org.mockito.internal.creation
public class MockSettingsImpl<T> extends CreationSettings<T> implements MockSettings, MockCreationSettings<T>
defaultAnswer, extraInterfaces, invocationListeners, mockName, name, serializableMode, spiedInstance, stubOnly, typeToMock
Constructor and Description |
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MockSettingsImpl() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
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MockCreationSettings<T> |
confirm(Class<T> typeToMock) |
MockSettings |
defaultAnswer(Answer defaultAnswer)
Specifies default answers to interactions.
|
MockSettings |
extraInterfaces(Class<?>... extraInterfaces)
Specifies extra interfaces the mock should implement.
|
Answer<Object> |
getDefaultAnswer()
the default answer for this mock, see
MockSettings.defaultAnswer(org.mockito.stubbing.Answer) . |
Set<Class<?>> |
getExtraInterfaces()
the extra interfaces the mock object should implement.
|
List<InvocationListener> |
getInvocationListeners()
The invocation listeners attached to this mock, see
MockSettings.invocationListeners(org.mockito.listeners.InvocationListener...) . |
MockName |
getMockName()
the name of this mock, as printed on verification errors; see
MockSettings.name(java.lang.String) . |
Object |
getOuterClassInstance()
Used when mocking non-static inner classes in conjunction with
MockCreationSettings.isUsingConstructor() |
Object |
getSpiedInstance()
the spied instance - needed for spies.
|
Class<T> |
getTypeToMock()
Mocked type.
|
boolean |
hasInvocationListeners() |
MockSettings |
invocationListeners(InvocationListener... listeners)
Registers a listener for method invocations on this mock.
|
boolean |
isStubOnly()
Whether the mock is only for stubbing, i.e.
|
boolean |
isUsingConstructor()
Informs whether the mock instance should be created via constructor
|
MockSettings |
name(String name)
Specifies mock name.
|
MockSettings |
outerInstance(Object outerClassInstance)
Makes it possible to mock non-static inner classes in conjunction with
MockSettings.useConstructor() . |
MockSettings |
serializable()
Configures the mock to be serializable.
|
MockSettings |
serializable(SerializableMode mode)
Configures the mock to be serializable with a specific serializable mode.
|
MockSettings |
spiedInstance(Object spiedInstance)
Specifies the instance to spy on.
|
MockSettingsImpl |
stubOnly()
A stub-only mock does not record method
invocations, thus saving memory but
disallowing verification of invocations.
|
MockSettings |
useConstructor()
Mockito attempts to use constructor when creating instance of the mock.
|
MockSettings |
verboseLogging()
Enables real-time logging of method invocations on this mock.
|
getName, getSerializableMode, isSerializable, setExtraInterfaces, setMockName, setTypeToMock
clone, equals, finalize, getClass, hashCode, notify, notifyAll, toString, wait, wait, wait
getSerializableMode, isSerializable
public MockSettings serializable()
MockSettings
WARNING: This should be rarely used in unit testing.
The behaviour was implemented for a specific use case of a BDD spec that had an unreliable external dependency. This was in a web environment and the objects from the external dependency were being serialized to pass between layers.
Example:
List serializableMock = mock(List.class, withSettings().serializable());
serializable
in interface MockSettings
public MockSettings serializable(SerializableMode mode)
MockSettings
WARNING: This should be rarely used in unit testing.
The behaviour was implemented for a specific use case of a BDD spec that had an unreliable external dependency. This was in a web environment and the objects from the external dependency were being serialized to pass between layers.
List serializableMock = mock(List.class, withSettings().serializable(SerializableMode.ACROSS_CLASSLOADERS));
serializable
in interface MockSettings
mode
- serialization modepublic MockSettings extraInterfaces(Class<?>... extraInterfaces)
MockSettings
This mysterious feature should be used very occasionally. The object under test should know exactly its collaborators & dependencies. If you happen to use it often than please make sure you are really producing simple, clean & readable code.
Examples:
Foo foo = mock(Foo.class, withSettings().extraInterfaces(Bar.class, Baz.class));
//now, the mock implements extra interfaces, so following casting is possible:
Bar bar = (Bar) foo;
Baz baz = (Baz) foo;
extraInterfaces
in interface MockSettings
extraInterfaces
- extra interfaces the should implement.public MockName getMockName()
MockCreationSettings
MockSettings.name(java.lang.String)
.getMockName
in interface MockCreationSettings<T>
getMockName
in class CreationSettings<T>
public Set<Class<?>> getExtraInterfaces()
MockCreationSettings
getExtraInterfaces
in interface MockCreationSettings<T>
getExtraInterfaces
in class CreationSettings<T>
public Object getSpiedInstance()
MockCreationSettings
getSpiedInstance
in interface MockCreationSettings<T>
getSpiedInstance
in class CreationSettings<T>
public MockSettings name(String name)
MockSettings
Beware that naming mocks is not a solution for complex code which uses too many mocks or collaborators. If you have too many mocks then refactor the code so that it's easy to test/debug without necessity of naming mocks.
If you use @Mock annotation then you've got naming mocks for free! @Mock uses field name as mock name. Read more.
