLlite in test setup and teardown and used the in memory option. He had to fudge the connection a little and explicit destroy the connection, but it would give a clean DB every time.

http://houseofbilz.com/archive/2008/11/14/update-for-the-activerecord-quotmockquot-framework.aspx

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vote up 0 vote down

For this sort of testing, I experimented with NDbUnit (working in concert with NUnit). If memory serves, it was a port of DbUnit from the Java platform. It had a lot of slick commands for just the sort of thing you're trying to do. The project appears to have moved here:

http://code.google.com/p/ndbunit/

(it used to be at http://ndbunit.org).

The source appears to be available via this link: http://ndbunit.googlecode.com/svn/trunk/

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vote up 0 vote down

I would call these integration tests, but no matter. What I have done for such tests is have my setup methods in the test class clear all the tables of interest before each test. I generally hand write the SQL to do this so that I'm not using the classes under test.

Generally, I rely on an ORM for my datalayer and thus I don't write unit tests for much there. I don't feel a need to unit test code that I don't write. For code that I add in the layer, I generally use dependency injection to abstract out the actual connection to the database so that when I test my code, it doesn't touch the actual database. Do this in conjunction with a mocking framework for best results.

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Unfortunately this approach is not practical for my projects (hundreds of tables, procedures, gigs of data). This is too high-friction to justify on an existing project. – Michael Haren Nov 26 '08 at 16:11
But your unit tests should be broken up in to smaller, more focused classes that don't touch all of the tables. You only need to deal with the tables this particular test class touches. – tvanfosson Nov 26 '08 at 16:13
Also, retrofitting unit tests on existing projects is probably best done on an "as needed" basis -- like when you need to refactor or fix a bug. Then you can write a "box" of tests around the existing code to guarantee that your changes don't break things (or fix the bug). – tvanfosson Nov 26 '08 at 16:15
I wish that were true. I really do. Plus, I don't want to have to write lots and lots of fixture code just to get the db into a "ready to go" state. – Michael Haren Nov 26 '08 at 16:15
tvanfosson: yes, I agree. – Michael Haren Nov 26 '08 at 16:17

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