70

Is there a way to set up a second persistence.xml file in a Maven project such that it is used for testing instead of the normal one that is used for deployment?

I tried putting a persistence.xml into src/test/resources/META-INF, which gets copied into target/test-classes/META-INF, but it seems target/classes/META-INF (the copy from the src/main/resources) gets preferred, despite mvn -X test listing the classpath entries in the right order:

[DEBUG] Test Classpath :
[DEBUG]   /home/uqpbecke/dev/NetBeansProjects/UserManager/target/test-classes
[DEBUG]   /home/uqpbecke/dev/NetBeansProjects/UserManager/target/classes
[DEBUG]   /home/uqpbecke/.m2/repository/junit/junit/4.5/junit-4.5.jar
...

I would like to be able to run tests against a simple hsqldb configuration without having to change the deployment version of the JPA configuration, ideally straight after project checkout without any need for local tweaking.

17 Answers 17

26

The following will work for Maven 2.1+ (prior to that there wasn't a phase between test and package that you could bind an execution to).

You can use the maven-antrun-plugin to replace the persistence.xml with the test version for the duration of the tests, then restore the proper version before the project is packaged.

This example assumes the production version is src/main/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml and the test version is src/test/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml, so they will be copied to target/classes/META-INF and target/test-classes/META-INF respectively.

It would be more elegant to encapsulate this into a mojo, but as you're only copying a file, it seems like overkill.

<plugin>
  <artifactId>maven-antrun-plugin</artifactId>
  <version>1.3</version>
  <executions>
    <execution>
      <id>copy-test-persistence</id>
      <phase>process-test-resources</phase>
      <configuration>
        <tasks>
          <!--backup the "proper" persistence.xml-->
          <copy file="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml" tofile="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml.proper"/>
          <!--replace the "proper" persistence.xml with the "test" version-->
          <copy file="${project.build.testOutputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml" tofile="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml"/>
        </tasks>
      </configuration>
      <goals>
        <goal>run</goal>
      </goals>
    </execution>
    <execution>
      <id>restore-persistence</id>
      <phase>prepare-package</phase>
      <configuration>
        <tasks>
          <!--restore the "proper" persistence.xml-->
          <copy file="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml.proper" tofile="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml"/>
        </tasks>
      </configuration>
      <goals>
        <goal>run</goal>
      </goals>
    </execution>
  </executions>
</plugin>
1
  • 2
    Indeed, it is a neat solution. However, one might also want to add the overwite="true" attribute to the last Ant task, to ensure that the proper XML file is copied back. In my environment, it seems to fail due to timestamps being the same for the destination and the target. Jun 22, 2010 at 15:10
21

In an EE6/CDI/JPA project, a test src/test/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml is picked up just fine without any further configuration.

When using JPA in Spring, the following works in the application context used for testing:

<bean id="entityManagerFactory"
    class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean">
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource" />
    <!--
        JPA requires META-INF/persistence.xml, but somehow prefers the one
        in classes/META-INF over the one in test-classes/META-INF. Spring
        to the rescue, as it allows for setting things differently, like by
        referring to "classpath:persistence-TEST.xml". Or, simply referring
        to "META-INF/persistence.xml" makes JPA use the test version too: 
    -->
    <property name="persistenceXmlLocation" value="META-INF/persistence.xml" />

    <!-- As defined in /src/test/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml -->
    <property name="persistenceUnitName" value="myTestPersistenceUnit" />
    <property name="jpaVendorAdapter">
        <bean
            class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.vendor.HibernateJpaVendorAdapter">
        </bean>
    </property>
</bean>

Here, /src/test/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml (copied into target/test-classes) would be preferred over /src/main/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml (copied into target/classes).

Unfortunately, the location of the persistence.xml file also determines the so-called "persistence unit's root", which then determines which classes are scanned for @Entity annotations. So, using /src/test/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml would scan classes in target/test-classes, not classes in target/classes (where the classes that need to be tested would live).

Hence, for testing, one would need to explicitly add <class> entries to persistence.xml, to avoid java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Not an entity: class .... The need for <class> entries can be avoided by using a different file name, like persistence-TEST.xml, and put that file in the very same folder as the regular persistence.xml file. The Spring context from your test folder can then just refer to <property name="persistenceXmlLocation" value="META-INF/persistence-TEST.xml" />, and Spring will find it for you in src/main.