Examples:
Foo foo = mock(Foo.class, withSettings().name("foo"));
//Below does exactly the same:
Foo foo = mock(Foo.class, "foo");
name
in interface MockSettings
name
- the name of the mock, later used in all verification errorspublic MockSettings spiedInstance(Object spiedInstance)
MockSettings
As usual you are going to read the partial mock warning: Object oriented programming is more or less about tackling complexity by dividing the complexity into separate, specific, SRPy objects. How does partial mock fit into this paradigm? Well, it just doesn't... Partial mock usually means that the complexity has been moved to a different method on the same object. In most cases, this is not the way you want to design your application.
However, there are rare cases when partial mocks come handy: dealing with code you cannot change easily (3rd party interfaces, interim refactoring of legacy code etc.) However, I wouldn't use partial mocks for new, test-driven & well-designed code.
Enough warnings about partial mocks, see an example how spiedInstance() works:
Foo foo = mock(Foo.class, withSettings().spiedInstance(fooInstance));
//Below does exactly the same:
Foo foo = spy(fooInstance);
About stubbing for a partial mock, as it is a spy it will always call the real method, unless you use the
doReturn
|Throw
|Answer
|CallRealMethod
stubbing style. Example:
List list = new LinkedList();
List spy = spy(list);
//Impossible: real method is called so spy.get(0) throws IndexOutOfBoundsException (the list is yet empty)
when(spy.get(0)).thenReturn("foo");
//You have to use doReturn() for stubbing
doReturn("foo").when(spy).get(0);
spiedInstance
in interface MockSettings
spiedInstance
- to spy onpublic MockSettings defaultAnswer(Answer defaultAnswer)
MockSettings
It is the default answer so it will be used only when you don't stub the method call.
Foo mock = mock(Foo.class, withSettings().defaultAnswer(RETURNS_SMART_NULLS));
Foo mockTwo = mock(Foo.class, withSettings().defaultAnswer(new YourOwnAnswer()));
//Below does exactly the same:
Foo mockTwo = mock(Foo.class, new YourOwnAnswer());
defaultAnswer
in interface MockSettings
defaultAnswer
- default answer to be used by mock when not stubbedpublic Answer<Object> getDefaultAnswer()
MockCreationSettings
MockSettings.defaultAnswer(org.mockito.stubbing.Answer)
.getDefaultAnswer
in interface MockCreationSettings<T>
getDefaultAnswer
in class CreationSettings<T>
public MockSettingsImpl stubOnly()
MockSettings
Example:
List stubOnly = mock(List.class, withSettings().stubOnly());
stubOnly
in interface MockSettings
public MockSettings useConstructor()
MockSettings
Mockito.spy(Class)
.
Example:
//Robust API, via settings builder:
OtherAbstract spy = mock(OtherAbstract.class, withSettings()
.useConstructor().defaultAnswer(CALLS_REAL_METHODS));
//Mocking a non-static inner abstract class:
InnerAbstract spy = mock(InnerAbstract.class, withSettings()
.useConstructor().outerInstance(outerInstance).defaultAnswer(CALLS_REAL_METHODS));
useConstructor
in interface MockSettings
public MockSettings outerInstance(Object outerClassInstance)
MockSettings
MockSettings.useConstructor()
.
Example:
InnerClass mock = mock(InnerClass.class, withSettings()
.useConstructor().outerInstance(outerInstance).defaultAnswer(CALLS_REAL_METHODS));
outerInstance
in interface MockSettings
public boolean isUsingConstructor()
MockCreationSettings
isUsingConstructor
in interface MockCreationSettings<T>
isUsingConstructor
in class CreationSettings<T>
public Object getOuterClassInstance()
MockCreationSettings
MockCreationSettings.isUsingConstructor()
getOuterClassInstance
in interface MockCreationSettings<T>
getOuterClassInstance
in class CreationSettings<T>
public boolean isStubOnly()
MockCreationSettings
isStubOnly
in interface MockCreationSettings<T>
isStubOnly
in class CreationSettings<T>
public MockSettings verboseLogging()
MockSettings
Invocations are logged as they happen to the standard output stream.
Calling this method multiple times makes no difference.
Example:
List mockWithLogger = mock(List.class, withSettings().verboseLogging());
verboseLogging
in interface MockSettings
public MockSettings invocationListeners(InvocationListener... listeners)
MockSettings
Multiple listeners may be added, but the same object is only added once. The order, in which the listeners are added, is not guaranteed to be the order in which the listeners are notified. Example:
List mockWithListener = mock(List.class, withSettings().invocationListeners(new YourInvocationListener()));
See the listener interface
for more details.invocationListeners
in interface MockSettings
listeners
- The invocation listeners to add. May not be null.public List<InvocationListener> getInvocationListeners()
MockCreationSettings
MockSettings.invocationListeners(org.mockito.listeners.InvocationListener...)
.getInvocationListeners
in interface MockCreationSettings<T>
getInvocationListeners
in class CreationSettings<T>
public boolean hasInvocationListeners()
public Class<T> getTypeToMock()
MockCreationSettings
getTypeToMock
in interface MockCreationSettings<T>
getTypeToMock
in class CreationSettings<T>
public MockCreationSettings<T> confirm(Class<T> typeToMock)