52

Is there any way we can mock the static util method while testing in JUnit?

I know Powermock can mock static calls, but I don't want to use Powermock.

Are there any alternatives?

5
  • 1
    You cannot mock static methods even if you use Mockito.
    – Abubakkar
    Commented Jul 7, 2017 at 9:21
  • Is there a reason why you do not want to use powermock?
    – Uwe Allner
    Commented Jul 7, 2017 at 9:25
  • 1
    Do you have to mock it? Is it your code and you can rewrite it so that there will be no statics? Static methods are death to testability
    – Arek
    Commented Jul 7, 2017 at 9:29
  • Those are util class use by other module so I can not change
    – gati sahu
    Commented Jul 7, 2017 at 9:30
  • 1
    @UweAllner, one reason for not using powermock is Code Coverage tool like JaCoCo may not consider code covered through powermock in code coverage report.
    – Dexter
    Commented May 8, 2020 at 9:25

4 Answers 4

39

(I assume you can use Mockito though) Nothing dedicated comes to my mind but I tend to use the following strategy when it comes to situations like that:

1) In the class under test, replace the static direct call with a call to a package level method that wraps the static call itself:

public class ToBeTested{

    public void myMethodToTest(){
         ...
         String s = makeStaticWrappedCall();
         ...
    }

    String makeStaticWrappedCall(){
        return Util.staticMethodCall();
    }
}

2) Spy the class under test while testing and mock the wrapped package level method:

public class ToBeTestedTest{

    @Spy
    ToBeTested tbTestedSpy = new ToBeTested();

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

    @Test
    public void myMethodToTestTest() throws Exception{
       // Arrange
       doReturn("Expected String").when(tbTestedSpy).makeStaticWrappedCall();

       // Act
       tbTestedSpy.myMethodToTest();
    }
}

Here is an article I wrote on spying that includes similar case, if you need more insight: sourceartists.com/mockito-spying

3
  • How can you call constructor when the question clearly ask about static methods? Wouldn't it be useless to call constructor when all methods are static? Also spying will also be useless in this case.
    – Talha
    Commented Jun 12, 2018 at 7:14
  • 1
    If the class is not final he could subclass ToBeTested adding the wrapper method and test the subclass.
    – thomas77
    Commented Sep 19, 2018 at 10:53
  • I get an error Wanted but not invoked: Actually, there were zero interactions with this mock. when I try to verify whether the method was called.
    – 6rchid
    Commented Jan 23, 2019 at 7:42
11

When you have static code that gives you trouble in your unit tests; so that you feel you have to "mock it away", you have exactly these options:

  • You turn to PowerMock(ito). Works fine.
  • You turn to JMockit. Works fine, too.
  • If you are testing code you have written yourself, you might want to step back and ask yourself: "why did I write code that I now find hard to unit test?"

In other words: if you want to use a mocking framework, you have to use one of those listed above. On the one side, that is absolutely fair. static is one part of the Java language; so why not use a framework that allows you to deal with it?

But of course: you still have the static call in your production code then. Leading to tight coupling, and preventing polymorphism.

So: if you can get rid of the static call (even when just using the workaround suggested in the other answer) - all the better. If not: Mockito can't help; you need the magic of byte code manipulation resp. JVM agents.

9

You can use Mockito (since version 3.4.0) to mock static methods.

Given a class Foo:

class Foo{
  static String method() {
    return "foo";
  }
}

This is the test:

@Test
void testMethod() {
    assertEquals("foo", Foo.method());
    try (MockedStatic mocked = Mockito.mockStatic(Foo.class)) {
        mocked.when(Foo::method).thenReturn("bar");
        assertEquals("bar", Foo.method());
        mocked.verify(Foo::method);
    }
    assertEquals("foo", Foo.method());
}

This requires the dependency org.mockito:mockito-inline:3.4.0 or newer version.

7
  • I used org.mockito:mockito-inline:3.4.0 and newer version and copied the same code as above. But still i get compilation error for "MockedStatic" and "mockStatic". it does not show any import statements. I tried using import org.mockito.*; but it does not work Commented Sep 9, 2020 at 6:03
  • After using the edited answer as well, i am getting compilation error as "MockedStatic cannot be resolved to a type". Do we need any special import statements. My pom.xml dependecy added as <dependency> <groupId>org.mockito</groupId> <artifactId>mockito-inline</artifactId> <version>3.5.9</version> </dependency> Commented Sep 9, 2020 at 6:37
  • @user2000189 are you using SpringBoot? The latest version of spring-boot ( 2.3.3.RELEASE) does not support Mockito 3.4.0. If you want to use it, you need to force org.mockito:mockito-core to version 3.4.0.
    – Marc
    Commented Sep 9, 2020 at 6:38
  • i am using spring-boot (2.3.1-RELEASE) and mockito-core as 3.3.3. Commented Sep 9, 2020 at 6:53
  • @user2000189 forcing mockito-core to version 3.4.0 will let you run this example, but be aware of other potential issues since it's not yet officially supported by Spring.
    – Marc
    Commented Sep 9, 2020 at 7:08
2

I've had a lot of luck with doing something similar to what Maciej suggested in his answer above. In Java8 I like to wrap those static methods with functional interfaces to make them more straightforward to inject or mock. For example:

public class MyClass {
    private MyStaticWrapper staticWrapper;

    public MyClass(final MyStaticWrapper staticWrapper) {
        this.staticWrapper = staticWrapper;
    }

    public void main() {
        ...
        staticWrapper.doSomething();
        ...    
    }
}    

public interface MyStaticWrapper {
    default void doSomething() {
      Util.annoyingUntestableStaticFunction();
    }
}
1
  • 2
    hello , do you have a example of unit testing for this please ?
    – NinjaDev
    Commented Mar 3, 2021 at 15:02

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