More compact Mockito with Java 8, lambda expressions and Mockito-Java8 add-ons

Posted: 2015-06-30 in Tools
Tags: , , , , , , , , , , ,

Mockito-Java8 is a set of Mockito add-ons leveraging Java 8 and lambda expressions to make mocking with Mockito even more compact.

At the beginning of 2015 I gave my flash talk Java 8 brings power to testing! at GeeCON TDD 2015 and DevConf.cz 2015. In my speech using 4 examples I showed how Java 8 – namely lambda expressions – can simplify testing tools and testing in general. One of those tools was Mokcito. To not let my PoC code die on slides and to make it simply available for others I have released a small project with two, useful in specified case, Java 8 add-ons for Mockito.

Mockito logo

Quick introduction

As a prerequisite, let’s assume we have the following data structure:

@Immutable
class ShipSearchCriteria {
    int minimumRange;
    int numberOfPhasers;
}

The library provides two add-ons:

Lambda matcher – allows to define matcher logic within a lambda expression.

given(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
    argLambda(sc -> sc.getMinimumRange() > 1000))).willReturn(4);

Argument Captor – Java 8 edition – allows to use ArgumentCaptor in a one line (here with AssertJ):

verify(ts).findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
    assertArg(sc -> assertThat(sc.getMinimumRange()).isLessThan(2000)));

Lambda matcher

With a help of the static method argLambda a lambda matcher instance is created which can be used to define matcher logic within a lambda expression (here for stubbing). It could be especially useful when working with complex classes pass as an argument.

@Test
public void shouldAllowToUseLambdaInStubbing() {
    //given
    given(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
        argLambda(sc -> sc.getMinimumRange() > 1000))).willReturn(4);
    //expect
    assertThat(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
        new ShipSearchCriteria(1500, 2))).isEqualTo(4);
    //expect
    assertThat(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
        new ShipSearchCriteria(700, 2))).isEqualTo(0);
}

In comparison the same logic implemented with a custom Answer in Java 7:

@Test
public void stubbingWithCustomAsnwerShouldBeLonger() {  //old way
    //given
    given(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(any())).willAnswer(new Answer<Integer>() {
        @Override
        public Integer answer(InvocationOnMock invocation) throws Throwable {
            Object[] args = invocation.getArguments();
            ShipSearchCriteria criteria = (ShipSearchCriteria) args[0];
            if (criteria.getMinimumRange() > 1000) {
                return 4;
            } else {
                return 0;
            }
        }
    });
    //expect
    assertThat(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
        new ShipSearchCriteria(1500, 2))).isEqualTo(4);
    //expect
    assertThat(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
        new ShipSearchCriteria(700, 2))).isEqualTo(0);
}

Even Java 8 and less readable constructions don’t help too much:

@Test
public void stubbingWithCustomAsnwerShouldBeLongerEvenAsLambda() {  //old way
    //given
    given(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(any())).willAnswer(invocation -> {
        ShipSearchCriteria criteria = (ShipSearchCriteria) invocation.getArguments()[0];
        return criteria.getMinimumRange() > 1000 ? 4 : 0;
    });
    //expect
    assertThat(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
        new ShipSearchCriteria(1500, 2))).isEqualTo(4);
    //expect
    assertThat(ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
        new ShipSearchCriteria(700, 2))).isEqualTo(0);
}

Argument Captor – Java 8 edition

A static method assertArg creates an argument matcher which implementation internally uses ArgumentMatcher with an assertion provided in a lambda expression. The example below uses AssertJ to provide meaningful error message, but any assertions (like native from TestNG or JUnit) could be used (if really needed). This allows to have inlined ArgumentCaptor:

@Test
public void shouldAllowToUseAssertionInLambda() {
    //when
    ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(searchCriteria);
    //then
    verify(ts).findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(
        assertArg(sc -> assertThat(sc.getMinimumRange()).isLessThan(2000)));
}

In comparison to 3 lines in the classic way:

@Test
public void shouldAllowToUseArgumentCaptorInClassicWay() {  //old way
    //when
    ts.findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(searchCriteria);
    //then
    ArgumentCaptor<ShipSearchCriteria> captor = 
        ArgumentCaptor.forClass(ShipSearchCriteria.class);
    verify(ts).findNumberOfShipsInRangeByCriteria(captor.capture());
    assertThat(captor.getValue().getMinimumRange()).isLessThan(2000);
}

Summary

The presented add-ons were created as PoC for my conference speech, but should be fully functional and potentially useful in the specific cases. To use it in your project it is enough to use Mockito 1.10.x or 2.0.x-beta, add mockito-java8 as a dependency and of course compile your project with Java 8+.

More details are available on the project webpage: https://github.com/szpak/mockito-java8

Update 20151217. You may be also interested in my new blog post about using Mockito wihtout static imports.

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