31

I am using Mockito for unit testing. I am wondering if its possible to send Parametrized input parameters with as in Junit testing
e.g

@InjectMocks
MockClass mockClass = new MockClass();

@Test
public void mockTestMethod()
    {
    mockClass.testMethod(stringInput); 
// here I want to pass a list of String inputs 
// this is possible in Junit through Parameterized.class.. 
// wondering if its can be done in Mockito
    } 
1
  • can you provide an example to show how you want to use Mockito in your unit test ?
    – Rangi Lin
    Sep 26, 2012 at 16:35

4 Answers 4

33

In JUnit, Parameterized tests use a special runner that ensure that the test is instantiated multiple times, so each test method is called multiple times. Mockito is a tool for writing specific unit tests, so there is no built-in ability to run the same test multiple times with different Mockito expectations.

If you want your test conditions to change, your best bet is to do one of the following:

  • Parameterize your test using JUnit, with a parameter for the mock inputs you want;
  • Run a loop of different parameters in your test, which unfortunately avoids the "test one thing per method" philosophy
  • Extract a method that actually performs the test, and create a new @Test method for each mock you want.

Note that there's no prohibition on using mock objects as @Parameterized test parameters. If you're looking to parameterize based on mocks, you can do that, possibly creating the mock and setting the expectations in a static method on the test.


Note about runners: This Parameterized test runner conflicts with Mockito's MockitoJUnitRunner: Each test class can only have one runner. You'll want to switch to @Before and @After methods or a Mockito JUnit4 rule for your setup, if you use them both.

As an example, compressed from a different answer that explains more about Parameterized runners versus JUnit rules and lifting from the JUnit4 Parameterized Test doc page and MockitoRule doc page:

@RunWith(Parameterized.class)
public class YourComponentTest {
    @Rule public MockitoRule rule = MockitoJUnit.rule();
    @Mock YourDep mockYourDep;

    @Parameters public static Collection<Object[]> data() { /* Return the values */ }

    public YourComponentTest(Parameter parameter) { /* Save the parameter to a field */ }

    @Test public void test() { /* Use the field value in assertions */ }
}
3
  • I'm sure this is the definitive answer. But would you care to comment on the possibility at (stackoverflow.com/questions/27745691/…) of combining @RunWith(Parameterized.class) with another @RunWith. I tried to understand how to use this technique with @RunWith(MockitoJUnitRunner.class), but it was beyond me (see my comments there). I have doubts in view of what you say, but I thought I'd ask... Nov 24, 2016 at 7:37
  • @mike Yes, you could create a parameterized Mockito runner using that technique, but while that post may be particularly useful for classloader-manipulating runners or runners that use dynamic tests, it is purely overkill in almost all Mockito situations because a @Rule would achieve this in a more modern idiomatic way. (MockitoJUnitRunner predates JUnit Rules.) If you want to see about combining them, it'd go better in another question—it wouldn't fit in a comment box and is no good general answer to either question. Nov 24, 2016 at 17:11
  • Thanks. You mean start a new question to ask for an explicit example of using @Rule? I have now done this: stackoverflow.com/questions/40793464/…. Hope you have a moment... Nov 24, 2016 at 19:33
12

If you are stuck with an older version of mockito where MockitoRule isn't available, the other possibility is to initialize the mocks explicitely with MockitoAnnotations.initMocks:

@RunWith(Parameterized.class)
public class YourComponentTest {        
    @Mock YourDep mockYourDep;

    @Parameter
    public Parameter parameter;

    @Parameters public static Collection<Object[]> data() { /* Return the values */ }

    @Before
    public void init() {
        MockitoAnnotations.initMocks(this);
    }

    @Test public void test() { /* Use the field value in assertions */ }
}
7

You can use the JUnitParamsRunner. Here's how I do it:

import junitparams.JUnitParamsRunner;
import junitparams.Parameters;
import org.junit.Before;
import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;
import org.mockito.InjectMocks;
import org.mockito.Mock;

import java.util.Arrays;

import static org.hamcrest.CoreMatchers.is;
import static org.hamcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat;
import static org.mockito.Mockito.when;
import static org.mockito.MockitoAnnotations.initMocks;

@RunWith(value = JUnitParamsRunner.class)
public class ParameterizedMockitoTest {

    @InjectMocks
    private SomeService someService;
    @Mock
    private SomeOtherService someOtherService;

    @Before
    public void setup() {
        initMocks(this);
    }

    @Test
    @Parameters(method = "getParameters")
    public void testWithParameters(Boolean parameter, Boolean expected) throws Exception {
        when(someOtherService.getSomething()).thenReturn(new Something());
        Boolean testObject = someService.getTestObject(parameter);
        assertThat(testObject, is(expected));
    }

    @Test
    public void testSomeBasicStuffWithoutParameters() {
        int i = 0;
        assertThat(i, is(0));
    }

    public Iterable getParameters() {
        return Arrays.asList(new Object[][]{
                {Boolean.TRUE, Boolean.TRUE},
                {Boolean.FALSE, Boolean.FALSE},
        });
    }
}
2
  • Just one note. This getParameters method does not have to be a public method.
    – Raj
    Feb 21, 2019 at 3:08
  • correct, and with junit5 the teat methods dont have to be public anymore. Feb 21, 2019 at 3:32
0

What solved it for me was:

  1. Class level annotation of @ExtendWith(MockitoExtension.class)
  2. Annotate each mock object with @Mock
  3. @InjectMocks on the test class. Or a setup method annotated with @BeforeEach where you initialise the class to be tested.
  4. if you need the @test annotation, make sure you import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test. org.junit.test will not work!

I'm using mockito version 4.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

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