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Rules
- Rules allow very flexible addition or redefinition of the behavior of each test method in a test class. Testers can reuse or extend one of the provided Rules below, or write their own.
For an example of a rule usage, there follows a test using the TemporaryFolder and ExpectedException rules:
public class DigitalAssetManagerTest {
@Rule
public final TemporaryFolder tempFolder = new TemporaryFolder();
@Rule
public final ExpectedException exception = ExpectedException.none();
@Test
public void countsAssets() throws IOException {
File icon = tempFolder.newFile("icon.png");
File assets = tempFolder.newFolder("assets");
createAssets(assets, 3);
DigitalAssetManager dam = new DigitalAssetManager(icon, assets);
assertEquals(3, dam.getAssetCount());
}
private void createAssets(File assets, int numberOfAssets) throws IOException {
for (int index = 0; index < numberOfAssets; index++) {
File asset = new File(assets, String.format("asset-%d.mpg", index));
Assert.assertTrue("Asset couldn't be created.", asset.createNewFile());
}
}
@Test
public void throwsIllegalArgumentExceptionIfIconIsNull() {
exception.expect(IllegalArgumentException.class);
exception.expectMessage("Icon is null, not a file, or doesn't exist.");
new DigitalAssetManager(null, null);
}
}
- The TemporaryFolder Rule allows creation of files and folders that are deleted when the test method finishes (whether it passes or fails). By default no exception is thrown if resources cannot be deleted:
public static class HasTempFolder {
@Rule
public final TemporaryFolder folder = new TemporaryFolder();
@Test
public void testUsingTempFolder() throws IOException {
File createdFile = folder.newFile("myfile.txt");
File createdFolder = folder.newFolder("subfolder");
// ...
}
}
-
TemporaryFolder#newFolder(String... folderNames)
creates recursively deep temporary folders -
TemporaryFolder#newFile()
creates a randomly named new file, and#newFolder()
creates a randomly named new folder - Starting with version 4.13
TemporaryFolder
optionally allows strict verification of deleted resources which fails the test withAssertionError
if resources cannot be deleted. This feature can only be opted for by using the#builder()
method. By default strict verification is disabled which maintains backward compatibility.
@Rule
public TemporaryFolder folder = TemporaryFolder.builder().assureDeletion().build();
- ExternalResource is a base class for Rules (like TemporaryFolder) that set up an external resource before a test (a file, socket, server, database connection, etc.), and guarantee to tear it down afterward:
public static class UsesExternalResource {
Server myServer = new Server();
@Rule
public final ExternalResource resource = new ExternalResource() {
@Override
protected void before() throws Throwable {
myServer.connect();
};
@Override
protected void after() {
myServer.disconnect();
};
};
@Test
public void testFoo() {
new Client().run(myServer);
}
}
- The ErrorCollector Rule allows execution of a test to continue after the first problem is found (for example, to collect all the incorrect rows in a table, and report them all at once):
public static class UsesErrorCollectorTwice {
@Rule
public final ErrorCollector collector = new ErrorCollector();
@Test
public void example() {
collector.addError(new Throwable("first thing went wrong"));
collector.addError(new Throwable("second thing went wrong"));
}
}
- Verifier is a base class for Rules like ErrorCollector, which can turn otherwise passing test methods into failing tests if a verification check is failed.
