0

I am using Resteasy serverside mock framework to test my service. I dont want to test business logic but I would like test the data produced by the service.

Using this approach I am able to create a simple test. However, in my RestEasy service I have a few dependency which I would like to mock.

See the following example service which I would like test. The collaborator must be mocked so the service can be tested.

@Path("v1")
Class ExampleService {
    @inject
    private Collaborator collaborator;

    @GET
    @Path("/")
    @Produces({ "application/xml", "application/json" })
    public Response getDummy() throws WSAccessException, JsonParseException,    JsonMappingException, IOException {

        ...
        Result result = collaborator.getResult();
        ..
        return Response.ok("helloworld").build();
    }
}

The junit test is the following

@Test
public void testfetchHistory() throws URISyntaxException {
    Dispatcher dispatcher = MockDispatcherFactory.createDispatcher();
    POJOResourceFactory noDefaults = new POJOResourceFactory(ExampleService.class);
    dispatcher.getRegistry().addResourceFactory(noDefaults);
    MockHttpRequest request = MockHttpRequest.get("v1/");
    MockHttpResponse response = new MockHttpResponse();

    dispatcher.invoke(request, response);


    Assert.assertEquals(..);         
}

How can I mock the collaborator in the test?

2 Answers 2

6

This worked for me using EasyMock

    @Test
public void testfetchHistory() throws URISyntaxException {

    Collaborator mockCollaborator  = EasyMock.createMock(Collaborator.class);
    Result result = new Result();
    EasyMock.expect(mockCollaborator.getResult()).andReturn(result);
    EasyMock.replay(mockCollaborator);

    ExampleService obj = new ExampleService();
    obj.setCollaborator(mockCollaborator);

    Dispatcher dispatcher = MockDispatcherFactory.createDispatcher();
    dispatcher.getRegistry().addSingletonResource(obj);
    MockHttpRequest request = MockHttpRequest.get("v1/");
    MockHttpResponse response = new MockHttpResponse();

    dispatcher.invoke(request, response);

    Assert.assertEquals(..); 

    EasyMock.verify(mockCollaborator);       
}
0

Alternatively you can use testfun-JEE for running a lightweight JAX-RS (based on RESTeasy and TJWS) inside your test and using testfun-JEE's JaxRsServer junit rule for building REST requests and asserting the responses.

testfun-JEE supports injection of other EJBs as well as mock objects into your JAX-RS resource class.

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.