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I've read various articles about mocking vs stubbing in testing, including Martin Fowler's Mocks Aren't Stubs, but still don't understand the difference.

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    @OP Because there is no difference. This article, as much as loved by the community, is - with all due respect - making everything unnecessary confusing by adding additional meaning to words that are easy to understand otherwise and by making things unnecessary complicated. Mock is just a mock, something that runs fake business logic instead of real one. Checking for behavior in the end is your choice, but it is still a mock. Or whatever you want to call it, but make it ONE. Do not split a hairs. Keep it simple, so people can understand your concept easily - which above article does fail with.
    – wst
    Commented Jun 29, 2016 at 2:30
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    "Classification between mocks, fakes, and stubs is highly inconsistent across the literature." With many citations. Still one of my favorite Wikipedia quotes - if such a thing exists :) en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mock_object
    – JD.
    Commented Sep 22, 2016 at 15:47
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    that Martin Fowler's article is really hard to understand for beginners. Commented Nov 24, 2016 at 15:03
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    @wst "mock is a mock" loses the argument on the spot. Mock = behavior expectation, stub is just a fixture. "I expect behavior X to have happened" is a mock. A stub is not a condition. A fake string it not a condition. Calling everything a Mock is like calling everything a Helper function.
    – Alex
    Commented Oct 13, 2022 at 15:13

41 Answers 41

1187
+500

Foreword

There are several definitions of objects, that are not real. The general term is test double. This term encompasses: dummy, fake, stub, mock.

Reference

According to Martin Fowler's article:

  • Dummy objects are passed around but never actually used. Usually they are just used to fill parameter lists.
  • Fake objects actually have working implementations, but usually take some shortcut which makes them not suitable for production (an in memory database is a good example).
  • Stubs provide canned answers to calls made during the test, usually not responding at all to anything outside what's programmed in for the test. Stubs may also record information about calls, such as an email gateway stub that remembers the messages it 'sent', or maybe only how many messages it 'sent'.
  • Mocks are what we are talking about here: objects pre-programmed with expectations which form a specification of the calls they are expected to receive.

Style

Mocks vs Stubs = Behavioral testing vs State testing

Principle

According to the principle of Test only one thing per test, there may be several stubs in one test, but generally there is only one mock.

Lifecycle

Test lifecycle with stubs:

  1. Setup - Prepare object that is being tested and its stubs collaborators.
  2. Exercise - Test the functionality.
  3. Verify state - Use asserts to check object's state.
  4. Teardown - Clean up resources.

Test lifecycle with mocks:

  1. Setup data - Prepare object that is being tested.
  2. Setup expectations - Prepare expectations in mock that is being used by primary object.
  3. Exercise - Test the functionality.
  4. Verify expectations - Verify that correct methods has been invoked in mock.
  5. Verify state - Use asserts to check object's state.
  6. Teardown - Clean up resources.

Summary

Both mocks and stubs testing give an answer for the question: What is the result?

Testing with mocks are also interested in: How the result has been achieved?

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  • Wait, mocks also return canned answers? Cause otherwise why do they answer the question?
    – AturSams
    Commented May 7, 2017 at 15:59
  • From what you wrote I can tell that mocks = stubs + expectations and verifications, because mocks "provide canned answers to calls made during the test, usually not responding at all to anything outside what's programmed in for the test" (same as stubs). And example that Fowler showed as example of a stub is actually example of a spy! That means that a mock is a stub, and a spy is a stub. And a stub is just an object that have several working methods. That also explains why Mockito deprecated stub() method.
    – kolobok
    Commented Jul 8, 2018 at 20:35
  • What I find confusing abou this and the accepted answer is this “expectation setting”, what does it even mean? Usually, in the “main code” you create the results that you would expect. It sounds like you put the expectations somehow INTO the mock object, though, which does not make sense to me. ALSO, you could just as easily exercise the mock with some input, store the result, create “the expectations” later and then compare. You use terminology that I find too abstract and ambiguous.
    – IceFire
    Commented May 22, 2020 at 5:43
  • Why does this answer appear on the second page? It should have appeared after the accepted answer (if not before it). The best answer I see here, detailed, precise, and understandable. Commented Jun 9, 2020 at 14:21
  • I think the "principle" section is incorrect. Test doubles are replacing the "collaborators", or "dependencies". There might be several of these in a test, and that's just fine. It's the System Under Test (SUT) of which there should be only one, and there is no difference here. Both Mock and Classical style testing prefer one SUT.
    – eisenpony
    Commented Jul 4, 2022 at 19:38
939

Stub

I believe the biggest distinction is that a stub you have already written with predetermined behavior. So you would have a class that implements the dependency (abstract class or interface most likely) you are faking for testing purposes and the methods would just be stubbed out with set responses. They would not do anything fancy and you would have already written the stubbed code for it outside of your test.