As an alternative, one might be able to keep persistence.xml the same for the actual application and the tests, and only define one in src/main. Most configuration such as the drivers, dialect and optional credentials can be done in the Spring context instead. Also settings such as hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto can be passed in the context:

<bean id="dataSource"
    class="org.springframework.jdbc.datasource.DriverManagerDataSource">
    <!-- For example: com.mysql.jdbc.Driver or org.h2.Driver -->
    <property name="driverClassName" value="#{myConfig['db.driver']}" />
    <!-- For example: jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/myDbName or 
        jdbc:h2:mem:test;DB_CLOSE_DELAY=-1 -->
    <property name="url" value="#{myConfig['db.url']}" />
    <!-- Ignored for H2 -->
    <property name="username" value="#{myConfig['db.username']}" />
    <property name="password" value="#{myConfig['db.password']}" />
</bean>

<bean id="jpaAdaptor"
    class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.vendor.HibernateJpaVendorAdapter">
    <!-- For example: org.hibernate.dialect.MySQL5Dialect or 
        org.hibernate.dialect.H2Dialect -->
    <property name="databasePlatform" value="#{myConfig['db.dialect']}" />
</bean>

<bean id="entityManagerFactory"
    class="org.springframework.orm.jpa.LocalContainerEntityManagerFactoryBean">
    <property name="dataSource" ref="dataSource" />
    <property name="jpaVendorAdapter" ref="jpaAdapter" />
    <property name="jpaProperties">
        <props>
            <!-- For example: validate, update, create or create-drop -->
            <prop key="hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto">#{myConfig['db.ddl']}</prop>
            <prop key="hibernate.show_sql">#{myConfig['db.showSql']}</prop>
            <prop key="hibernate.format_sql">true</prop>
        </props>
    </property>
</bean>
4
  • 2
    There is no word about spring in the original question. Sep 17, 2016 at 8:44
  • 1
    True, @Dmitry, but is that worth your downvote? Should the same problem with Spring be another question then? That's not how Stack Overflow works in my opinion, and apparently 18 upvoters found the answer to their problem given the title "How to configure JPA for testing in Maven". Even more, the first paragraph in my answer is not about Spring, followed by "When using JPA in Spring [...]".
    – Arjan
    Sep 17, 2016 at 9:59
  • 1
    "Should the same problem with Spring be another question then?" -- yes, and there are questions like this. And it makes very hard to find answers to non-spring configuration question. "18 upvoters" - that is why I just must downvote. Because this is a good answer. But for another question. Sep 17, 2016 at 10:35
  • Okay, then we (very much) don't agree, @Dmitry. And apparently I did not find any Spring-specific question when I needed an answer to "How to configure JPA for testing in Maven" 6 years ago, and posted my solution once I found it. (By the way, even the part that starts with a Spring-config is not only related to Spring; if you're having this problem yourself then be sure to read the linked explanation on "persistence unit's root".)
    – Arjan
    Sep 17, 2016 at 11:06
13

It seems multiple persistence.xml files is a general problem with JPA, solved only by classloading tricks.

A workaround that works for me is to define multiple persistence units in one persistence.xml file and then make sure that your deployment and test code use a different binding (in Spring you can set the "persistenceUnitName" property on the entity manager factory). It pollutes your deployment file with the test configuration, but if you don't mind that it works ok.

0
11

Add a persistance.xml for tests: /src/test/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml As @Arjan said, that would change persistance unit's root and entity classes would be scanned in target/test-classes. To handle that, add jar-file element to this persistance.xml:

/src/test/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml

<persistence xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence"
             xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
             xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence/persistence_2_0.xsd"
             version="2.0">
    <persistence-unit name="com.some.project">
        <provider>org.hibernate.jpa.HibernatePersistenceProvider</provider>
        <jar-file>${project.basedir}/target/classes</jar-file>
        <properties>
            <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.url" value="jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/test_database" />
            <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.driver" value="org.postgresql.Driver" />
            <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.user" value="user" />
            <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.password" value="..." />
        </properties>
    </persistence-unit>
</persistence>

Then, add filtering of test resources to your pom.xml:

<project>
    ...
    <build>
        ...
        <testResources>
            <testResource>
                <directory>src/test/resources</directory>
                <filtering>true</filtering>
            </testResource>
        </testResources>
        ...
    </build>
...
</project>

This will work because jar-file can target to directories, not only to jar files.

