Holder class for a collection of mocks that can be passed implicitly to one form of the
overloaded whenExecuting
method.
Implicit conversion that invokes the expect
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static expect
method in Java class org.easymock.EasyMock
).
Implicit conversion that invokes the expect
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static expect
method in Java class org.easymock.EasyMock
).
In a ScalaTest Suite
, the expect
method defined in Assertions
, and inherited by Suite
,
interferes with the expect
method if imported from EasyMock
. You can invoke it by qualifying it, i.e.,
EasyMock.expect
, or by changing its name on import, like this:
import org.easymock.EasyMock.{expect => easyMockExpect, _}
But if you mix in this trait, you can just invoke call
instead.
You can use this method, for example, to chain expectations like this:
expecting {
call(mock.getName).andReturn("Ben Franklin")
}
Note: the name of this methods is call
, not expectCall
because
"expect" appears in the surrounding expecting
clause provided by this trait.
Moreover, because this method is marked implicit
, you will usually be able to simply
leave it off. So long as the result of the method call you are expecting doesn't have
a method that satisfies the subsequent invocation (such as andReturn
in this
example), the Scala compiler will invoke call
for you
implicitly. Here's how that looks:
expecting {
mock.getName.andReturn("Ben Franklin")
}
- the result of invoking a method on mock prior to invoking replay
.
Provides a visual clue to readers of the code that a set of statements are expectations being set on mocks.
Provides a visual clue to readers of the code that a set of statements are expectations being set on mocks.
Using the EasyMock API directly, you set expectations on a mock object with syntax like:
mockCollaborator.documentAdded("Document") mockCollaborator.documentChanged("Document") expectLastCall().times(3)
This expecting
method can make it more obvious which portion of your test code
is devoted to setting expectations on mock objects. For example:
expecting { mockCollaborator.documentAdded("Document") mockCollaborator.documentChanged("Document") lastCall.times(3) }
Using an expecting
clause is optional, because it does nothing besides visually indicate
which statements are setting expectations on mocks. Note: this trait also provides the lastCall
method, which just calls expectLastCall
. This allows you to avoid writing "expect" twice.
Also, the reason expecting
doesn't take a by-name parameter, execute that, then call
replay
is because you would then need to pass your mock object or objects into
expecting
. Since you already need to pass the mocks into whenExecuting
so
that verify
can be invoked on them, it yields more concise client code to have
whenExecuting
invoke replay
on the mocks first rather than having
expecting
invoke replay
last.
Invokes the expectLastCall
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static expect
method in Java class org.easymock.EasyMock
).
Invokes the expectLastCall
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static expect
method in Java class org.easymock.EasyMock
).
This method is provided simply to allow you to avoid repeating "expect" inside an
expecting
clause. Here's an example that uses the expectLastCall
directly
to express the expectation that the getName
method will be invoked three times
on a mock, each time returning "Ben Franklin"
:
expecting { mock.getName.andReturn("Ben Franklin") expectLastCall.times(3) }
Using this method, you can compress this to:
expecting { mock.getName.andReturn("Ben Franklin") lastCall.times(3) }
Invokes the createMock
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static createMock
method in Java class org.easymock.classextension.EasyMock
).
Invokes the createMock
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static createMock
method in Java class org.easymock.classextension.EasyMock
).
Using the EasyMock API directly, you create a mock with:
val mockCollaborator = createMock(classOf[Collaborator])
Using this method, you can shorten that to:
val mockCollaborator = mock[Collaborator]
Invokes the createNiceMock
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static createNiceMock
method in Java class org.easymock.classextension.EasyMock
).
Invokes the createNiceMock
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static createNiceMock
method in Java class org.easymock.classextension.EasyMock
).
Using the EasyMock API directly, you create a nice mock with:
val mockCollaborator = createNiceMock(classOf[Collaborator])
Using this trait, you can shorten that to:
val mockCollaborator = niceMock[Collaborator]
Invokes the createStrictMock
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static createStrictMock
method in Java class org.easymock.classextension.EasyMock
).
Invokes the createStrictMock
method on the EasyMock
companion object (i.e., the
static createStrictMock
method in Java class org.easymock.classextension.EasyMock
).