Mock

A mock is something that as part of your test you have to setup with your expectations. A mock is not setup in a predetermined way so you have code that does it in your test. Mocks in a way are determined at runtime since the code that sets the expectations has to run before they do anything.

Difference between Mocks and Stubs

Tests written with mocks usually follow an initialize -> set expectations -> exercise -> verify pattern to testing. While the pre-written stub would follow an initialize -> exercise -> verify.

Similarity between Mocks and Stubs

The purpose of both is to eliminate testing all the dependencies of a class or function so your tests are more focused and simpler in what they are trying to prove.

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    One confusing line - A mock is something that as part of your test you have to setup with your expectations. A mock is not setup in a predetermined way so you have code that does it in your test. So, it's set up according to your expectations, but not in a predetermined way? How is that possible?
    – Drew
    Commented May 7, 2021 at 0:01
  • Your definition of stub is matching definition of fake in @RyszardDżegan s answer IMO Commented Feb 1, 2023 at 13:13
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    @Drew based on other answers and from my experience, i would say that the stub is predetermined in compile-time, while a mock is determined during runtime (by setting up expectations inside the test). Commented Jun 19, 2023 at 9:32
562

A stub is a simple fake object. It just makes sure test runs smoothly.
A mock is a smarter stub. You verify your test passes through it.

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    I think this is the most succinct and spot on answer. Takeaway: a mock IS-A stub. stackoverflow.com/a/17810004/2288628 is the longer version of this answer. Commented Oct 6, 2014 at 0:12
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    I don't think a mock is a stub. Mocks are used to assert and should never return data, stubs are used to return data and should never assert.
    – dave1010
    Commented Aug 3, 2015 at 14:00
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    @dave1010 Mocks most definitely can return data or even throw an exception. They should do so in response to the params passed into them.
    – Trenton
    Commented Aug 17, 2015 at 18:33
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    @trenton if an object returns or throws based on data passed in then it's a fake, not a mock. Stubs test how your SUT handles receiving messages, mocks test how your SUT sends messages. Mixing up the 2 is likely to lead to bad OO design.
    – dave1010
    Commented Aug 24, 2015 at 7:41
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    I think this is great - a stub returns answers to questions. A mock also returns answers to questions (is-a stub) but it also verifies that the question was asked !!
    – Leif
    Commented Jan 15, 2017 at 1:53
209

In the codeschool.com course, Rails Testing for Zombies, they give this definition of the terms:

Stub

For replacing a method with code that returns a specified result.

Mock

A stub with an assertion that the method gets called.

So as Sean Copenhaver described in his answer, the difference is that mocks set expectations (i.e. make assertions, about whether or how they get called).

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  • To complement Dillon post, think about this, you have a Class called "MakeACake" who take several libraries: Milk, Eggs, Sugar, Oven.
    – aarkerio
    Commented Feb 11, 2014 at 19:37
184

Stubs don't fail your tests, mock can.

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    And I think this is good, you know if tests have the same behavior after refactoring.
    – RodriKing
    Commented May 23, 2018 at 11:25
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    @RodriKing I have same feeling. As with Mock, with any changes in production code - you have corresponding changes to test code. Which is pain! With Stubs, It feels like you keep testing the behavior so no micro changes need to made with test code.
    – tucq88
    Commented Jul 21, 2019 at 3:13
130

Reading all the explanations above, let me try to condense:

