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So the controller context depends on some asp.net internals. What are some ways to cleanly mock these up for unit tests? Seems like its very easy to clog up tests with tons of setup when I only need, for example, Request.HttpMethod to return "GET".

I've seen some examples/helpers out on the nets, but some are dated. Figured this would be a good place to keep the latest and greatest.

I'm using latest version of rhino mocks

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7 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check

Using MoQ it looks something like this:

var request = new Mock<HttpRequestBase>();
request.Expect(r => r.HttpMethod).Returns("GET");
var mockHttpContext = new Mock<HttpContextBase>();
mockHttpContext.Expect(c => c.Request).Returns(request.Object);
var controllerContext = new ControllerContext(mockHttpContext.Object
, new RouteData(), new Mock<ControllerBase>().Object);

I think the Rhino Mocks syntax is similar.

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vote up 0 vote down

I use Typemock and Ivonna for unit testing ASP.NET and MVC

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vote up 1 vote down

Or you can do this with Typemock Isolator with no need to send in a fake controller at all:

Isolate.WhenCalled(()=>HttpContext.Request.HttpMethod).WillReturn("Get");
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vote up 1 vote down

Hi great stuff ... i've finsihed with this spec

public abstract class Specification <C> where C: Controller
{
    protected C controller;

    HttpContextBase mockHttpContext;
    HttpRequestBase mockRequest;

    protected Exception ExceptionThrown { get; private set; }

    [SetUp]
    public void Setup()
    {
        mockHttpContext = MockRepository.GenerateMock<HttpContextBase>();
        mockRequest = MockRepository.GenerateMock<HttpRequestBase>();

        mockHttpContext.Stub(x => x.Request).Return(mockRequest);
        mockRequest.Stub(x => x.HttpMethod).Return("GET");


        EstablishContext();
        SetHttpContext();

        try
        {
            When();
        }
        catch (Exception exc)
        {
            ExceptionThrown = exc;
        }
    }

    protected void SetHttpContext()
    {
        var context = new ControllerContext(mockHttpContext, new RouteData(), controller);
        controller.ControllerContext = context;
    }

    protected T Mock<T>() where T: class
    {
        return MockRepository.GenerateMock<T>();
    }

    protected abstract void EstablishContext();
    protected abstract void When();

    [TearDown]
    public virtual void TearDown()
    {
    }
}

and the juice is here

[TestFixture]
public class When_invoking_ManageUsersControllers_Update :Specification <ManageUsersController>

{ private IUserRepository userRepository; FormCollection form;

    ActionResult result;
    User retUser;

    protected override void EstablishContext()
    {
        userRepository = Mock<IUserRepository>();
        controller = new ManageUsersController(userRepository);

        retUser = new User();
        userRepository.Expect(x => x.GetById(5)).Return(retUser);
        userRepository.Expect(x => x.Update(retUser));

        form = new FormCollection();
        form["IdUser"] = 5.ToString();
        form["Name"] = 5.ToString();
        form["Surename"] = 5.ToString();
        form["Login"] = 5.ToString();
        form["Password"] = 5.ToString();
    }

    protected override void When()
    {
        result = controller.Edit(5, form);
    }

    [Test]
    public void is_retrieved_before_update_original_user()
    {
        userRepository.AssertWasCalled(x => x.GetById(5));
        userRepository.AssertWasCalled(x => x.Update(retUser));
    }
}

enjoy

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vote up 3 vote down

Here's a snippet from Jason's link. Its the same as Phil's method but uses rhino.

Note: mockHttpContext.Request is stubbed to return mockRequest before mockRequest's internals are stubbed out. I believe this order is required.

// create a fake web context
var mockHttpContext = MockRepository.GenerateMock<HttpContextBase>();
var mockRequest = MockRepository.GenerateMock<HttpRequestBase>();
mockHttpContext.Stub(x => x.Request).Return(mockRequest);

// tell the mock to return "GET" when HttpMethod is called
mockRequest.Stub(x => x.HttpMethod).Return("GET");            

var controller = new AccountController();

// assign the fake context
var context = new ControllerContext(mockHttpContext, 
                  new RouteData(), 
                  controller);
controller.ControllerContext = context;

// act
...
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vote up 0 vote down

Look at the sample code here:

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

It was part of a demo I went to today on ASP.NET MVC, and it includes a pretty good lab exercise on testing.

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vote up 0 vote down

I find that long mocking procedure to be too much friction.

The best way we have found - using ASP.NET MVC on a real project - is to abstract the HttpContext to an IWebContext interface that simply passes through. Then you can mock the IWebContext with no pain.

Here is an example

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Can you explain this a bit more? – aktxyz Nov 30 '08 at 0:28

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