3

I have a method which is private . Now, I do not want to call this private method while doing unit test on execute() method. I have tried with PowerMockito and all, but with all type of mockings it still enter into the private method.

Please suggest with workable testcase. Would appreciate the same.

@Component 
public class Employee implements SuperClass {

    @Autowired
    private FileTraverse fileTraverse;

    @Override 
    public void execute() throws Exception {
        List<String> traverse = fileTraverse.getFiles();
        Boolean t = isFileTraversed(traverse);
    } 

    private Boolean isFileTraversed(List<String> param1) {
        Boolean flag;
        //do some DB operation and return flag;
    }
}
1
  • 1
    If you can choose mocking framework, youo may try jmockit - which does mock private methods Feb 7, 2018 at 11:03

3 Answers 3

1

@glytching is right. The best variant it's to extract method in a new service/component and create mock for one. In this case, your code is testable, you can re-use this component ...

BUT in case if you have only one use case for this method and you don't want to create a service/component just for one method, helper method, you can change the method visibility level from private to protected or package-default. In this case, you can override this method in subclass for testing and work with this sub-class. What you should do : create a subclass for the class that you want to test and use the instance of this subclass instead of the target class.

--service that you have and need to test one
public class MainService {
    @Autowired
    private SecondService secondService;

    public Object getResultFromMainService(){
        return getResultFromMainServiceFromPrivate();
    }

    --here I changed 'private' into 'default-package' 
    Object getResultFromMainServiceFromPrivate(){
        return secondService.getResult();
    }
}

_

@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration(classes = ServiceOverrideTestConfiguration.class)
public class MainServiceTest {
    @Autowired
    @Qualifier("subMainService") // or add @Primary and don't use Qualifier
    private MainService service;
    @Autowired
    private SecondService secondService;

    @Test
    public void test(){
        Object result = service.getResultFromMainService();
        --here, method getResultFromMainService call inside the overrided 
            method that we can change
        assertNotNull(result);
    }    
}

@ContextConfiguration
@Import(ApplicationConfigure.class)
class ServiceOverrideTestConfiguration {

    @Bean("subMainService")
    // or add @Primary and don't use Qualifier
    MainService mainServiceSubBean(){
        return new MainServiceUnderTest();
    }
}

class MainServiceUnderTest extends MainService{    
    @Override
    Object getResultFromMainServiceFromPrivate(){
        return "SOME DEFAULT";
    }    
}

! Pls, consider this approach only as a workaround in rare cases when you need to mock/stub some method and you can't use PowerMock or any other libs. Better, try to do refactoring and bring testability in your code

1

Don't mock private methods.

See the suggestion below:

@Component 
public class Employee implements SuperClass {

    @Autowired
    private FileTraverse fileTraverse;

    @Override 
    public void execute() throws Exception {
        List<String> traverse = fileTraverse.getFiles();
        Boolean t = isFileTraversed(traverse);
    } 

    private Boolean isFileTraversed(List<String> param1) {
        Boolean flag;
        //do some DB operation and return flag;
    }
}

So inside isFileTraversed - you will have a DB operation. This operation will probably be executed through a DAO/Repository object.

So your code will probably look like:

@Component 
public class Employee implements SuperClass {

    @Autowired
    private FileTraverse fileTraverse;

    @Autowired
    private DatabaseAccessDao dbAccess;

    @Override 
    public void execute() throws Exception {
        List<String> traverse = fileTraverse.getFiles();
        Boolean t = isFileTraversed(traverse);
    } 

    @Override
    private Boolean isFileTraversed(List<String> param1) {
        Boolean flag;
        flag = dbAccess.checkFileTraversed(param1);
        return flag;
    }
}

What you need to do is to mock the public checkFileTraversed() method on the DatabaseAccessDao class.

1) Don't @Autowire on fields - prefer constructor injection.

2) Are you sure you want to return a Boolean? Is "null" allowed as a return value? If not - consider using the primitive boolean type;

0

Everybody else is right. You should try to avoid mocking private methods as much as you can. And if you really need to mock it, just drop the private to put it in default scope.

BUT

For the sake of completeness, you can indeed to it with PowerMock. Here is an example using PowerMock and EasyMock.

public class Employee {

  public void execute() {
    // If our mock is working, isFileTraversed will return false
    assertThat(isFileTraversed(Collections.emptyList())).isFalse();
  }

  private Boolean isFileTraversed(List<String> param1) {
    return true;
  }

}

@RunWith(PowerMockRunner.class)
@PrepareForTest(Employee.class)
public class EmployeeTest {

  @Test
  public void execute() throws Exception {
    Employee employee = PowerMock.createPartialMockForAllMethodsExcept(Employee.class, "execute");

    PowerMock.expectPrivate(employee, "isFileTraversed", Collections.emptyList()).andReturn(false);
    PowerMock.replay(employee);

    employee.execute();

    PowerMock.verify(employee);
  }

}

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.