26

Urls for menus in my ASP.NET MVC apps are generated from controller/actions. So, they call

controller.Url.Action(action, controller)

Now, how do I make this work in unit tests? I use MVCContrib successfully with

var controller = new TestControllerBuilder().CreateController<OrdersController>();

but whatever I try to do with it I get controller.Url.Action(action, controller) failing with NullReferenceException because Url == null.

Update: it's not about how to intercept HttpContext. I did this in several ways, using MVCContrib, Scott Hanselman's example of faking, and also the one from http://stephenwalther.com/blog/archive/2008/07/01/asp-net-mvc-tip-12-faking-the-controller-context.aspx. This doesn't help me because I need to know WHAT values to fake... is it ApplicationPath? How do I set it up? Does it need to match the called controller/action? That is, how do Url.Action works and how do I satisfy it?

Also, I know I can do IUrlActionAbstraction and go with it... but I'm not sure I want to do this. After all, I have MVCContrib/Mock full power and why do I need another abstraction.

3
  • 1
    Not worth an answer on its own, so I'll point to a similar answer: bit.ly/aSJ0a Sep 2, 2009 at 13:35
  • Yes I used that link and it didn't work. Actually I tried both Scott's version and MVCContrib. What I try to understand is what values do I need to setup? What does Url.Action() actually use? I.e. on the link you provided there's Moq version that setup a LOT of variables... are ALL of them necessary? I tried all of them without luck.
    – queen3
    Sep 2, 2009 at 14:25
  • See the update in question...
    – queen3
    Sep 2, 2009 at 14:27

5 Answers 5

28

A cleaner way to do this is just use Moq(or any other framework you like) to Mock UrlHelper itself

var controller = new OrdersController();
var UrlHelperMock = new Mock<UrlHelper>();

controller.Url = UrlHelperMock.Object;

UrlHelperMock.Setup(x => x.Action("Action", "Controller", new {parem = "test"})).Returns("testUrl");

var url = controller.Url.Action("Action", "Controller", new {parem = "test"});
assert.areEqual("/Controller/Action/?parem=test",url);

clean and simple.

22

Here's how you could mock UrlHelper using MvcContrib's TestControllerBuilder:

var routes = new RouteCollection();
MvcApplication.RegisterRoutes(routes);
HomeController controller = CreateController<HomeController>();

controller.HttpContext.Response
    .Stub(x => x.ApplyAppPathModifier("/Home/About"))
    .Return("/Home/About");

controller.Url = new UrlHelper(
    new RequestContext(
        controller.HttpContext, new RouteData()
    ), 
    routes
);
var url = controller.Url.Action("About", "Home");
Assert.IsFalse(string.IsNullOrEmpty(url));
3
  • Oops... It was misleading to see in MSDN help for Controller.Url "Gets the URL helper object"... I didn't even verified if it has setter.
    – queen3
    Sep 3, 2009 at 18:22
  • Do you know how we could achieve this with MVC4 Darin? As I'm trying to follow your code example but can't call RegisterRoutes
    – DevDave
    Dec 6, 2012 at 12:51
  • 2
    Tyler: RegisterRoutes is a convention, use MvcApplication.RouteTable.Routes.Add(...)
    – Shane
    Jan 28, 2013 at 11:33
5

If you're using Moq (and not MvcContrib's TestControllerBuilder), you can mock out the context, similar to @DarianDimitrov's answer:

var controller = new OrdersController();
var context = new Mock<System.Web.HttpContextBase>().Object;

controller.Url = new UrlHelper(
    new RequestContext(context, new RouteData()),
    new RouteCollection()
);

This doesn't set the controller.HttpContext property, but it does allow Url.Action to execute (and return an empty string -- no mocking required).

4

Fake it easy works nicely:

 var fakeUrlHelper = A.Fake<UrlHelper>();
        controller.Url = fakeUrlHelper;
        A.CallTo(() => fakeUrlHelper.Action(A<string>.Ignored, A<string>.Ignored))
            .Returns("/Action/Controller");
1
  • 2
    +1 bazillion for using FakeItEasy !! But ... the Action method is not virtual ... so how can you fake/intercept that?
    – Pure.Krome
    Oct 23, 2014 at 5:20
0

Here is another way to solve the problem with NSubstitute. Hope, it helps someone.

// _accountController is the controller that we try to test
var urlHelper = Substitute.For<UrlHelper>();
urlHelper.Action(Arg.Any<string>(), Arg.Any<object>()).Returns("/test_Controller/test_action");

var context = Substitute.For<HttpContextBase>();
_accountController.Url = urlHelper;
_accountController.ControllerContext = new ControllerContext(context, new RouteData(), _accountController);

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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