It is pretty easy to test an aspect (including its pointcut expressions) in isolation, without the whole web context (or any context at all).
I will first try to give a generalized example, not the one that was in the OP question.
Let's imagine that we have an aspect that must throw an exception if a method's first argument is null, otherwise allow the method invocation proceed.
It should only be applied to controllers annotated with our custom @ThrowOnNullFirstArg
annotation.
@Aspect
public class ThrowOnNullFirstArgAspect {
@Pointcut("" +
"within(@org.springframework.stereotype.Controller *) || " +
"within(@(@org.springframework.stereotype.Controller *) *)")
private void isController() {}
@Around("isController()")
public Object executeAroundController(ProceedingJoinPoint point) throws Throwable {
throwIfNullFirstArgIsPassed(point);
return point.proceed();
}
private void throwIfNullFirstArgIsPassed(ProceedingJoinPoint point) {
if (!(point.getSignature() instanceof MethodSignature)) {
return;
}
if (point.getArgs().length > 0 && point.getArgs()[0] == null) {
throw new IllegalStateException("The first argument is not allowed to be null");
}
}
}
We could test it like this:
public class ThrowOnNullFirstArgAspectTest {
private final ThrowOnNullFirstArgAspect aspect = new ThrowOnNullFirstArgAspect();
private TestController controllerProxy;
@Before
public void setUp() {
AspectJProxyFactory aspectJProxyFactory = new AspectJProxyFactory(new TestController());
aspectJProxyFactory.addAspect(aspect);
DefaultAopProxyFactory proxyFactory = new DefaultAopProxyFactory();
AopProxy aopProxy = proxyFactory.createAopProxy(aspectJProxyFactory);
controllerProxy = (TestController) aopProxy.getProxy();
}
@Test
public void whenInvokingWithNullFirstArg_thenExceptionShouldBeThrown() {
try {
controllerProxy.someMethod(null);
fail("An exception should be thrown");
} catch (IllegalStateException e) {
assertThat(e.getMessage(), is("The first argument is not allowed to be null"));
}
}
@Test
public void whenInvokingWithNonNullFirstArg_thenNothingShouldBeThrown() {
String result = controllerProxy.someMethod(Descriptor.builder().externalId("id").build());
assertThat(result, is("ok"));
}
@Controller
@ThrowOnNullFirstArg
private static class TestController {
@SuppressWarnings("unused")
String someMethod(Descriptor descriptor) {
return "ok";
}
}
}
The key part is inside the setUp()
method. Please note that it also allows to verify the correctness of your pointcut expression.
How to test that the aspect method actually gets called?
If the aspect method only has some some effect that is difficult to verify in tests, you could use a mock library like Mockito and make a stub around your real aspect and then verify that the method was actually called.
private ControllerExceptionAspect aspect = Mockito.stub(new ControllerExceptionAspect());
Then in your test, after invoking the controller via proxy
Mockito.verify(aspect).afterThrowingAdvice(Matchers.any());
How to test that the aspect method actually writes to log?
If you are using logback-classic, you could write an Appender
implementation and add it to the Logger
of interest, and then inspect whether a message that you expect gets logged or not.
public class TestAppender extends AppenderBase<ILoggingEvent> {
public List<ILoggingEvent> events = new ArrayList<>();
@Override
protected void append(ILoggingEvent event) {
events.add(event);
}
}
In the fixture setup:
appender = new TestAppender();
// logback Appender must be started to accept messages
appender.start();
ch.qos.logback.classic.Logger logger = (ch.qos.logback.classic.Logger) LoggerFactory.getLogger(ControllerExceptionAspect.class.class);
logger.addAppender(appender);
and in your test:
List<ILoggingEvent> errors = appender.events.stream()
.filter(event -> event.getLevel() == Level.ERROR)
.collect(Collectors.toList());
assertEquals("Exactly one ERROR is expected in log", 1, errors.size());
// any other assertions you need
Probably you would also need to stop()
the Appender
in @After
method, but I'm not sure.
adviceexecution()
in your test.