Tesing: Sanity check

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djmil 2023-07-26 14:01:10 +02:00
parent 141ed6aa7f
commit e77f67b0b7
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@ -131,3 +131,40 @@ Let's add minimal interactivity to the page by introducing an input field and a
</script>
```
# Testing the Web Layer
Let's test our simple app with JUnit. We will concentrate on using Spring Test and Spring Boot features to test the interactions between Spring and your code.
## Sanity check
The first thing you can do is write a simple sanity check test that will fail if the application context cannot start.
From `src/test/java/djmil/hellomvc/SmokeTest.java`
```java
package djmil.hellomvc;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.boot.test.context.SpringBootTest;
import static org.assertj.core.api.Assertions.assertThat;
@SpringBootTest
public class SmokeTest {
@Autowired
private GreetingController controller;
@Test
void contextLoads() throws Exception {
assertThat(controller).isNotNull();
}
}
```
The `@SpringBootTest` annotation tells Spring Boot to look for a main configuration class (one with `@SpringBootApplication`, for instance) and use that to start a Spring application context. You can run this test in your IDE or on the command line (by running `./mvnw test` or `./gradlew test`), and it should pass.
Spring interprets the `@Autowired` annotation, and the controller is injected before the test methods are run. We use [AssertJ](http://joel-costigliola.github.io/assertj/) (which provides `assertThat()` and other methods) to express the test assertions.
> A nice feature of the Spring Test support is that the application context is cached between tests. That way, if you have multiple methods in a test case or multiple test cases with the same configuration, they incur the cost of starting the application only once. You can control the cache by using the @DirtiesContext annotation.|

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package djmil.hellomvc;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.boot.test.context.SpringBootTest;
import static org.assertj.core.api.Assertions.assertThat;
@SpringBootTest
public class SmokeTest {
@Autowired
private GreetingController controller;
@Test
void contextLoads() throws Exception {
assertThat(controller).isNotNull();
}
}