2
  • Where do I add this? In my <build> there is only a <plugins> element. Is testResources part of a plugin or should I just put it below?
    – Hugo G
    Feb 23, 2016 at 11:13
  • @HubertGrzeskowiak, it should be put below plugins xml element. Here is a page with an example of pom.xml where testResources element is present.
    – Vlad-HC
    Feb 24, 2016 at 9:56
7

I prefer the solution of using different persistence.xml for testing and production as Rich Seller post (thanks!!).

But need to change:

<copy file="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml.proper" tofile="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml"/>

for:

<move file="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml.proper" tofile="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml" overwrite="true"/>

In order persistence.xml.proper not embedded in .jar file

1
  • This answer in addition to the Rich Seller's one was what worked for me.
    – Caffé
    Oct 20, 2015 at 20:14
6

I tried the ClassLoaderProxy approach but had the problem that the JPA annotated classes are not handled as persistent classes by hibernate.

So decided to try it without using persistence.xml. The advantage is that the maven build and the Eclipse JUnit test will work without modifications.

I have a persitent support class for JUnit testing.

public class PersistenceTestSupport {

    protected EntityManager em;
    protected EntityTransaction et;

    /**
     * Setup the the {@code EntityManager} and {@code EntityTransaction} for
     * local junit testing.
     */
    public void setup() {

        Properties props = new Properties();
        props.put("hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto", "create-drop");
        props.put("hibernate.dialect", "org.hibernate.dialect.MySQLDialect");
        props.put("hibernate.connection.url", "jdbc:mysql://localhost/db_name");
        props.put("hibernate.connection.driver_class", "com.mysql.jdbc.Driver");
        props.put("hibernate.connection.username", "user");
        props.put("hibernate.connection.password", "****");

        Ejb3Configuration cfg = new Ejb3Configuration();
        em = cfg.addProperties(props)
            .addAnnotatedClass(Class1.class)
            .addAnnotatedClass(Class2.class)
            ...
                    .addAnnotatedClass(Classn.class)
            .buildEntityManagerFactory()
            .createEntityManager();

        et = em.getTransaction();
    }
}

My test classes just extend PersistenceTestSupport and call the setup() in TestCase.setup().

The only drawback is to keep the persistent classes up todate, but for JUnit testing this is acceptable for me.

4

This answer might sounds silly but I was looking for a way which lets me run those tests from eclipse by Run As -> JUnit Test. This is how I made it:

@BeforeClass
public static void setUp() throws IOException {
    Files.copy(new File("target/test-classes/META-INF/persistence.xml"), new File("target/classes/META-INF/persistence.xml"));
    // ...
}

I'm just copying the test/persistence.xml to classes/persistence.xml. This works.

2
  • Nice. Just for posterity: when using this in an EE6/CDI/JPA project (where no trickery is needed at all), JPA would still prefer target/test-classes/META-INF/persistence.xml over target/classes/META-INF/persistence.xml, hence JPA would only scan the classes in target/test-classes, not the ones in target/classes (which might be troublesome when relying on @Entity annotations).
    – Arjan
    Nov 4, 2014 at 18:49
  • But you then overwrite the src/main persistence.xml right?
    – WesternGun
    Sep 13, 2021 at 9:37
3

Keep two copies of persistence.xml file. One for testing and another for normal build.

The default life cycle copy the build persistence.xml to src/test/resources/META-INF

Create a separate profile which when run will copy the testing persistence.xml to src/test/resources/META-INF

3

Persistence.xml is used as a starting point to search for entity classes unless you list all classes explicitly and add . So if you want to override this file with another one, say from src/test/resources, you have to specify every single entity class in this second persistence.xml otherwise no entity class would be found.

Another solution would be to overwrite the file using the maven-resources-plugin ('copy-resources' goal). But then you have to overwrite it twice, once for testing (e.g. phase process-test-classes) and once for the real packaging (phase 'prepare-package').

2

This is an extension of Rich Seller's answer with proper handling of Hibernate finding multiple persistence.xml files on the classpath and pre-testing state restoration.

