Testing Spring @MVC annotations
I ran into a problem the other day where a @Valid annotation was accidentally removed from a controller class. Unfortunately, it didn't break any of our tests. None of our unit tests actually exercise the Spring AnnotationMethodHandlerAda开发者_C百科pter
pathway. We just test our controller classes directly.
How can I write a unit or integration test that will correctly fail if my @MVC annotations are wrong? Is there a way I can ask Spring to find and exercise the relevant controller with a MockHttpServlet or something?
I write integration tests for this kind of thing. Say you have a bean with validation annotations:
public class MyForm {
@NotNull
private Long myNumber;
...
}
and a controller that handles the submission
@Controller
@RequestMapping("/simple-form")
public class MyController {
private final static String FORM_VIEW = null;
@RequestMapping(method = RequestMethod.POST)
public String processFormSubmission(@Valid MyForm myForm,
BindingResult result) {
if (result.hasErrors()) {
return FORM_VIEW;
}
// process the form
return "success-view";
}
}
and you want to test that the @Valid and @NotNull annotations are wired correctly:
@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration({"file:web/WEB-INF/application-context.xml",
"file:web/WEB-INF/dispatcher-servlet.xml"})
public class MyControllerIntegrationTest {
@Inject
private ApplicationContext applicationContext;
private MockHttpServletRequest request;
private MockHttpServletResponse response;
private HandlerAdapter handlerAdapter;
@Before
public void setUp() throws Exception {
this.request = new MockHttpServletRequest();
this.response = new MockHttpServletResponse();
this.handlerAdapter = applicationContext.getBean(HandlerAdapter.class);
}
ModelAndView handle(HttpServletRequest request, HttpServletResponse response)
throws Exception {
final HandlerMapping handlerMapping = applicationContext.getBean(HandlerMapping.class);
final HandlerExecutionChain handler = handlerMapping.getHandler(request);
assertNotNull("No handler found for request, check you request mapping", handler);
final Object controller = handler.getHandler();
// if you want to override any injected attributes do it here
final HandlerInterceptor[] interceptors =
handlerMapping.getHandler(request).getInterceptors();
for (HandlerInterceptor interceptor : interceptors) {
final boolean carryOn = interceptor.preHandle(request, response, controller);
if (!carryOn) {
return null;
}
}
final ModelAndView mav = handlerAdapter.handle(request, response, controller);
return mav;
}
@Test
public void testProcessFormSubmission() throws Exception {
request.setMethod("POST");
request.setRequestURI("/simple-form");
request.setParameter("myNumber", "");
final ModelAndView mav = handle(request, response);
// test we're returned back to the form
assertViewName(mav, "simple-form");
// make assertions on the errors
final BindingResult errors = assertAndReturnModelAttributeOfType(mav,
"org.springframework.validation.BindingResult.myForm",
BindingResult.class);
assertEquals(1, errors.getErrorCount());
assertEquals("", errors.getFieldValue("myNumber"));
}
See my blog post on integration testing Spring's MVC annotations
Sure. There's no reason why your test can't instantiate its own DispatcherServlet
, inject it with the various items which it would have in a container (e.g. ServletContext
), including the location of the context definition file.
Spring comes with a variety of servlet-related MockXYZ
classes for this purpose, including MockServletContext
, MockHttpServletRequest
and MockHttpServletResponse
. They're not really "mock" objects in the usual sense, they're more like dumb stubs, but they do the job.
The servlet's test context would have the usual MVC-related beans, plus your beans to test. Once the servlet is initialized, create the mock requests and responses, and feed them into the servet's service()
method. If request gets routed correctly, you can check the results as written to the mock response.
In upcoming spring 3.2 (SNAPSHOT available) or with spring-test-mvc (https://github.com/SpringSource/spring-test-mvc) you can do it like this:
first we emulate Validation as we do not want to test the validator, just want to know if validation is called.
public class LocalValidatorFactoryBeanMock extends LocalValidatorFactoryBean
{
private boolean fakeErrors;
public void fakeErrors ( )
{
this.fakeErrors = true;
}
@Override
public boolean supports ( Class<?> clazz )
{
return true;
}
@Override
public void validate ( Object target, Errors errors, Object... validationHints )
{
if (fakeErrors)
{
errors.reject("error");
}
}
}
this is our test class:
@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
@WebAppConfiguration
@ContextConfiguration
public class RegisterControllerTest
{
@Autowired
private WebApplicationContext wac;
private MockMvc mockMvc;
@Autowired
@InjectMocks
private RegisterController registerController;
@Autowired
private LocalValidatorFactoryBeanMock validator;
@Before
public void setup ( )
{
this.mockMvc = MockMvcBuilders.webAppContextSetup(this.wac).build();
// if you want to inject mocks into your controller
MockitoAnnotations.initMocks(this);
}
@Test
public void testPostValidationError ( ) throws Exception
{
validator.fakeErrors();
MockHttpServletRequestBuilder post = post("/info/register");
post.param("name", "Bob");
ResultActions result = getMockMvc().perform(post);
// no redirect as we have errors
result.andExpect(view().name("info/register"));
}
@Configuration
@Import(DispatcherServletConfig.class)
static class Config extends WebMvcConfigurerAdapter
{
@Override
public Validator getValidator ( )
{
return new LocalValidatorFactoryBeanMock();
}
@Bean
RegisterController registerController ( )
{
return new RegisterController();
}
}
}
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