48

Assume I have made a simple client in my application that uses a remote web service that is exposing a RESTful API at some URI /foo/bar/{baz}. Now I wish to unit test my client that makes calls to this web service.

Ideally, in my tests, I’d like to mock the responses I get from the web service, given a specific request like /foo/bar/123 or /foo/bar/42. My client assumes the API is actually running somewhere, so I need a local "web service" to start running on http://localhost:9090/foo/bar for my tests.

I want my unit tests to be self-contained, similar to testing Spring controllers with the Spring MVC Test framework.

Some pseudo-code for a simple client, fetching numbers from the remote API:

// Initialization logic involving setting up mocking of remote API at 
// http://localhost:9090/foo/bar

@Autowired
NumberClient numberClient // calls the API at http://localhost:9090/foo/bar

@Test
public void getNumber42() {
    onRequest(mockAPI.get("/foo/bar/42")).thenRespond("{ \"number\" : 42 }");
    assertEquals(42, numberClient.getNumber(42));
}

// ..

What are my alternatives using Spring?

8
  • Do you leverage the DTO pattern?
    – Manu
    Aug 29, 2014 at 8:39
  • @Manu Do you mean if I marshall to and from JSON into domain objects in my client?
    – user1019830
    Aug 29, 2014 at 8:44
  • More precisely, if you marshal/unmarshal into intermediate objects representing your domain entities in the network
    – Manu
    Aug 29, 2014 at 8:47
  • @Manu No, I don’t have intermediate objects, only domain objects and JSON text.
    – user1019830
    Aug 29, 2014 at 8:54
  • 1
    Then I'd recommend start using the DTO pattern and proceed the same way you did for testing MVC controllers.
    – Manu
    Aug 29, 2014 at 8:59

6 Answers 6

19

If you use Spring RestTemplate you can use MockRestServiceServer. An example can be found here REST Client Testing With MockRestServiceServer.

3
  • 1
    If you don't use Spring RestTemplate, you can check WireMock. However this will start a server in the background.
    – Tuno
    Sep 20, 2016 at 6:11
  • This one is newer.
    – shellbye
    Mar 2, 2019 at 15:28
  • 2
    To be sure: I guess this only work if the tested client use the same instance of RestTemplate? In my case, the tested code instantiate its own RestTemplate internally and I don't have access to it. So I can't use MockRestServiceServer?
    – Juh_
    Nov 6, 2019 at 16:49
18

Best method is to use WireMock. Add the following dependencies:

    <dependency>
        <groupId>com.github.tomakehurst</groupId>
        <artifactId>wiremock</artifactId>
        <version>2.4.1</version>
    </dependency>
    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.igniterealtime.smack</groupId>
        <artifactId>smack-core</artifactId>
        <version>4.0.6</version>
    </dependency>

Define and use the wiremock as shown below

@Rule
public WireMockRule wireMockRule = new WireMockRule(8089);

String response ="Hello world";
StubMapping responseValid = stubFor(get(urlEqualTo(url)).withHeader("Content-Type", equalTo("application/json"))
            .willReturn(aResponse().withStatus(200)
                    .withHeader("Content-Type", "application/json").withBody(response)));
3
  • Where is aResponse() coming from?
    – powder366
    Mar 23, 2017 at 15:09
  • @powder366 WireMock.aResponse() Aug 12, 2017 at 4:43
  • 2
    Too bad WireMock requires Jitpack, and our IT Risk office forbids us to build it in production servers since it would introduce a vulnerability. For this reason, even if I like WireMock and I used it with success, I'm still looking for alternatives Jun 15, 2022 at 14:25
12

If you want to unit test your client, then you'd mock out the services that are making the REST API calls, i.e. with mockito - I assume you do have a service that is making those API calls for you, right?

If on the other hand you want to "mock out" the rest APIs in that there is some sort of server giving you responses, which would be more in line of integration testing, you could try one of the many framework out there like restito, rest-driver or betamax.

11

You can easily use Mockito to mock a REST API in Spring Boot.