  • Stub: a dummy piece of code that lets the test run, but you don't care what happens to it. Substitutes for real working code.
  • Mock: a dummy piece of code that you verify is called correctly as part of the test. Substitutes for real working code.
  • Spy: a dummy piece of code that intercepts and verifies some calls to real working code, avoiding the need to substitute all the real code.
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    Good answer. Mock sounds quite similar to Spy though, based on your definition. Would be nice if you updated your answer to include a few more test doubles. Commented May 4, 2018 at 9:02
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    This is quite good answer without blurring the picture.
    – iaforek
    Commented Mar 28, 2022 at 9:26
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    @O'Rooney Great answer. It would be helpful if you could update the answer and provide a clearer explanation/summary about Stub.
    – Uros C
    Commented Jul 10, 2022 at 12:00
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    Thanks for the suggestion; I thought it also applied to mock, so I incorporated your suggestion and did some other tweaks.
    – O'Rooney
    Commented Jul 11, 2022 at 3:07
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    #1 result on Google for "stub vs mock". Way to go @O'Rooney! Commented Oct 21, 2022 at 15:30
96

I think the simplest and clearer answer about this question is given from Roy Osherove in his book The art of Unit Testing (page 85)

The easiest way to tell we’re dealing with a stub is to notice that the stub can never fail the test. The asserts the test uses are always against the class under test.

On the other hand, the test will use a mock object to verify whether the test failed or not. [...]

Again, the mock object is the object we use to see if the test failed or not.

Stub and mock are both fakes.

If you are making assertions against the fake it means you are using the fake as a mock, if you are using the fake only to run the test without assertion over it you are using the fake as a stub.

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A Mock is just testing behaviour, making sure certain methods are called. A Stub is a testable version (per se) of a particular object.

What do you mean an Apple way?

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    "What do you mean an Apple way?" Use Helvetica
    – kubi
    Commented Aug 11, 2010 at 14:35
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    In an Apple way as opposed to in a Microsoft way :) Commented Aug 11, 2010 at 14:40
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If you compare it to debugging:

Stub is like making sure a method returns the correct value

Mock is like actually stepping into the method and making sure everything inside is correct before returning the correct value.

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To be very clear and practical:

Stub: A class or object that implements the methods of the class/object to be faked and returns always what you want.

Example in JavaScript:

var Stub = {
   method_a: function(param_a, param_b){
      return 'This is an static result';
   }
}

Mock: The same of stub, but it adds some logic that "verifies" when a method is called so you can be sure some implementation is calling that method.

As @mLevan says imagine as an example that you're testing a user registration class. After calling Save, it should call SendConfirmationEmail.

A very stupid code Example:

var Mock = {
   calls: {
      method_a: 0
   }

   method_a: function(param_a, param_b){
     this.method_a++; 
     console.log('Mock.method_a its been called!');
   }
}
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This slide explain the main differences very good.

enter image description here

*From CSE 403 Lecture 16 , University of Washington (slide created by "Marty Stepp")

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  • This is the more clear explanation of the diff between the two, IMO. For stub: the tester take the Stub and use it directly inside the class under test. But for Mock, the tester has to device way how the Mock object will be used. In different cases, it will behave differently. In contrast, stub is not expected to behave differently but is used as it is (meaning returning the same data whenever contacted)
    – Dexter
    Commented Nov 27, 2018 at 5:45
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Using a mental model really helped me understand this, rather than all of the explanations and articles, that didn't quite "sink in".

Imagine your kid has a glass plate on the table and he starts playing with it. Now, you're afraid it will break. So, you give him a plastic plate instead. That would be a Mock (same behavior, same interface, "softer" implementation).

Now, say you don't have the plastic replacement, so you explain "If you continue playing with it, it will break!". That's a Stub, you provided a predefined state in advance.

A Dummy would be the fork he didn't even use... and a Spy could be something like providing the same explanation you already used that worked.

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let see Test Doubles:

  • Fake: Fakes are objects that have working implementations, but not the same as production one. Such as: in-memory implementation of Data Access Object or Repository.
  • Stub: Stub is an object that holds predefined data and uses it to answer calls during tests. Such as: an object that needs to grab some data from the database to respond to a method call.

  • Mocks: Mocks are objects that register calls they receive. In test assertion, we can verify on Mocks that all expected actions were performed. Such as: a functionality that calls e-mail sending service. for more just check this.

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    best answer in my opinion Commented Mar 23, 2020 at 21:58
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I like the explanation put out by Roy Osherove in his talk Understanding Mock Objects:

Every class or object created is a fake. It is a mock if you assert against it. Otherwise it is a stub.

