43

I'm using Spring 3.1.1.RELEASE, Hibernate 4.1.0.Final, JPA 2, JUnit 4.8.1, and HSQL 2.2.7. I want to run some JUnit tests on my service methods, and after each test, I would like any data written to the in-memory database to be rolled back. However, I do NOT want the entire test to be treated as a transaction. For example in this test

@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration({ "classpath:test-context.xml" })
public class ContractServiceTest 
{
    …

    @Autowired
    private ContractService m_contractService;

    @Test
    public void testUpdateContract()
    {
        // Add the contract
        m_contractService.save(m_contract);
        Assert.assertNotNull(m_contract.getId());
        // Update the activation date by 6 months.
        final Calendar activationDate = Calendar.getInstance();
        activationDate.setTime(activationDate.getTime());
        activationDate.add(Calendar.MONTH, 6);
        m_contract.setActivationDate(activationDate.getTime());
        m_contractService.save(m_contract);
        final List<Contract> foundContracts = m_contractService.findContractByOppId(m_contract.getOpportunityId());
        Assert.assertEquals(foundContracts.get(0), m_contract);
    }   // testUpdateContract

there are three calls to the service, ("m_contractService.save", "m_contractService.save", and "m_contractService.findContractByOppId") and each is treated as a transaction, which I want. But I don't know how to reset my in-memory database to its original state after each unit test.

Let me know if I need to provide additional information.

3

8 Answers 8

33

Since you are using Hibernate, you could use the property hibernate.hbm2ddl.auto to create the database on startup every time. You would also need to force the spring context to be reloaded after each test. You can do this with the @DirtiesContext annotation.

This might add a bit extra overhead to your tests, so the other solution is to just manually delete the data from each table.

2
  • 13
    I added "@DirtiesContext(classMode = ClassMode.AFTER_EACH_TEST_METHOD)" at the class level and it did what I need. There is extra overhead but that doesn't matter in my case. Rock on
    – Dave
    Jan 16, 2013 at 16:27
  • 1
    Yes, I explicitly had to set the classMode = ClassMode.AFTER_EACH_TEST_METHOD). THe default is "After Class", but I wanted a fresh DB ready for reach Unit Test method. Jan 27, 2017 at 13:30
20

@DirtiesContext was no solution for me because the whole application context gets destroyed an must be created after each test -> Took very long.

@Before was also not a good solution for me as I have to create @Before in each integration test.

So I decided to create an TestExecutionListener which recreates the database after each test. (With Liquibase, but it also works with Flyway and normal SQL)

public class CleanupDatabaseTestExecutionListener
extends AbstractTestExecutionListener {

public final int getOrder() {
    return 2001;
}

private boolean alreadyCleared = false;

@Override
public void prepareTestInstance(TestContext testContext) throws Exception {
    if (!alreadyCleared) {
        cleanupDatabase(testContext);
        alreadyCleared = true;
    } else {
        alreadyCleared = true;
    }
}

@Override
public void afterTestClass(TestContext testContext) throws Exception {
    cleanupDatabase(testContext);
}

private void cleanupDatabase(TestContext testContext) throws LiquibaseException {
    ApplicationContext app = testContext.getApplicationContext();
    SpringLiquibase springLiquibase = app.getBean(SpringLiquibase.class);
    springLiquibase.setDropFirst(true);
    springLiquibase.afterPropertiesSet(); //The database get recreated here
}
}

To use the TestExecutionListenere I created a custom test annotation

@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Target(ElementType.TYPE)
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@SpringBootTest(classes = OurderApp.class)
@TestExecutionListeners(mergeMode = 
TestExecutionListeners.MergeMode.MERGE_WITH_DEFAULTS,
    listeners = {CleanupDatabaseTestExecutionListener.class}
)
public @interface OurderTest {
}

Last but not least, I can now create tests and I can be sure that the database is in a clean mode.

