Reputation: 578
Hello guys I was wondering if this way of testing my exception is ok, i have this exception i need to throw in the second test annotation, im receiving as result a red evil bar, and a succeed and a failure, as you can guess the failure is my concern, i have a fail(); there but the reason is because i read thats the way to test the exception and now im confused.
Also i have to say im willin get the green bar because im expecting the exception, but i dont know if failure is the right way to see the answer of the expected exception.
Also if you had any advice, I would appreciate it
@Before
public void setUp() throws Exception {
LogPack.logPacConfig(Constants.LOGGING_FILE);
gtfri = "+RESP:GTFRI,380502,869606020101881,INCOFER-gv65,,10,1,1,0.0,0,888.1,-84.194560,9.955602,20170220074514,,,,,,0.0,,,,100,210100,,,,20170220074517,40A2$";
weirdProtocol = "+RESP:GRI,380502,869606020101881,INCOFER-gv65,,10,1,1,0.0,0,888.1,-84.194560,9.955602,20170220074514,,,,,,0.0,,,,100,210100,,,,20170220074517,40A2$";
factory = new LocomotiveFactory();
}
@Test
public void GTFRICreationTester_shouldPass() throws TramaConProtolocoloDesconocido {
assertTrue(factory.createLocomotive(gtfri, false, new Date()) instanceof LocomotiveGTFRI);
}
@Test(expected = TramaConProtolocoloDesconocido.class)
public void GTFRICreationTester_shouldFail() {
try {
factory.createLocomotive(weirdProtocol, false, new Date());
fail("Expected an TramaConProtolocoloDesconocido");
} catch (TramaConProtolocoloDesconocido e) {
//assertSame("exception thrown as expected", "no se conoce el protocolo dado para la creacion de este factory", e.getMessage());;
}
}
Upvotes: 21
Views: 42746
Reputation: 8641
There is 3 most common ways to test expected exception:
First one is the most common way, but you can test only the type of expected exception with it. This test will fail if ExceptionType
won't be thrown:
@Test(expected = ExceptionType.class)
public void testSomething(){
sut.doSomething();
}
Also you cannot specify the failure message using this approach
The better option is to use ExpectedException JUnit @Rule. Here you can assert much more for expected exception
@Rule
public ExpectedException thrown = ExpectedException.none();
@Test
public void testSomething(){
thrown.expect(ExceptionType.class);
thrown.expectMessage("Error message");
thrown.expectCause(is(new CauseOfExeption()));
thrown.reportMissingExceptionWithMessage("Exception expected");
//any other expectations
sut.doSomething();
}
The third option will allow you to do the same as with using ExpectedException @Rule, but all the assertion should be written manually. However the advantage of this method is that you can use any custom assertion and any assertion library that you want:
@Test
public void testSomething(){
try{
sut.doSomething();
fail("Expected exception");
} catch(ExceptionType e) {
//assert ExceptionType e
}
}
Upvotes: 26
Reputation: 2541
if your are using java 8, I would recommend to go for the AssertJ library
public void GTFRICreationTester_shouldFail() {
assertThatExceptionOfType(EXCEPTION_CLASS).isThrownBy(() -> { factory.createLocomotive(weirdProtocol, false, new Date()) })
.withMessage("MESSAGE")
.withMessageContaining("MESSAGE_CONTAINING")
.withNoCause();
}
with that solution you can at one verify exception type, with message etc.
for more reading, take a look at: http://joel-costigliola.github.io/assertj/assertj-core-features-highlight.html#exception-assertion
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 29276
You can use ExpectedException which can provide you more precise information about the exception expected to be thrown with the ability to verify error message, as follows:
import org.junit.Rule;
import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.rules.ExpectedException;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;
public class TestClass {
@Rule
public ExpectedException expectedException = ExpectedException.none();
@Test
public void GTFRICreationTester_shouldFail() {
expectedException.expect(TramaConProtolocoloDesconocido.class);
factory.createLocomotive(weirdProtocol, false, new Date());
}
}
To expolore more about it, you can refer to the blog written by me here - Expected Exception Rule and Mocking Static Methods – JUnit
Upvotes: 4
Reputation: 3749
You don't need to catch the Exception
with try-catch
@Test(expected = TramaConProtolocoloDesconocido.class)
public void GTFRICreationTester_shouldFail() {
factory.createLocomotive(weirdProtocol, false, new Date());
}
If we suppose that factory.createLocomotive(weirdProtocol, false, new Date())
throws the exception
when you apply a scenario that makes the exception
thrown.
void createLocomotive(param...) {
//something...
throw new TramaConProtolocoloDesconocido();
}
Upvotes: 1