Reputation: 1783
Is it possible to have a Junit rule only apply to specific tests? If so, how do I do that?
The code below exemplifies what I want to do: each time I have @Rule, I want the method below that to have the specific rule that has been annotated to run with it. I only want that rule to run with the corresponding test. I don't want anything other tests to be affected by the rule.
In this case, when I run these tests, I see that one of the tests the EmptyFileCheck, gives a File DNE does not exist, but I have used a separate annotation for that function, so I had thought that it would run with a different context, supplying the Empty, but instead DNE is till being used.
import static java.lang.System.in;
import static java.lang.System.setIn;
import static org.junit.Assert.fail;
import java.io.BufferedOutputStream;
import java.io.BufferedReader;
import java.io.ByteArrayInputStream;
import java.io.FileNotFoundException;
import java.io.IOException;
import java.io.InputStream;
import java.io.InputStreamReader;
import java.io.PipedInputStream;
import java.io.PipedOutputStream;
import java.io.PrintStream;
import java.nio.channels.Pipe;
import static org.hamcrest.core.AllOf.allOf;
import org.hamcrest.Matcher;
import org.hamcrest.core.AllOf;
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.*;
import org.hamcrest.text.StringContains;
import org.hamcrest.text.StringEndsWith;
import org.hamcrest.text.StringStartsWith;
import org.jmock.Expectations;
import org.jmock.Mockery;
import org.jmock.lib.legacy.ClassImposteriser;
import org.junit.After;
import org.junit.Before;
import org.junit.Rule;
import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.contrib.java.lang.system.TextFromStandardInputStream;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;
public class UnitTests {
private Mockery context = new Mockery() {{
setImposteriser(ClassImposteriser.INSTANCE);
}};
private main mn;
private InputStream oldIn;
private PrintStream oldOut;
private InputStream mockIn;
private InputStreamReader mockinputStream;
private PrintStream mockOut;
private BufferedReader reader;
private Expectations exp;
@Before
public void setMinimalMockingExpectations() throws IOException {
exp = new Expectations() {{ }};
mn = context.mock(main.class);
mockinputStream = context.mock(InputStreamReader.class);
oldIn = System.in;
oldOut = System.out;
mockIn = context.mock(InputStream.class);
mockOut = context.mock(PrintStream.class);
System.setOut(mockOut);
}
public void configureExpectations(boolean fileOrInput, boolean verbosity) {
exp.one(mockOut).println("Do you want to process standard (I)nput, or a (F)ile? I/F");
if (fileOrInput) { //it's a file
exp.one(mockOut).println("Enter filename: ");
} else { //it's not
}
}
@After
public void reset() {
System.setOut(oldOut);
}
@Rule
public final TextFromStandardInputStream FileNotFoundException
= new TextFromStandardInputStream("F\nDNE\n");
@Test(expected=FileNotFoundException.class)
public void EnsureFileCheckExists() throws IOException {
final String fileName = "DNE";
configureExpectations(true, false);
exp.one(mn).checkFile(fileName);
context.checking(exp);
mn.main(null);
}
@Rule
public final TextFromStandardInputStream FileReadAccessDenied
= new TextFromStandardInputStream("F\nUnderPriviledged\n");:w
@Test(expected=FileNotFoundException.class)
public void FileReadAccessDenied() throws java.io.FileNotFoundException {
final String fileName = "UnderPriviledged";
configureExpectations(true, false);
//exp.oneOf(mn).checkFile(with()); TODO: fix ME!
context.checking(exp);
mn.main(null);
}
@Rule
public final TextFromStandardInputStream EmptyFileCheck
= new TextFromStandardInputStream("F\nEmpty\n");
@Test
public void EmptyFileCheck() throws java.io.FileNotFoundException {
final String fileName = "Empty";
configureExpectations(true, false);
exp.one(mn).checkFile(fileName);
context.checking(exp);
mn.main(null);
}
}
Upvotes: 5
Views: 4607
Reputation: 5526
Any reason not to just take the code out of the @rule annotation and move it to the start of the test body?
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 61705
You could have a setter in your Rule which is the first thing that gets called in the rule. Something like this, from ExpectedException:
// These tests all pass.
public static class HasExpectedException {
@Rule
public ExpectedException thrown= ExpectedException.none();
@Test
public void throwsNothing() {
// no exception expected, none thrown: passes.
}
@Test
public void throwsNullPointerException() {
thrown.expect(NullPointerException.class);
throw new NullPointerException();
}
@Test
public void throwsNullPointerExceptionWithMessage() {
thrown.expect(NullPointerException.class);
thrown.expectMessage("happened?");
thrown.expectMessage(startsWith("What"));
throw new NullPointerException("What happened?");
}
}
Upvotes: 4