Using the EasyMock API directly, you create a strict mock with:
val mockCollaborator = createStrictMock(classOf[Collaborator])
Using this trait, you can shorten that to:
val mockCollaborator = strictMock[Collaborator]
Invokes replay
on the mock object or objects passed via an implicit parameter,
executes the passed function, then invokes verify
on the passed mock object or objects.
Invokes replay
on the mock object or objects passed via an implicit parameter,
executes the passed function, then invokes verify
on the passed mock object or objects.
Once you've set expectations on some mock objects, you must invoke replay
on
the mocks to indicate you are done setting expectations, and will start using the mocks.
After using the mocks, you must invoke verify
to check to make sure the mocks
were used in accordance with the expectations you set on it. Here's how that looks when you
use the EasyMock API directly:
replay(mock) 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)) verify(mock)
This method enables you to use the following, more declarative syntax instead:
implicit val mocks = MockObjects(mockCollaborator)
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)) }
If you are working with multiple mock objects at once, you simply pass
them all to MockObjects
, like this:
implicit val mocks = MockObjects(mock1, mock2, mock3)
The whenExecuting
method will first invoke EasyMock.reply
once for each mock you supplied, execute the passed function, then
invoke EasyMock.verify
once for each mock you supplied. If an exception
is thrown by the passed function, whenExecuting
will complete abruptly with
that same exception without executing verify on any of the mocks.
Invokes replay
on the passed mock object or objects, executes the passed function, then invokes
verify
on the passed mock object or objects.
Invokes replay
on the passed mock object or objects, executes the passed function, then invokes
verify
on the passed mock object or objects.
Once you've set expectations on some mock objects, you must invoke replay
on
the mocks to indicate you are done setting expectations, and will start using the mocks.
After using the mocks, you must invoke verify
to check to make sure the mocks
were used in accordance with the expectations you set on it. Here's how that looks when you
use the EasyMock API directly:
replay(mock) 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)) verify(mock)
This method enables you to use the following, more declarative syntax instead:
whenExecuting(mockCollaborator) { 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)) }
If you are working with multiple mock objects at once, you simply pass
them all to whenExecuting
, like this:
whenExecuting(mock1, mock2, mock3) {
// ...
}
The whenExecuting
method will first invoke EasyMock.reply
once for each mock you supplied, execute the passed function, then
invoke EasyMock.verify
once for each mock you supplied. If an exception
is thrown by the passed function, whenExecuting
will complete abruptly with
that same exception without executing verify on any of the mocks.
one or more mock objects to invoke replay
before using and verify
after using.
if no mocks are passed
Trait that provides some basic syntax sugar for EasyMock.
Using the EasyMock API directly, you create a mock with:
With this trait, you can shorten that to:
After creating mocks, you set expectations on them, using syntax like this:
If you wish to highlight which statements are setting expectations on the mock (versus which ones are actually using the mock), you can place them in an
expecting
clause, provided by this trait, like this:Using an
expecting
clause is optional, because it does nothing but visually indicate which statements are setting expectations on mocks. (Note: this trait also provides thelastCall
method, which just callsexpectLastCall
.)Once you've set expectations on the mock objects, you must invoke
replay
on the mocks to indicate you are done setting expectations, and will start using the mock. After using the mock, you must invokeverify
to check to make sure the mock was used in accordance with the expectations you set on it. Here's how that looks when you use the EasyMock API directly:This trait enables you to use the following, more declarative syntax instead:
The
whenExecuting
method will pass themockCollaborator
toreplay
, execute the passed function (your code that uses the mock), and callverify
, passing in themockCollaborator
. If you want to use multiple mocks, you can pass multiple mocks towhenExecuting
.To summarize, here's what a typical test using
EasyMockSugar
looks like:An alternative approach is to place your mock objects in a
MockObjects
holder object referenced from an implicitval
, then use the overloaded variant ofwhenExecuting
that takes an implicitMockObjects
parameter. Here's how that would look:Note: As of ScalaTest 1.3, this trait supports EasyMock 3, with no dependencies on EasyMock class extension.