I want to mock an inherited protected method. I can't call this method directly from java code as it is inherited from class that in another package. I can't find a way to specify this method to stub in in when(...)

package a;

public class A() {
    protected int m() {}
}

package b;

public class B extends a.A {
    // this class currently does not override m method from a.A
    public asd() {}
}

// test
package b;

class BTest {
    @Test
    public void testClass() {
        B instance = PowerMockito.spy(new B());
        PowerMockito.when(instance, <specify a method m>).thenReturn(123);
        //PowerMockito.when(instance.m()).thenReturn(123); -- obviously does not work
    }
}

I looked at PowerMockito.when overrides and this seems that they are all for private methods only!

How to specify protected method?

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70% accept rate
@AndroidKiller, updated code with class name. Actually they could be from Mockito, but I use powermock and these methods has the same meaning there – misha nesterenko Nov 29 '11 at 14:32
That's of the reason why we should always prefer composition over inheritance. If you can't just redefine this method in your tested code, just like you'll do with legacy code. – Brice Nov 29 '11 at 14:49
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1 Answer

up vote 5 down vote accepted

Nutshell: Can't always use when to stub spies; use doReturn.

Assuming static imports of spy and doReturn (both PowerMockito):

@RunWith(PowerMockRunner.class)
@PrepareForTest(B.class)
public class BTest {
    @Test public void testClass() throws Exception {
        B b = spy(new B());
        doReturn(42).when(b, "m");
        b.asd();
    }
}

You could also @PrepareForTest(A.class) and set up the doReturn on when(a, "m"). Which makes more sense depends on the actual test.

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wow, thank you. Interestingly when I tried to use Method instance instead of method string name stubbing failed with exception message about wrong number of arguments. But with string name all works perfectly. – misha nesterenko Nov 29 '11 at 14:50
@mishanesterenko Yep, it can get a little convoluted sometimes. Another option is always subclassing B for the purposes of the test. Not always an option, but less "magical" than modifying bytecode ;) – Dave Newton Nov 29 '11 at 14:52
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