307

So, I'm creating a mock object as a static variable on the class level like so... In one test, I want Foo.someMethod() to return a certain value, while in another test, I want it to return a different value. The problem I'm having is that it seems I need to rebuild the mocks to get this to work correctly. I'd like to avoid rebuilding the mocks, and just use the same objects in each test.

class TestClass {

    private static Foo mockFoo;

    @BeforeClass
    public static void setUp() {
        mockFoo = mock(Foo.class);
    }

    @Test
    public void test1() {
        when(mockFoo.someMethod()).thenReturn(0);

        TestObject testObj = new TestObject(mockFoo);

        testObj.bar(); // calls mockFoo.someMethod(), receiving 0 as the value

    }

    @Test
    public void test2() {
        when(mockFoo.someMethod()).thenReturn(1);

        TestObject testObj = new TestObject(mockFoo);

        testObj.bar(); // calls mockFoo.someMethod(), STILL receiving 0 as the value, instead of expected 1.

    }

}

In the second test, I'm still receiving 0 as the value when testObj.bar() is called... What is the best way to resolve this? Note that I know I could use a different mock of Foo in each test, however, I have to chain multiple requests off of mockFoo, meaning I'd have to do the chaining in each test.

5 Answers 5

560

You could also Stub Consecutive Calls (#10 in 2.8.9 api). In this case, you would use multiple thenReturn calls or one thenReturn call with multiple parameters (varargs).

import static org.junit.Assert.assertEquals;
import static org.mockito.Mockito.mock;
import static org.mockito.Mockito.when;

import org.junit.Before;
import org.junit.Test;

public class TestClass {

    private Foo mockFoo;

    @Before
    public void setup() {
        setupFoo();
    }

    @Test
    public void testFoo() {
        TestObject testObj = new TestObject(mockFoo);

        assertEquals(0, testObj.bar());
        assertEquals(1, testObj.bar());
        assertEquals(-1, testObj.bar());
        assertEquals(-1, testObj.bar());
    }

    private void setupFoo() {
        mockFoo = mock(Foo.class);

        when(mockFoo.someMethod())
            .thenReturn(0)
            .thenReturn(1)
            .thenReturn(-1); //any subsequent call will return -1

        // Or a bit shorter with varargs:
        when(mockFoo.someMethod())
            .thenReturn(0, 1, -1); //any subsequent call will return -1
    }
}
8
  • 197
    I think you can also take advantage of the fact that .thenReturn() takes varargs, so the code can be shortened to: when(mockFoo.someMethod()).thenReturn(0, 1, -1); Jun 11, 2012 at 4:25
  • 10
    @JustinMuller - that's worth a separate answer, I think (as opposed to a comment) Nov 11, 2014 at 12:29
  • 21
    This answer is not the correct thing to do in this case. If you stub this method to return 0 and 1, then you'll be fine so long as you run test1 and then test2. But it may be that your continuous integration environment will run the tests in the other order. Or it may be that you'll want to run test2 by itself, without running test1 first, in which case it will fail. Unit tests must always be independent of each other; and there should never be a dependency between individual tests, or a dependency on a particular ordering of tests. Whereas chaining thenReturn statements ... Jul 21, 2015 at 9:18
  • 5
    ... has its uses, as does using varargs for a single thenReturn, it's not a correct solution in this particular case. It seems to me that the hordes of upvoters here have most likely failed to understand the question. Jul 21, 2015 at 9:19
  • 2
    Junit itself does not ensure test order without @FixMethodOrder
    – Roger
    Oct 15, 2015 at 16:59
78

For all who search to return something and then for another call throw exception:

when(mockFoo.someMethod())
        .thenReturn(obj1)
        .thenReturn(obj2)
        .thenThrow(new RuntimeException("Fail"));

or

when(mockFoo.someMethod())
        .thenReturn(obj1, obj2)
        .thenThrow(new RuntimeException("Fail"));
52

First of all don't make the mock static. Make it a private field. Just put your setUp class in the @Before not @BeforeClass. It might be run a bunch, but it's cheap.

Secondly, the way you have it right now is the correct way to get a mock to return something different depending on the test.

0
47

Or, even cleaner:

when(mockFoo.someMethod()).thenReturn(obj1, obj2);
2
  • 6
    This should be the answer.
    – Ikthiander
    May 7, 2019 at 11:55
  • I ran into a situation where I wanted to test a mock returning something inside a while loop. This solves it since you can always use thenReturn(obj1, obj2, null) to get out of the loop. Oct 14, 2021 at 14:38
30

For Anyone using spy() and the doReturn() instead of the when() method:

what you need to return different object on different calls is this:

doReturn(obj1).doReturn(obj2).when(this.spyFoo).someMethod();

.

For classic mocks:

when(this.mockFoo.someMethod()).thenReturn(obj1, obj2);

or with an exception being thrown:

when(mockFoo.someMethod())
        .thenReturn(obj1)
        .thenThrow(new IllegalArgumentException())
        .thenReturn(obj2, obj3);
1
  • Thanks, didn't understood why it does not work with when but works with doReturn()
    – Mykeul
    Oct 20, 2021 at 12:03

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