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22

I think the most important difference between them is their intentions.

Let me try to explain it in WHY stub vs. WHY mock

Suppose I'm writing test code for my mac twitter client's public timeline controller

Here is test sample code

twitter_api.stub(:public_timeline).and_return(public_timeline_array)
client_ui.should_receive(:insert_timeline_above).with(public_timeline_array)
controller.refresh_public_timeline
  • STUB: The network connection to twitter API is very slow, which make my test slow. I know it will return timelines, so I made a stub simulating HTTP twitter API, so that my test will run it very fast, and I can running the test even I'm offline.
  • MOCK: I haven't written any of my UI methods yet, and I'm not sure what methods I need to write for my ui object. I hope to know how my controller will collaborate with my ui object by writing the test code.

By writing mock, you discover the objects collaboration relationship by verifying the expectation are met, while stub only simulate the object's behavior.

I suggest to read this article if you're trying to know more about mocks: http://jmock.org/oopsla2004.pdf

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    I think you have the right idea, but Dillon Kearns explained it a lot more clearly.
    – O'Rooney
    Commented Nov 25, 2014 at 20:56
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Stub

A stub is an object used to fake a method that has pre-programmed behavior. You may want to use this instead of an existing method in order to avoid unwanted side-effects (e.g. a stub could make a fake fetch call that returns a pre-programmed response without actually making a request to a server).

Mock

A mock is an object used to fake a method that has pre-programmed behavior as well as pre-programmed expectations. If these expectations are not met then the mock will cause the test to fail (e.g. a mock could make a fake fetch call that returns a pre-programmed response without actually making a request to a server which would expect e.g. the first argument to be "http://localhost:3008/" otherwise the test would fail.)

Difference

Unlike mocks, stubs do not have pre-programmed expectations that could fail your test.

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I was reading The Art of Unit Testing, and stumbled upon the following definition:

A fake is a generic term that can be used to describe either a stub or a mock object (handwritten or otherwise), because they both look like the real object. Whether a fake is a stub or a mock depends on how it's used in the current test. if it's used to check an interaction (asserted against), it's a mock object. Otherwise, it's a stub.

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  • Stubs vs. Mocks
    • Stubs
      1. provide specific answers to methods calls
        • ex: myStubbedService.getValues() just return a String needed by the code under test
      2. used by code under test to isolate it
      3. cannot fail test
        • ex: myStubbedService.getValues() just returns the stubbed value
      4. often implement abstract methods
    • Mocks
      1. "superset" of stubs; can assert that certain methods are called
        • ex: verify that myMockedService.getValues() is called only once
      2. used to test behaviour of code under test
      3. can fail test
        • ex: verify that myMockedService.getValues() was called once; verification fails, because myMockedService.getValues() was not called by my tested code
      4. often mocks interfaces
15

Mocks: help to emulate and examine outcoming interactions. These interactions are calls the SUT makes to its dependencies to change their state.

Stubs: help to emulate incoming interactions. These interactions are calls the SUT makes to its dependencies to get input data.

enter image description here

source : Unit Testing Principles, Practices, and Patterns - Manning

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  • Thank you for posting this image man, it makes more sense now. This answer needs more upvotes!
    – Parsa
    Commented Sep 20, 2023 at 6:15
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The generic term he uses is a Test Double (think stunt double). Test Double is a generic term for any case where you replace a production object for testing purposes. There are various kinds of double that Gerard lists:

  • Dummy objects are passed around but never actually used. Usually they are just used to fill parameter lists.
  • Fake objects actually have working implementations, but usually take some shortcut which makes them not suitable for production (an InMemoryTestDatabase is a good example).
  • Stubs provide canned answers to calls made during the test, usually not responding at all to anything outside what's programmed in for the test.
  • Spies are stubs that also record some information based on how they were called. One form of this might be an email service that records how many messages it was sent(also called Partial Mock).
  • Mocks are pre-programmed with expectations which form a specification of the calls they are expected to receive. They can throw an exception if they receive a call they don't expect and are checked during verification to ensure they got all the calls they were expecting.

Source

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Stub

A stub is an object that holds predefined data and uses it to answer calls during tests. It is used when you can’t or don’t want to involve objects that would answer with real data or have undesirable side effects.