@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@OurderTest
public class ProductSaveServiceIntTest {
 }

EDIT: I improved my solution a bit. I had the problem that sometime one test method destroyed my database for all upcoming tests within the test class. So I created the annotation

package com.ourder.e2e.utils;

import java.lang.annotation.ElementType;
import java.lang.annotation.Retention;
import java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy;
import java.lang.annotation.Target;

@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Target(ElementType.METHOD)
public @interface ClearContext {
}

and added this to the CleanupDatabaseTestExectionListener.

@Override
public void afterTestMethod(TestContext testContext) throws Exception {
    if(testContext.getTestMethod().getAnnotation(ClearContext.class)!=null){
        cleanupDatabase(testContext);
    }
    super.afterTestMethod(testContext);
}

with help of these two snippets I am now able to create tests like this:

@Test
@ClearContext
public void testWhichDirtiesDatabase() {}
3
  • 1
    which bean should I get from context if I want to use built-in libraries? I have very simple app, and I don't need Liquibase or Flyway.
    – klubi
    Sep 13, 2017 at 16:16
  • Do you want to clear your database tables or recreate the whole sql scheme ? Sep 14, 2017 at 22:25
  • Thank you! I need to use afterTestMethod instead of afterTestClass to clean the database between each test execution
    – sebasira
    Jan 9, 2019 at 11:58
2

You can use @Transactional annotation at Junit class level from org.springframework.transaction.annotation.Transactional.

For example:

package org.test
import org.springframework.transaction.annotation.Transactional;

@Transactional
public class ArmyTest{

}
1
  • 6
    The OP said: "without making the whole test a transaction"
    – Dherik
    Jun 13, 2019 at 17:18
2

I solve the same problem using a random memory database for each test:

@DirtiesContext(classMode = DirtiesContext.ClassMode.BEFORE_EACH_TEST_METHOD)
@TestPropertySource(properties = {
    "spring.datasource.url=jdbc:hsqldb:mem:${random.uuid}"
})
1
  • So you have different db contexts in test and real application. That means if something works in tests it still could fail in real application Mar 14, 2022 at 10:26
2

If you use flyway for migrations, I use the following pattern:

@TestInstance(TestInstance.Lifecycle.PER_CLASS)
class JUnit5Class {
    @Autowired
    Flyway flyway;

    @BeforeAll
    public void cleanUp(){
        flyway.clean();
        flyway.migrate();
    }
}

@TestInstance allows you to make @BeforeAll non static and thus you can migrate only once per test class. If you want to reset it for each test remove the class anotation and make change @BeforeAll to @BeforeEach.

1
  • 1
    Is there something same for Liquibase? Aug 5, 2022 at 7:47
2

As of JUnit 5 you could also create a custom extension and access the data source from the Spring context, like so (using Kotlin):

class DatabaseCleanerExtension : AfterEachCallback {
  override fun afterEach(context: ExtensionContext) {
    val ds = SpringExtension.getApplicationContext(context).getBean(DataSource::class.java)

    ds.connection.use { connection ->
      connection.prepareStatement("DELETE FROM my_table").execute()
    }
  }
}

You can then register the extension as follows:

@SpringBootTest
@ExtendWith(DatabaseCleanerExtension::class)
class SpringJunitExtensionApplicationTests { .. }

Now after each test the callback is executed and you can easily annotate any test classes this applies to.

Here is also a video on settings this up.

1

Make a @Before method in which you delete all data from database. You are using Hibernate so you can use HQL: delete from Contract.

1

I was having same issue and solved following this

http://www.javafixing.com/2021/10/fixed-how-to-cleanup-h2-db-after-each.html?m=1

basically you can clean the DB after every test method with:

@Sql(scripts = "clean_file.sql", executionPhase = Sql.ExecutionPhase.AFTER_TEST_METHOD)

on clean_file.sql you can add all the SQL statements to reset the db

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