Trait that will pass a new JMockCycle into any test that needs one.
Class that wraps and manages the lifecycle of a single org.jmock.Mockery context object,
provides some basic syntax sugar for using JMock
in Scala.
Class that wraps and manages the lifecycle of a single org.jmock.Mockery context object,
provides some basic syntax sugar for using JMock
in Scala.
Using the JMock API directly, you first need a Mockery context object:
val context = new Mockery
JMockCycle uses jMock's ClassImposterizer to support mocking of classes, so the following line
would also be needed if you wanted that functionality as well:
context.setImposteriser(ClassImposteriser.INSTANCE)
When using this class, you would instead create an instance of this class (which will create and
wrap a Mockery object) and import its members, like this:
val cycle = new JMockCycle import cycle._
Using the JMock API directly, you would create a mock object like this:
val mockCollaborator = context.mock(classOf[Collaborator])
Having imported the members of an instance of this class, you can shorten that to:
val mockCollaborator = mock[Collaborator]
After creating mocks, you set expectations on them, using syntax like this:
context.checking( new Expectations() { oneOf (mockCollaborator).documentAdded("Document") exactly(3).of (mockCollaborator).documentChanged("Document") } )
Having imported the members of an instance of this class, you can shorten this step to:
expecting { e => import e._
oneOf (mockCollaborator).documentAdded("Document")
exactly(3).of (mockCollaborator).documentChanged("Document")
}
The expecting method will create a new Expectations object, pass it into
the function you provide, which sets the expectations. After the function returns, the expecting
method will pass the Expectations object to the checking
method of its internal Mockery context.
The expecting method passes an instance of class
org.scalatest.mock.JMockExpectations to the function you pass into
expectations. JMockExpectations extends org.jmock.Expectations and
adds several overloaded withArg methods. These withArg methods simply
invoke corresponding with methods on themselves. Because with is
a keyword in Scala, to invoke these directly you must surround them in back ticks, like this:
oneOf (mockCollaborator).documentAdded(`with`("Document"))
By importing the members of the passed JMockExpectations object, you can
instead call withArg with no back ticks needed:
oneOf (mockCollaborator).documentAdded(withArg("Document"))
Once you've set expectations on the mock objects, when using the JMock API directly, you use the mock, then invoke
assertIsSatisfied on the Mockery context to make sure the mock
was used in accordance with the expectations you set on it. Here's how that looks:
classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0)) classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0)) classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0)) classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0)) context.assertIsSatisfied()
This class enables you to use the following, more declarative syntax instead:
whenExecuting {
classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0))
classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0))
classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0))
classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0))
}
The whenExecuting method will execute the passed function, then
invoke assertIsSatisfied on its internal Mockery
context object.
To summarize, here's what a typical test using JMockCycle looks like:
val cycle = new JMockCycle import cycle._
val mockCollaborator = mock[Collaborator]
expecting { e => import e._ oneOf (mockCollaborator).documentAdded("Document") exactly(3).of (mockCollaborator).documentChanged("Document") }
whenExecuting { classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0)) classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0)) classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0)) classUnderTest.addDocument("Document", new Array[Byte](0)) }
ScalaTest also provides a JMockCycleFixture trait, which
will pass a new JMockCycle into each test that needs one.
Trait that will pass a new JMockCycle into any test that needs one.
Trait that will pass a new JMockCycle into any test that needs one.
This trait, which must be mixed into a fixture.Suite, defines the
Fixture type to be JMockCycle and defines a
withFixture method that instantiates a new JMockCycle
and passes it to the test function.
Subclass of org.jmock.Expectations that provides withArg
alternatives to the with methods defined in its superclass.
Subclass of org.jmock.Expectations that provides withArg
alternatives to the with methods defined in its superclass.
JMockCycle's expecting method of passes an instance of this class
to the function passed into expectations. Because JMockExpectations
extends org.jmock.Expectations, all of the Expectations methods are
available to be invoked on instances of this class, in addition to
several overloaded withArg methods defined in this class. These withArg methods simply
invoke corresponding with methods on this. Because with is
a keyword in Scala, to invoke these directly you must surround them in back ticks, like this:
oneOf (mockCollaborator).documentAdded(`with`("Document"))
By importing the members of the JMockExpectations object passed to
a JMockCycle's executing method, you can
instead call withArg with no back ticks needed:
oneOf (mockCollaborator).documentAdded(withArg("Document"))
Trait that will pass a new
JMockCycleinto any test that needs one.This trait, which must be mixed into a
fixture.AsyncSuite, defines theFixturetype to beJMockCycleand defines awithFixturemethod that instantiates a newJMockCycleand passes it to the test function.