But I don't really like the last test since I'm never going to use the IRandomService
.
But that's kind of the point. You wire up your locator in the test setup method (arrange), and then you lookup a key that was not wired up (act), then you check that an exception was thrown (assert). You don't need to use types you're actually going to use, you just want to get some confidence that your method is working.
Also I like to know if there is any other relevants tests I could write for this class.
Well, I'm going to answer a different question here.
Is the service locator pattern evil?
Yes, it is pure evil.
It defeats the purpose of dependency injection because it doesn't make dependencies explicit (any class can pull anything out of the service locator). Moreover, it makes your all of your components dependent on this one class.
It makes maintenance an unbelievable nightmare because now you have this one component that is just spread all over your codebase. You have become tightly coupled to this one class.
Further, testing is a nightmare. Let's say you have
public class Foo {
public Foo() { // }
public string Bar() { // }
}
and you want to test Foo.Bar
.
public void BarDoesSomething() {
var foo = new Foo();
Assert.Equal("Something", foo.Bar());
}
and you run your test and you get an exception
ServiceLocator could not resolve component Frob.
What? Oh that's because your constructor looks like this:
public Foo() {
this.frob = ServiceLocator.GetService<Frob>();
}
And on and on.
avoid, Avoid, AVOID.