Setup:

Create one persistence file for deployment/packaging and one for testing:

  • src/main/resources/persistence.xml

  • src/test/resources/persistence-testing.xml

in your pom.xml add this to the plugins section:

        <plugin>
            <artifactId>maven-antrun-plugin</artifactId>
            <version>1.3</version>
            <executions>
                <execution>
                    <id>copy-test-persistence</id>
                    <phase>process-test-resources</phase>
                    <configuration>
                        <tasks>
                            <echo>renaming deployment persistence.xml</echo>
                            <move file="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml" tofile="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml.proper"/>
                            <echo>replacing deployment persistence.xml with test version</echo>
                            <copy file="${project.build.testOutputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence-testing.xml" tofile="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml" overwrite="true"/>
                        </tasks>
                    </configuration>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>run</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
                <execution>
                    <id>restore-persistence</id>
                    <phase>prepare-package</phase>
                    <configuration>
                        <tasks>
                            <echo>restoring the deployment persistence.xml</echo>
                            <move file="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml.proper" tofile="${project.build.outputDirectory}/META-INF/persistence.xml" overwrite="true"/>
                        </tasks>
                    </configuration>
                    <goals>
                        <goal>run</goal>
                    </goals>
                </execution>
            </executions>
        </plugin>

Advantages over other solutions

  • No extra Java code required
  • Only one persistence.xml on classpath
  • Both building and testing work as expected
  • Describing output on console (echo)
  • For packaging the state is 100% restored. No leftover files
1

I'm trying to do the same thing. I have a solution that works for me - yours may vary (and you might not love the solution... it's a bit low-level).

I came across an article on the net where they were using a custom class loader to do something similar which served as inspiration. If anyone can see how to improve then suggestions would be welcome btw. For deployment I rely on container injection of the EntityManager but for testing I create it myself using this code:

final Thread currentThread = Thread.currentThread();
final ClassLoader saveClassLoader = currentThread.getContextClassLoader();
currentThread.setContextClassLoader(new ClassLoaderProxy(saveClassLoader));

EntityManagerFactory emFactory = Persistence.createEntityManagerFactory("test");
em = emFactory.createEntityManager();

Then the ClassLoaderProxy is about as minimal as you can get and just redirects requests for META-INF/persistence.xml to META-INF/test-persist.xml:

public class ClassLoaderProxy extends ClassLoader {

    public ClassLoaderProxy(final ClassLoader parent) {
        super();
    }

    @Override
    public Enumeration<URL> getResources(final String name) throws IOException {
        if (!"META-INF/persistence.xml".equals(name)) {
            return super.getResources(name);
        } else {
            System.out.println("Redirecting persistence.xml to test-persist.xml");
            return super.getResources("META-INF/test-persist.xml");
        }
    }
}

Just to explain this a bit more:

  1. There are two persistence.xml files (one named persistence.xml that is used outside testing and one named test-persist.xml that is used for tests).
  2. The custom class loader is only active for unit tests (for deployment everything is normal)
  3. The custom class loader redirects requests for "META-INF/persistence.xml" to the test version ("META-INF/test-persist.xml").

I was originally hitting some problems because Hibernate will revert back (somehow) to the classloader that was used to load Hibernate (at least I think that is what was going on). I've found that putting the ClassLoader switching code (the first block) as a static block in your Test case it will get loaded before Hibernate but that, depending on your unit test structure you may also need to put the same code in other places (yuck).

3
  • Interesting... It'll work, but you'll get some funny looks from other developers. Also, you forgot to restore the thread's context class loader. Nov 1, 2011 at 22:41
  • Fair enough. With respect to the 'forgot' comment... This was some years ago so who knows whether I forgot or not but I can't see how the intention could have been clearer. Adding code (with a try/finally and so on) seems like it would be distracting to the purpose but each to their own I suppose.
    – macbutch
    May 23, 2012 at 0:34
  • Agreed about code clarity. I was just imaging someone copy-pasting that code and getting into trouble. Although, if you want to stay out of trouble, best not copy-paste random code. :) May 24, 2012 at 20:25
1

Another approach is to use a separate persistence.xml for testing (test/../META-INF/persistence.xml but override the Scanner as follows: -

testing persistence.xml needs to contain

<property name="hibernate.ejb.resource_scanner" value = "...TestScanner" />

Code for new class TestScanner is as follows.