An example can be an object that needs to grab some data from the database to respond to a method call. Instead of the real object, we introduced a stub and defined what data should be returned.

enter image description here


example of Stub:

public class GradesService {

   private final Gradebook gradebook;

   public GradesService(Gradebook gradebook) {
       this.gradebook = gradebook;
   }

   Double averageGrades(Student student) {
       return average(gradebook.gradesFor(student));
   }
}

Instead of calling database from Gradebook store to get real students grades, you preconfigure stub with grades that will be returned. You define just enough data to test average calculation algorithm.

public class GradesServiceTest {

   private Student student;
   private Gradebook gradebook;

   @Before
   public void setUp() throws Exception {
       gradebook = mock(Gradebook.class);
       student = new Student();
   }

   @Test
   public void calculates_grades_average_for_student() {
       //stubbing gradebook
       when(gradebook.gradesFor(student)).thenReturn(grades(8, 6, 10)); 

       double averageGrades = new GradesService(gradebook).averageGrades(student);

       assertThat(averageGrades).isEqualTo(8.0);
   }
}


Mock

Mocks are objects that register calls they receive. In test assertion you can verify on Mocks that all expected actions were performed. You use mocks when you don’t want to invoke production code or when there is no easy way to verify, that intended code was executed. There is no return value and no easy way to check system state change. An example can be a functionality that calls e-mail sending service.

You don’t want to send e-mails each time you run a test. Moreover, it is not easy to verify in tests that a right email was send. Only thing you can do is to verify the outputs of the functionality that is exercised in our test. In other worlds, verify that the e-mail sending service was called.

enter image description here


Example of Mock:

public class SecurityCentral {

   private final Window window;
   private final Door door;

   public SecurityCentral(Window window, Door door) {
       this.window = window;
       this.door = door;
   }

   void securityOn() {
       window.close();
       door.close();
   }
}

You don’t want to close real doors to test that security method is working, right? Instead, you place door and window mocks objects in the test code.

public class SecurityCentralTest {

   Window windowMock = mock(Window.class);
   Door doorMock = mock(Door.class);

   @Test
   public void enabling_security_locks_windows_and_doors() {
       SecurityCentral securityCentral = new SecurityCentral(windowMock, doorMock);

       securityCentral.securityOn();

       verify(doorMock).close();
       verify(windowMock).close();
   }
}

Thanks a lot to Michał Lipski for his good article. For further reading:

Test Double – Martin Fowler https://martinfowler.com/bliki/TestDouble.html
Test Double – xUnit Patterns http://xunitpatterns.com/Test%20Double.html
Mocks Aren’t Stubs – Martin Fowler https://martinfowler.com/articles/mocksArentStubs.html
Command Query Separation – Martin Fowler https://martinfowler.com/bliki/CommandQuerySeparation.html

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    THE BEST EXPLANATION!
    – Bob
    Commented Apr 1, 2023 at 9:00
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A fake is a generic term that can be used to describe either a stub or a mock object (handwritten or otherwise), because they both look like the real object.

Whether a fake is a stub or a mock depends on how it’s used in the current test. If it’s used to check an interaction (asserted against), it’s a mock object. Otherwise, it’s a stub.

Fakes makes sure test runs smoothly. It means that reader of your future test will understand what will be the behavior of the fake object, without needing to read its source code (without needing to depend on external resource).

What does test run smoothly mean?
Forexample in below code:

 public void Analyze(string filename)
        {
            if(filename.Length<8)
            {
                try
                {
                    errorService.LogError("long file entered named:" + filename);
                }
                catch (Exception e)
                {
                    mailService.SendEMail("[email protected]", "ErrorOnWebService", "someerror");
                }
            }
        }

You want to test mailService.SendEMail() method, to do that you need to simulate an Exception in you test method, so you just need to create a Fake Stub errorService class to simulate that result, then your test code will be able to test mailService.SendEMail() method. As you see you need to simulate a result which is from an another External Dependency ErrorService class.

9

Right from the paper Mock Roles, not Objects, by the developers of jMock :

Stubs are dummy implementations of production code that return canned results. Mock Objects act as stubs, but also include assertions to instrument the interactions of the target object with its neighbours.

