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I'm trying to test a SpringBoot application that self-registers with with a ServiceRegistry (eg. Eureka/Consul), and then deregisters on shutdown. The implementation simply extends pre-existing spring cloud abstractions, for example

@Component
public class MyAutoRegistration extends AbstractAutoServiceRegistration<MyRegistration> {

   @override
   protected void register(){...}

   @Override
   protected void deregister(){...}

The registration and deregistration are working as expected in sample apps, but I can't capture this in a SpringBootTest because the test runs BEFORE self-registration occurs (ie. immediately after spring context is loaded and logs shows "app started in N seconds..."). Likewise, the test finishes before the app is shutdown (ie. before spring context shutdowns), and hence before deregistration initiates.

@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@SpringBootTest(classes = MyClientAutoConfiguration.class)
@EnableAutoConfiguration
public class MyRegistrationTest {

@Autowired
MyRegistration record;

@SpyBean
@Autowired
ServiceRegistry<MyRegistration> registry;

@Test
public void registers_and_deregisters(){
    verify(registry, times(1)).register(record);
    verify(registry, times(1)).deregister(record);
}

Found a test class that does something similar, but its a bit beyond my comprehension. Is there a straightforward way to include auto registration/deregistration into a @SpringBootTest?

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  • Not sure what is beyond your comprehension there, but that is testing exactly what you describe, most of the classes are just auto registration and service registry. One thing I noticed is that your test doesn't have webEnvironment=RANDOM defined. Mar 21, 2019 at 16:17
  • sorry for delay - having SO access issues. I will study this example - I guess my failure of comprehension is regarding the event listeners. When I run a unit test, it exists IMMEDIATELY after spring context is created. It does not wait for my, say, autoregistration to occur or calls annotated by @PostConstruct. My knowledge gap is related to where you told spring to wait until autoregistration had completed. Mar 26, 2019 at 17:38

1 Answer 1

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Red-herring... my actual problem was I did not have spring-boot-starter-web on my classpath, which implicitly imports spring-boot-starter-tomcat. Without these, the autoregistration component that I was trying to test failed to autoconfigure. Putting starter-web back on the classpath fixed my issue.

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