import java.lang.annotation.Annotation;
import java.net.MalformedURLException;
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.Set;
import org.hibernate.ejb.packaging.NamedInputStream;
import org.hibernate.ejb.packaging.NativeScanner;


public class TestScanner extends NativeScanner
{

@Override
public Set <Class <?> > 
getClassesInJar (URL jar, Set <Class <? extends Annotation> > annotations)
{  return super.getClassesInJar (getUpdatedURL (jar), annotations); }

@Override
public Set <NamedInputStream> 
getFilesInJar (URL jar, Set <String> patterns)
{  return super.getFilesInJar (getUpdatedURL (jar), patterns); }

@Override
public Set <Package> 
getPackagesInJar (URL jar, Set <Class <? extends Annotation> > annotations)
{  return super.getPackagesInJar (getUpdatedURL (jar), annotations); }

private URL getUpdatedURL (URL url)
{
  String oldURL = url.toExternalForm ();
  String newURL = oldURL.replaceAll ("test-classes", "classes");
  URL result;
  try {
    result = newURL.equals (oldURL) ? url : new URL (newURL);
  } catch (MalformedURLException e)
  {  // Whatever  }
  return result;
}

}
1
  • It looks like this doesn't work with Hibernate 5 anymore.
    – Hugo G
    Feb 23, 2016 at 11:10
1

When using OpenEJB, persistence.xml can be overriden with alternate descriptors: http://tomee.apache.org/alternate-descriptors.html

1

Another option for this use case would be adding multiple persistence units, one for lets say production and another one for testing and inject the EntityManagerFactory accordingly.

Place both persistence-units into the persistence.xml of the actual project and have your test cases inject the correct EntityManager. The example below illustrates how to do that with guice. Please note that I've left in some mockito mocking for completeness, the mockito specific code has been marked accordingly and is not required for injection.

public class HibernateTestDatabaseProvider extends AbstractModule {
    private static final ThreadLocal<EntityManager> ENTITYMANAGER_CACHE = new ThreadLocal<>();

    @Override
    public void configure() {
    }

    @Provides
    @Singleton
    public EntityManagerFactory provideEntityManagerFactory() {
        return Persistence.createEntityManagerFactory("my.test.persistence.unit");
    }

    @Provides
    public CriteriaBuilder provideCriteriaBuilder(EntityManagerFactory entityManagerFactory) {
        return entityManagerFactory.getCriteriaBuilder();
    }

    @Provides
    public EntityManager provideEntityManager(EntityManagerFactory entityManagerFactory) {
        EntityManager entityManager = ENTITYMANAGER_CACHE.get();
        if (entityManager == null) {
            // prevent commits on the database, requires mockito. Not relevant for this answer
            entityManager = spy(entityManagerFactory.createEntityManager());


            EntityTransaction et = spy(entityManager.getTransaction());
            when(entityManager.getTransaction()).thenReturn(et);
            doNothing().when(et).commit();

            ENTITYMANAGER_CACHE.set(entityManager);
        }
        return entityManager;
    }
}
0

put tests in own maven project with its persistence.xml

1
  • That is one solution, but it doesn't work if your persistence.xml is part of your domain model (JPA) module. Nov 1, 2011 at 22:38
0

I'd suggest using different maven profiles where you could filter your database.proprerties files and have one database.properties per profile.

This way you don't have to keep duplicates of any other configuration files except for the .properties.