So, the main differences are:

  • expectations set on stubs are usually generic, while expectations set on mocks can be more "clever" (e.g. return this on the first call, this on the second etc.).
  • stubs are mainly used to setup indirect inputs of the SUT, while mocks can be used to test both indirect inputs and indirect outputs of the SUT.

To sum up, while also trying to disperse the confusion from Fowler's article title: mocks are stubs, but they are not only stubs.

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  • 1
    i think you're right, but this is why the Fowler article is confusing, the article title is "Mocks Aren't Stubs"...but they ARE?! ¯_(ツ)_/¯
    – stonedauwg
    Commented Dec 7, 2016 at 16:14
  • @stonedauwg, indeed, I edited my post to incorporate your pun and a clarification. Hope this helps a bit more.
    – Dimos
    Commented Sep 7, 2017 at 19:03
  • @stonedauwg, a mock is not a stub, much like a rectangle is not a square. :) Commented Nov 8, 2017 at 19:07
8

I came across this interesting article by UncleBob The Little Mocker. It explains all the terminology in a very easy to understand manner, so its useful for beginners. Martin Fowlers article is a hard read especially for beginners like me.

8

a lot of valid answers up there but I think worth to mention this form uncle bob: https://8thlight.com/blog/uncle-bob/2014/05/14/TheLittleMocker.html

the best explanation ever with examples!

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  • Link-only answers aren't considered valuable on SO.
    – isherwood
    Commented Aug 9, 2021 at 19:30
7

A mock is both a technical and a functional object.

The mock is technical. It is indeed created by a mocking library (EasyMock, JMockit and more recently Mockito are known for these) thanks to byte code generation.
The mock implementation is generated in a way where we could instrument it to return a specific value when a method is invoked but also some other things such as verifying that a mock method was invoked with some specific parameters (strict check) or whatever the parameters (no strict check).

Instantiating a mock :

@Mock Foo fooMock

Recording a behavior :

when(fooMock.hello()).thenReturn("hello you!");

Verifying an invocation :

verify(fooMock).hello()

These are clearly not the natural way to instantiate/override the Foo class/behavior. That's why I refer to a technical aspect.

But the mock is also functional because it is an instance of the class we need to isolate from the SUT. And with recorded behaviors on it, we could use it in the SUT in the same way than we would do with a stub.


The stub is just a functional object : that is an instance of the class we need to isolate from the SUT and that's all. That means that both the stub class and all behaviors fixtures needed during our unit tests have to be defined explicitly.
For example to stub hello() would need to subclass the Foo class (or implements its interface it has it) and to override hello() :

public class HelloStub extends Hello{    
  public String hello { 
      return "hello you!"; 
  }
}

If another test scenario requires another value return, we would probably need to define a generic way to set the return :

public class HelloStub extends Hello{    
  public HelloStub(String helloReturn){
       this.helloReturn = helloReturn;
  }
  public String hello { 
      return helloReturn; 
  }
}

Other scenario : if I had a side effect method (no return) and I would check that that method was invoked, I should probably have added a boolean or a counter in the stub class to count how many times the method was invoked.


Conclusion

The stub requires often much overhead/code to write for your unit test. What mock prevents thanks to providing recording/verifying features out of the box.
That's why nowadays, the stub approach is rarely used in practice with the advent of excellent mock libraries.


About the Martin Fowler Article : I don't think to be a "mockist" programmer while I use mocks and I avoid stubs.
But I use mock when it is really required (annoying dependencies) and I favor test slicing and mini-integration tests when I test a class with dependencies which mocking would be an overhead.

6

Both Stubs and Mocks override external dependencies but the difference is

Stubs -> To Test Data

Mocks -> To Test Behavior

A quote from Fowler's Mocks Aren't Stubs article:

  • Stubs provide canned answers to calls made during the test, usually not responding at all to anything outside what's programmed in for the test.
  • Mocks are what we are talking about here: objects pre-programmed with expectations which form a specification of the calls they are expected to receive.

This obviously tells the difference.