public static class UsesVerifier {
private static String sequence;
@Rule
public final Verifier collector = new Verifier() {
@Override
protected void verify() {
sequence += "verify ";
}
};
@Test
public void example() {
sequence += "test ";
}
@Test
public void verifierRunsAfterTest() {
sequence = "";
assertThat(testResult(UsesVerifier.class), isSuccessful());
assertEquals("test verify ", sequence);
}
}
- TestWatcher replaces TestWatchman from version 4.9. It implements TestRule, not MethodRule -- http://junit.org/javadoc/latest/org/junit/rules/TestWatcher.html
- TestWatchman was introduced in JUnit 4.7, it uses a MethodRule, which is now deprecated. -- http://junit.org/javadoc/latest/org/junit/rules/TestWatchman.html
- TestWatcher (and the deprecated TestWatchman) are base classes for Rules that take note of the testing action, without modifying it. For example, this class will keep a log of each passing and failing test:
import static org.junit.Assert.fail;
import org.junit.AssumptionViolatedException;
import org.junit.Rule;
import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.rules.TestRule;
import org.junit.rules.TestWatcher;
import org.junit.runner.Description;
import org.junit.runners.model.Statement;
public class WatchmanTest {
private static String watchedLog;
@Rule
public final TestRule watchman = new TestWatcher() {
@Override
public Statement apply(Statement base, Description description) {
return super.apply(base, description);
}
@Override
protected void succeeded(Description description) {
watchedLog += description.getDisplayName() + " " + "success!\n";
}
@Override
protected void failed(Throwable e, Description description) {
watchedLog += description.getDisplayName() + " " + e.getClass().getSimpleName() + "\n";
}
@Override
protected void skipped(AssumptionViolatedException e, Description description) {
watchedLog += description.getDisplayName() + " " + e.getClass().getSimpleName() + "\n";
}
@Override
protected void starting(Description description) {
super.starting(description);
}
@Override
protected void finished(Description description) {
super.finished(description);
}
};
@Test
public void fails() {
fail();
}
@Test
public void succeeds() {
}
}
- The TestName Rule makes the current test name available inside test methods:
public class NameRuleTest {
@Rule
public final TestName name = new TestName();
@Test
public void testA() {
assertEquals("testA", name.getMethodName());
}
@Test
public void testB() {
assertEquals("testB", name.getMethodName());
}
}
- The Timeout Rule applies the same timeout to all test methods in a class:
public static class HasGlobalTimeout {
public static String log;
@Rule
public final TestRule globalTimeout = Timeout.millis(20);
@Test
public void testInfiniteLoop1() {
log += "ran1";
for(;;) {}
}
@Test
public void testInfiniteLoop2() {
log += "ran2";
for(;;) {}
}
}
- The ExpectedException Rule allows in-test specification of expected exception types and messages:
public static class HasExpectedException {
@Rule
public final ExpectedException thrown = ExpectedException.none();
@Test
public void throwsNothing() {
}
@Test
public void throwsNullPointerException() {
thrown.expect(NullPointerException.class);
throw new NullPointerException();
}
@Test
public void throwsNullPointerExceptionWithMessage() {
thrown.expect(NullPointerException.class);
thrown.expectMessage("happened?");
thrown.expectMessage(startsWith("What"));
throw new NullPointerException("What happened?");
}
}
The ClassRule
annotation extends the idea of method-level Rules,
adding static fields that can affect the operation of a whole class. Any
subclass of ParentRunner
, including the standard BlockJUnit4ClassRunner
and Suite
classes, will support ClassRule
s.
For example, here is a test suite that connects to a server once before all the test classes run, and disconnects after they are finished:
@RunWith(Suite.class)
@SuiteClasses({A.class, B.class, C.class})
public class UsesExternalResource {
public static final Server myServer = new Server();
@ClassRule
public static final ExternalResource resource = new ExternalResource() {
@Override
protected void before() throws Throwable {
myServer.connect();
};
@Override
protected void after() {
myServer.disconnect();
};
};
}
The RuleChain rule allows ordering of TestRules:
public static class UseRuleChain {
@Rule
public final TestRule chain = RuleChain
.outerRule(new LoggingRule("outer rule"))
.around(new LoggingRule("middle rule"))
.around(new LoggingRule("inner rule"));
@Test
public void example() {
assertTrue(true);
}
}
writes the log
starting outer rule
starting middle rule
starting inner rule
finished inner rule
finished middle rule
finished outer rule
Most custom rules can be implemented as an extension of the ExternalResource
rule. However, if you need more information about the test class or method in question, you'll need to implement the TestRule
interface.
import org.junit.rules.TestRule;
import org.junit.runner.Description;
import org.junit.runners.model.Statement;
public class IdentityRule implements TestRule {
@Override
public Statement apply(final Statement base, final Description description) {
return base;
}
}
Of course, the power from implementing TestRule
comes from using a combination of custom constructors, adding methods to the class for use in tests, and wrapping the provided Statement
in a new Statement
. For instance, consider the following test rule that provides a named logger for every test:
package org.example.junit;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import org.junit.rules.TestRule;
import org.junit.runner.Description;
import org.junit.runners.model.Statement;
public class TestLogger implements TestRule {
private Logger logger;
public Logger getLogger() {
return this.logger;
}
@Override
public Statement apply(final Statement base, final Description description) {
return new Statement() {
@Override
public void evaluate() throws Throwable {
logger = Logger.getLogger(description.getTestClass().getName() + '.' + description.getDisplayName());
base.evaluate();
}
};
}
}
Then that rule could be applied like so:
import java.util.logging.Logger;
import org.example.junit.TestLogger;
import org.junit.Rule;
import org.junit.Test;
public class MyLoggerTest {
@Rule
public final TestLogger logger = new TestLogger();
@Test
public void checkOutMyLogger() {
final Logger log = logger.getLogger();
log.warn("Your test is showing!");
}
}