<properties>
    <!-- Used to locate the profile specific configuration file. -->
    <build.profile.id>default</build.profile.id>
    <!-- Only unit tests are run by default. -->
    <skip.integration.tests>true</skip.integration.tests>
    <skip.unit.tests>false</skip.unit.tests>
    <integration.test.files>**/*IT.java</integration.test.files>
</properties>
<profiles>
    <profile>
        <id>default</id>
        <activation>
            <activeByDefault>true</activeByDefault>
        </activation>
        <properties>
            <!--
                Specifies the build profile id, which is used to find out the correct properties file.
                This is not actually necessary for this example, but it can be used for other purposes.
            -->
            <build.profile.id>default</build.profile.id>
            <skip.integration.tests>true</skip.integration.tests>
            <skip.unit.tests>false</skip.unit.tests>
        </properties>
        <build>
            <filters>
                <!--
                    Specifies path to the properties file, which contains profile specific
                    configuration. In this case, the configuration file should be the default spring/database.properties file
                -->
                <filter>src/main/resources/META-INF/spring/database.properties</filter>
            </filters>
            <resources>
                <!--
                    Placeholders found from files located in the configured resource directories are replaced
                    with values found from the profile specific configuration files.
                -->
                <resource>
                    <filtering>true</filtering>
                    <directory>src/main/resources</directory>
                    <!--
                        You can also include only specific files found from the configured directory or
                        exclude files. This can be done by uncommenting following sections and adding
                        the configuration under includes and excludes tags.
                    -->
                    <!--
                    <includes>
                        <include></include>
                    </includes>
                    <excludes>
                        <exclude></exclude>
                    </excludes>
                    -->
                </resource>
            </resources>
        </build>
    </profile>
    <profile>
        <id>integration</id>
        <properties>
            <!--
                Specifies the build profile id, which is used to find out the correct properties file.
                This is not actually necessary for this example, but it can be used for other purposes.
            -->
            <build.profile.id>integration</build.profile.id>
            <skip.integration.tests>false</skip.integration.tests>
            <skip.unit.tests>true</skip.unit.tests>
        </properties>
        <build>
            <filters>
                <!--
                    Specifies path to the properties file, which contains profile specific
                    configuration. In this case, the configuration file is searched
                    from spring/profiles/it/ directory.
                -->
                <filter>src/main/resources/META-INF/spring/profiles/${build.profile.id}/database.properties</filter>
            </filters>
            <resources>
                <!--
                    Placeholders found from files located in the configured resource directories are replaced
                    with values found from the profile specific configuration files.
                -->
                <resource>
                    <filtering>true</filtering>
                    <directory>src/main/resources</directory>
                    <!--
                        You can also include only specific files found from the configured directory or
                        exclude files. This can be done by uncommenting following sections and adding
                        the configuration under includes and excludes tags.
                    -->
                    <!--
                    <includes>
                        <include></include>
                    </includes>
                    <excludes>
                        <exclude></exclude>
                    </excludes>
                    -->
                </resource>
            </resources>
        </build>
    </profile>
</profiles>

With the help of surefire for unit tests and failsfe for integration tests, you're done.

    <plugin>
    <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
    <artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>2.12</version>
    <configuration>
        <junitArtifactName>org.junit:com.springsource.org.junit</junitArtifactName>
        <!--see: https://issuetracker.springsource.com/browse/EBR-220-->
        <printSummary>false</printSummary>
        <redirectTestOutputToFile>true</redirectTestOutputToFile>
        <!-- Skips unit tests if the value of skip.unit.tests property is true -->
        <skipTests>${skip.unit.tests}</skipTests>
        <!-- Excludes integration tests when unit tests are run. -->
        <excludes>
            <exclude>${integration.test.files}</exclude>
        </excludes>
    </configuration>
</plugin>


<plugin>
    <groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
    <artifactId>maven-failsafe-plugin</artifactId>
    <version>2.12</version>
    <configuration>
        <!-- Skips integration tests if the value of skip.integration.tests property is true -->
        <skipTests>${skip.integration.tests}</skipTests>
        <includes>
            <include>${integration.test.files}</include>
        </includes>
        <forkMode>once</forkMode>
        <!--
                            <reuseForks>false</reuseForks>
                            <forkCount>1</forkCount>
        -->
    </configuration>
    <executions>
        <execution>
            <id>integration-test</id>
            <goals>
                <goal>integration-test</goal>
            </goals>
        </execution>
        <execution>
            <id>verify</id>
            <goals>
                <goal>verify</goal>
            </goals>
        </execution>
    </executions>
</plugin>

Now you need just mvn test for your unit tests and mvn verify -Pintegration for your integration tests. Obviously you should create the database.properties files in the specified (on the profiles) paths (or elsewhere and change the paths)

Based-on reference: http://www.petrikainulainen.net/programming/tips-and-tricks/creating-profile-specific-configuration-files-with-maven/

0

I found 2 possibilities without changing classloader/using other Maven plugins/profiles/copy-overwrite files.

TL;DR: check provider name.

At first I started to construct the entityManagerFactory programmatically, like here: create entity manager programmatically without persistence file.