Fake/Dummy -> Test nothing (just override functionality with empty methods, eg replace Logger to avoid any logging noise while testing)

1
  • This is totally wrong. Fakes are not dummies. Fakes are simplified implementations of the real thing. This is the second best thing after using the real dependency. Typically you can create a Fake service communicating over HTTP in your tests to run all your production code in the tests. High fidelity, but high cost.
    – oligofren
    Commented Apr 30 at 12:41
5

Plus useful answers, One of the most powerful point of using Mocks than Subs

If the collaborator [which the main code depend on it] is not under our control (e.g. from a third-party library),
In this case, stub is more difficult to write rather than mock.

1
  • Makes sense. The expected output could change. However, isn't this the same with Mock. Once you write mocks and expected output changes, you need to change the test code. Commented Jun 13, 2020 at 15:40
4

Stub helps us to run test. How? It gives values which helps to run test. These values are itself not real and we created these values just to run the test. For example we create a HashMap to give us values which are similar to values in database table. So instead of directly interacting with database we interact with Hashmap.

Mock is an fake object which runs the test. where we put assert.

1
  • "So instead of directly interacting with database we interact with Hashmap." ...because whe had no time yet to code the Database-Module, and we could not run the test-code without using the stub. Otherwise the very same Hasmap would be a mock! right? Commented Oct 24, 2015 at 11:39
4

See below example of mocks vs stubs using C# and Moq framework. Moq doesn't have a special keyword for Stub but you can use Mock object to create stubs too.

namespace UnitTestProject2
{
    using Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting;
    using Moq;
    [TestClass]
    public class UnitTest1
    {
        /// <summary>
        /// Test using Mock to Verify that GetNameWithPrefix method calls Repository GetName method "once" when Id is greater than Zero
        /// </summary>
        [TestMethod]
        public void GetNameWithPrefix_IdIsTwelve_GetNameCalledOnce()
        {
            // Arrange 
            var mockEntityRepository = new Mock<IEntityRepository>();
            mockEntityRepository.Setup(m => m.GetName(It.IsAny<int>()));

            var entity = new EntityClass(mockEntityRepository.Object);
            // Act 
            var name = entity.GetNameWithPrefix(12);
            // Assert
            mockEntityRepository.Verify(m => m.GetName(It.IsAny<int>()), Times.Once);
        }
        /// <summary>
        /// Test using Mock to Verify that GetNameWithPrefix method doesn't call Repository GetName method when Id is Zero
        /// </summary>
        [TestMethod]
        public void GetNameWithPrefix_IdIsZero_GetNameNeverCalled()
        {
            // Arrange 
            var mockEntityRepository = new Mock<IEntityRepository>();
            mockEntityRepository.Setup(m => m.GetName(It.IsAny<int>()));
            var entity = new EntityClass(mockEntityRepository.Object);
            // Act 
            var name = entity.GetNameWithPrefix(0);
            // Assert
            mockEntityRepository.Verify(m => m.GetName(It.IsAny<int>()), Times.Never);
        }
        /// <summary>
        /// Test using Stub to Verify that GetNameWithPrefix method returns Name with a Prefix
        /// </summary>
        [TestMethod]
        public void GetNameWithPrefix_IdIsTwelve_ReturnsNameWithPrefix()
        {
            // Arrange 
            var stubEntityRepository = new Mock<IEntityRepository>();
            stubEntityRepository.Setup(m => m.GetName(It.IsAny<int>()))
                .Returns("Stub");
            const string EXPECTED_NAME_WITH_PREFIX = "Mr. Stub";
            var entity = new EntityClass(stubEntityRepository.Object);
            // Act 
            var name = entity.GetNameWithPrefix(12);
            // Assert
            Assert.AreEqual(EXPECTED_NAME_WITH_PREFIX, name);
        }
    }
    public class EntityClass
    {
        private IEntityRepository _entityRepository;
        public EntityClass(IEntityRepository entityRepository)
        {
            this._entityRepository = entityRepository;
        }
        public string Name { get; set; }
        public string GetNameWithPrefix(int id)
        {
            string name = string.Empty;
            if (id > 0)
            {
                name = this._entityRepository.GetName(id);
            }
            return "Mr. " + name;
        }
    }
    public interface IEntityRepository
    {
        string GetName(int id);
    }
    public class EntityRepository:IEntityRepository
    {
        public string GetName(int id)
        {
            // Code to connect to DB and get name based on Id
            return "NameFromDb";
        }
    }
}

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