Put a stubbed controller in your test tree:

@RestController
public class OtherApiHooks {

    @PostMapping("/v1/something/{myUUID}")
    public ResponseEntity<Void> handlePost(@PathVariable("myUUID") UUID myUUID ) {
        assert (false); // this function is meant to be mocked, not called
        return new ResponseEntity<Void>(HttpStatus.NOT_IMPLEMENTED);
    }
}

Your client will need to call the API on localhost when running tests. This could be configured in src/test/resources/application.properties. If the test is using RANDOM_PORT, your client under test will need to find that value. This is a bit tricky, but the issue is addressed here: Spring Boot - How to get the running port

Configure your test class to use a WebEnvironment (a running server) and now your test can use Mockito in the standard way, returning ResponseEntity objects as needed:

@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@SpringBootTest(webEnvironment = SpringBootTest.WebEnvironment.RANDOM_PORT)
public class TestsWithMockedRestDependencies {

  @MockBean private OtherApiHooks otherApiHooks;

  @Test public void test1() {
    Mockito.doReturn(new ResponseEntity<Void>(HttpStatus.ACCEPTED))
      .when(otherApiHooks).handlePost(any());
    clientFunctionUnderTest(UUID.randomUUID()); // calls REST API internally
    Mockito.verify(otherApiHooks).handlePost(eq(id));
  }

}

You can also use this for end-to-end testing of your entire microservice in an environment with the mock created above. One way to do this is to inject TestRestTemplate into your test class, and use that to call your REST API in place of clientFunctionUnderTest from the example.

@Autowired private TestRestTemplate restTemplate;
@LocalServerPort private int localPort; // you're gonna need this too

How this works

Because OtherApiHooks is a @RestController in the test tree, Spring Boot will automatically establish the specified REST service when running the SpringBootTest.WebEnvironment.

Mockito is used here to mock the controller class -- not the service as a whole. Therefore, there will be some server-side processing managed by Spring Boot before the mock is hit. This may include such things as deserializing (and validating) the path UUID shown in the example.

From what I can tell, this approach is robust for parallel test runs with IntelliJ and Maven.

2
  • WARNING: Note that assert may be out-of-favor with some reviewers. Aug 3, 2018 at 18:05
  • Solutions like WireMock allow you to copy/paste a serialized response and test how it gets deserialized by the code. On the other hand, when mocking the RestTemplate you are passing an already existent ResponseEntity, which makes the test way less powerful. As an example, WireMock would let you test different Content-Type response headers and let you see how they are handled Jun 15, 2022 at 14:30
1

What you are looking for is the support for Client-side REST Tests in the Spring MVC Test Framework.

Assuming your NumberClient uses Spring's RestTemplate, this aforementioned support is the way to go!

Hope this helps,

Sam

1

Here is a basic example on how to mock a Controller class with Mockito:

The Controller class:

@RestController
@RequestMapping("/users")
public class UsersController {

    @Autowired
    private UserService userService;

    public Page<UserCollectionItemDto> getUsers(Pageable pageable) {
        Page<UserProfile> page = userService.getAllUsers(pageable);
        List<UserCollectionItemDto> items = mapper.asUserCollectionItems(page.getContent());
        return new PageImpl<UserCollectionItemDto>(items, pageable, page.getTotalElements());
    }
}

Configure the beans:

@Configuration
public class UserConfig {

    @Bean
    public UsersController usersController() {
        return new UsersController();
    }

    @Bean
    public UserService userService() {
        return Mockito.mock(UserService.class);
    }
}

The UserCollectionItemDto is a simple POJO and it represents what the API consumer sends to the server. The UserProfile is the main object used in the service layer (by the UserService class). This behaviour also implements the DTO pattern.

Finally, mockup the expected behaviour:

@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration(loader = AnnotationConfigContextLoader.class)
@Import(UserConfig.class)
public class UsersControllerTest {

    @Autowired
    private UsersController usersController;

    @Autowired
    private UserService userService;

    @Test
    public void getAllUsers() {
        initGetAllUsersRules();
        PageRequest pageable = new PageRequest(0, 10);
        Page<UserDto> page = usersController.getUsers(pageable);
        assertTrue(page.getNumberOfElements() == 1);
    }

    private void initGetAllUsersRules() {
        Page<UserProfile> page = initPage();
        when(userService.getAllUsers(any(Pageable.class))).thenReturn(page);
    }

    private Page<UserProfile> initPage() {
        PageRequest pageRequest = new PageRequest(0, 10);
        PageImpl<UserProfile> page = new PageImpl<>(getUsersList(), pageRequest, 1);
        return page;
    }

    private List<UserProfile> getUsersList() {
        UserProfile userProfile = new UserProfile();
        List<UserProfile> userProfiles = new ArrayList<>();
        userProfiles.add(userProfile);
        return userProfiles;
    }
}

The idea is to use the pure Controller bean and mockup its members. In this example, we mocked the UserService.getUsers() object to contain a user and then validated whether the Controller would return the right number of users.

With the same logic you can test the Service and other levels of your application. This example uses the Controller-Service-Repository Pattern as well :)