So I did sth very similar:

    @BeforeClass
    public static void prepare() {
        Map<String, Object> configOverrides = new HashMap<>();
        configOverrides.put("hibernate.connection.driver_class", "org.h2.Driver");
        configOverrides.put("hibernate.connection.url", "jdbc:h2:mem:test;DB_CLOSE_DELAY=-1");
        configOverrides.put("hibernate.connection.username", "sa");
        configOverrides.put("hibernate.connection.password", "sa");
        configOverrides.put("hibernate.dialect", "org.hibernate.dialect.H2Dialect");
        configOverrides.put("hibernate.show_sql", "true");
        configOverrides.put("hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto", "validate");
        factory = new HibernatePersistence().createContainerEntityManagerFactory(
                new CustomPersistenceUnitInfo(), configOverrides
        );
        //factory = Persistence.createEntityManagerFactory("test");
        assertNotNull(factory);
    }
...
    private static class CustomPersistenceUnitInfo implements PersistenceUnitInfo {

        @Override
        public String getPersistenceUnitName() {
            return "test";
        }

        @Override
        public String getPersistenceProviderClassName() {
            return "org.hibernate.jpa.HibernatePersistenceProvider";
 // <------------note here: this is wrong!
        }

        @Override
        public PersistenceUnitTransactionType getTransactionType() {
            return PersistenceUnitTransactionType.RESOURCE_LOCAL;
        }

        @Override
        public DataSource getJtaDataSource() {
            return null;
        }

        @Override
        public DataSource getNonJtaDataSource() {
            return null;
        }

        @Override
        public List<String> getMappingFileNames() {
            return Collections.emptyList();
        }

        @Override
        public List<URL> getJarFileUrls() {
            try {
                return Collections.list(this.getClass()
                        .getClassLoader()
                        .getResources(""));
            } catch (IOException e) {
                throw new UncheckedIOException(e);
            }
        }

        @Override
        public URL getPersistenceUnitRootUrl() {
            return null;
        }

        @Override
        public List<String> getManagedClassNames() {
            return Arrays.asList(
                    "com.app.Entity1",
                    "com.app.Entity2"
            );
        }

        @Override
        public boolean excludeUnlistedClasses() {
            return true;
        }

        @Override
        public SharedCacheMode getSharedCacheMode() {
            return null;
        }

        @Override
        public ValidationMode getValidationMode() {
            return null;
        }

        @Override
        public Properties getProperties() {
            return null;
        }

        @Override
        public String getPersistenceXMLSchemaVersion() {
            return null;
        }

        @Override
        public ClassLoader getClassLoader() {
            return null;
        }

        @Override
        public void addTransformer(final ClassTransformer classTransformer) {

        }

        @Override
        public ClassLoader getNewTempClassLoader() {
            return null;
        }
    }


But then, I found it still return null. Why?

Then I found that when I use com.hibernate.ejb.HibernatePersistence class, the provider should not be com.hibernate.jpa.HibernatePersistenceProvider, but com.hibernate.ejb.HibernatePersistence. The class HibernatePersistenceProvider is not even found with IDEA "Open Class", even when it is in the main persistence.xml.

In Ejb3Configuration.class I found:

        integration = integration != null ? Collections.unmodifiableMap(integration) : CollectionHelper.EMPTY_MAP;
        String provider = (String)integration.get("javax.persistence.provider");
        if (provider == null) {
            provider = info.getPersistenceProviderClassName();
        }

        if (provider != null && !provider.trim().startsWith(IMPLEMENTATION_NAME)) { // private static final String IMPLEMENTATION_NAME = HibernatePersistence.class.getName(); which, is, "com.hibernate.ejb.HibernatePersistence"
            LOG.requiredDifferentProvider(provider);
            return null;
        } else {

So I went back to the first solution of persistence.xml, and change provider name, and now it works. It seems that even the provider in main is jpa.xxx, in tests it is not.

So, in summary, 3 things to check:

  • turn on -X in Maven to check if maven-resources-plugin really copied your src/test/resources/META-INF/persistence.xml into target/test-classes(I think this never fails)
  • check if hibernate-entitymanager is in your classpath(you can check with mvn dependency:tree -Dincludes=org.hibernate:hibernate-entitymanager.
  • check provider's name, most important one. Should be org.hibernate.ejb.HibernatePersistence.
<persistence version="2.0"
             xmlns="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
             xsi:schemaLocation="http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence http://java.sun.com/xml/ns/persistence/persistence_2_0.xsd">
    <persistence-unit name="test" transaction-type="RESOURCE_LOCAL">
        <provider>org.hibernate.ejb.HibernatePersistence</provider>
        <class>com.app.model.Company</class>
        ...

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