1

I'm trying to test my Session Beans with JUnit, but I can't. I've tried a lot of method, but still get some exceptions. Here is what I need:

  • I have a few Stateless Session Beans I need to test. Each has the same @PersistenceContext and uses an EntityManager
  • With my test cases I need to test their methods. For instance: if I add an user with username X and then I try to add another one with the same username, I want to catch an Exception.

Can someone provide a simple and short generic test example? I've already read many, but I always get an error (I get NullPointerException for the EntityManager when I call a method like: sessionBean.method() (which does, for instance, entityManager.find(...)), or I am not able to initialize the Context, or other PersistenceException).

3
  • How are you writing your test cases? Do you use some integration framework like Arquillian or embedded EJB container like OpenEJB? Jan 22, 2012 at 22:38
  • @PiotrNowicki I tried both (using mockito as framework). I don't know how to set them, what I need to import... Any method is fine, anyway.
    – Simon
    Jan 22, 2012 at 22:54
  • I have a simple example : stackoverflow.com/questions/6469751/testing-an-ejb-with-junit/… . Look at my answer. Sep 30, 2014 at 13:44

4 Answers 4

4

You might be interested in one of the latest posts of Antonio Goncalves:

WYTIWYR : What You Test Is What You Run

It tells about testing EJB with EntityManager using:

  • Mockito,
  • Embedded EJB Container,
  • Arquillian.
2
  • I'm reading it, but I see that he uses a mocked entity manager and inject it into its session bean (where there is @DataSourceDefinition). However, I use the @PersistenceContext with the persistence.xml descriptor. So, I don't know how to fit his example to my case.
    – Simon
    Jan 22, 2012 at 23:28
  • He's mocking EntityManager only when neither the embedded EJB container nor the Arquillian are used. In any other cases he uses the actual EntityManager injected by the container. Jan 23, 2012 at 21:33
1

I solved creating a Stateless Session Bean and injecting its Entity Manager to test classes. I post the code in case someone will need it:

@Stateless(name = "TestProxy")
@Remote({TestProxyRemote.class})
public class TestProxy implements TestProxyRemote {

    @PersistenceContext(unitName = "mph")
    private EntityManager em;

    @Override
    public void persist(Object o) {
        em.persist(o);
    }

    @Override
    public void clear() {
        em.clear();
    }

    @Override
    public void merge(Object o) {
        em.merge(o);
    }

    @Override
    @SuppressWarnings({ "rawtypes", "unchecked" })
    public Object find(Class classe, String key) {
        return em.find(classe, key);
    }

    @Override
    @SuppressWarnings({ "rawtypes", "unchecked" })
    public Object find(Class classe, long key) {
        return em.find(classe, key);
    }

    @SuppressWarnings("rawtypes")
    @Override
    public List getEntityList(String query) {
        Query q = em.createQuery(query);
        return q.getResultList();
    }

}



public class MyTest {

    @BeforeClass
    public static void setUpBeforeClass() throws NamingException {
        Properties env = new Properties();
        env.setProperty(Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY,"org.jnp.interfaces.NamingContextFactory");
        env.setProperty(Context.PROVIDER_URL, "localhost:1099");
        env.setProperty("java.naming.factory.url.pkgs","org.jboss.naming:org.jnp.interfaces");
        jndiContext = new InitialContext(env);
        try {
            proxy = (TestProxyRemote) jndiContext.lookup("TestProxy/remote");
        } catch (NamingException e) {
            e.printStackTrace();
        }
    }
}

Then I can use proxy.find() to get the entities I need, o proxy.getEntityList() to execute a query to retrieve all the instance of an Entity. Or I can add other methods if I want.

0

Unitils provides a really cool support for JPA. Unitils can be used with JUnit or TestNG and in case you need a mocking framework, Unitils provides its own mocking module as well as support for EasyMock.

    @JpaEntityManagerFactory(persistenceUnit = "testPersistenceUnit")
    @DataSet(loadStrategy = RefreshLoadStrategy.class)
    public class TimeTrackerTest extends UnitilsTestNG {

        @TestedObject
        private TimeTrackerBean cut = new TimeTrackerBean();

        @InjectInto(target="cut",property="em")
        @PersistenceContext
        private EntityManager em;

        @Test
        @DataSet("TimeTrackerTest.testAddTimeSlot.xml")
        public void yourTest() {
            ...
        }
   }

@JpaEntityManagerFactory - Used to specify your persistence unit. It automatically picks up the persistence.xml from your project classpath. @DataSet - Just in case you need to load any test data you can use this. @TestedObject - Marks your Class Under Test @PersistenceContext - Automatically creates your EntityManager instance from the configurations made in the persistence.xml - PersistenceUnit. @InjectInto - Injects the em instance into the target (cut)

For more information refer this.

Hope this helps.

0

I'm using Needle for this. It works well with Mockito and EasyMock if you want to mock other objects.

First I write a persistencte.xml for tests (src/test/resources/META-INF) like this:

<persistence-unit name="rapPersistenceTest" transaction-type="RESOURCE_LOCAL">
    <properties>
     <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.driver" value="org.h2.Driver"/>
     <property name="javax.persistence.jdbc.url" value="jdbc:h2:~/test"/>
    ...
    </properties>
</persistence-unit>

In my Junit-Testclass I write:

public class DaoNeedleTest {

//here Needle will create persistenceContext for your testclass
public static DatabaseRule databaseRule = new DatabaseRule("rapPersistenceTest");

//here you can get the entityManager to manipulate data directly
private final EntityManager entityManager = databaseRule.getEntityManager();

@Rule
public NeedleRule needleRule = new NeedleRule(databaseRule);

//here you can instantiate your daoService
@ObjectUnderTest
DAOService daoService;

@Test
public void test() {
    //if your method needs a transaction here you can get it
    entityManager.getTransaction().begin();

    daoService.yourMethod();        

    entityManager.getTransaction().commit();
}

You also need a Needle-configuration File in src/test/resources, where you tell what kind of Mock-provider you are using. E.g. I'm using Mockito:

mock.provider=de.akquinet.jbosscc.needle.mock.MockitoProvider

That's it.

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