4

In JUnit, using a TestWatcher and Overriding the failed() function, is it possible to remove the thrown exception and instead make my own assertion?

The use case is : with functional tests on Android, when a test makes the app crashes, I would like to replace the NoSuchElementException with an AssertionError ("app crashed").

I have no problem to make the custom assertion (when I detect a crash in finished() method) , but how to remove the thrown exception ?

Because in my report it creates for one test the exception and the assertion, so there are more failures than test in failure, which is logic but annoying.

I was wondering if there were a way to customize the Throwable object to remove the specific NoSuchElementException, manipulating the stacktrace.

I didn't manage to do it. (And necessarily I don't want to perform it using a try/catch in every tests ...).

2 Answers 2

3
+50

You could override TestWatcher.apply and add a special catch for NoSuchElementException:

public class MyTestWatcher extends TestWatcher {
    public Statement apply(final Statement base, final Description description) {
        return new Statement() {
            @Override
            public void evaluate() throws Throwable {
                List<Throwable> errors = new ArrayList<Throwable>();

                startingQuietly(description, errors);
                try {
                    base.evaluate();
                    succeededQuietly(description, errors);
                }
                catch (NoSuchElementException e) {
                    // ignore this
                }
                catch (AssumptionViolatedException  e) {
                    errors.add(e);
                    skippedQuietly(e, description, errors);
                }
                catch (Throwable e) {
                    errors.add(e);
                    failedQuietly(e, description, errors);
                }
                finally {
                    finishedQuietly(description, errors);
                }

                MultipleFailureException.assertEmpty(errors);
            }
        };
    }
0
1

You can do it by bypassing. An example code is given below. Hope it will help you.

try {
// Write your code which throws exception
----
----
----

} catch (NoSuchElementException ex) {
    ex.printStackTrace();
    if (ex instanceof NoSuchElementException) { // bypass
                                                // NoSuchElementException
        // You can again call the method and make a counter for deadlock
        // situation or implement your own code according to your
        // situation
        AssertionError ("app crashed");
        if (retry) {
            ---
            ---
            return previousMethod(arg1, arg2,...);
        } else {
            throw ex;
        }
    }
} catch (final Exception e) {
    e.printStackTrace();
    throw e;
}

I have solved this type of issue previously. My another answer has details. You can go through my another answer: android.security.KeyStoreException: Invalid key blob

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.