I must
admit that I am a huge fan of Test Driven development. Although
I generally use CRC process to design my classes and their interactions, I tend to
use TDD process to fine-tune the collaborations between these objects, and generally
simplify my initial object design. While I know that there are
many skeptics in usefulness of TDD as a software design process, I believe that they
underestimate one important factor in developer’s arsenal: laziness! After
a while each one of us tries to find a way to minimize the number of tests they have
to write per object you implement. If you build it in its simplest
form, minimizing interactions and state permutations you minimize the number of the
tests. In addition tests help us understand how objects is used/how
it behaves/interacts with other objects. And most importantly test
that we write give us that safety net to facilitate change, refactor code without
constant worry that we might break existing functionality.
Mocks on the other hand are the mechanism that assures
that tests focus on the unit/component being tested and not the components that this
unit interacts with. When the tested code uses other components
things can get quite fragile and the tests will quickly become system tests. Examples
are classes that use a database, a logging system, web service and any other external
components. These external components might require a complex setup.
For example, in order to run a test that uses a database, we must have a running database
with the tables and data setup correctly for the test (we must cleanup this data before
each test runs). Too much work for a lazy developer,
and more importantly test results easily compromised by factors that are out of our
control.
So mocking in this case sounds like a valid
solution. But what is the problem in implementing this in a CSLA
world? Well, CSLA has this concept of ‘Mobile Objects’, which means
that the object is generally created in the (App) Server context, and then serialized
to the client. For example let’s take a look at the way we retrieve
ProjectList object from the sample ProjectTracker20cs project.
/// <summary>Return
a list of all projects.</summary>
public static ProjectList GetProjectList()
{
return DataPortal.Fetch<ProjectList>(new Criteria());
}
or,
/// <summary>Return
a list of projects filtered by project name.</summary>
public static ProjectList GetProjectList(string name)
{
return DataPortal.Fetch<ProjectList>
(new FilteredCriteria(name));
}
For all of us that use CSLA daily this means
that the DataPortal is going to instantiate the object of type ProjectList, call appropriate
override of the method DataPortal_Fetch() defined
in the ProjectList,
and finally serialize it back to the client where that instance is returned trough
the factory method in question.
DataPortal_Fetch method
overrides should resemble something like this:
private void DataPortal_Fetch(Criteria criteria)
{
//
fetch with no filter
Fetch("");
}
private void DataPortal_Fetch(FilteredCriteria criteria)
{
Fetch(criteria.Name);
}
private void Fetch(string nameFilter)
{
RaiseListChangedEvents
= false;
using (SqlConnection cn
= new SqlConnection(Database.PTrackerConnection))
{
cn.Open();
using (SqlCommand cm
= cn.CreateCommand()) {
cm.CommandType
= CommandType.StoredProcedure;
cm.CommandText
= "getProjects";
using (SafeDataReader dr
= new SafeDataReader(cm.ExecuteReader()))
{
IsReadOnly
= false;
while (dr.Read())
{
ProjectInfo info
= new ProjectInfo(
dr.GetGuid(0),
dr.GetString(1));
//
apply filter if necessary
if ((nameFilter.Length
== 0) || (info.Name.IndexOf(nameFilter) == 0))
Add(info);
}
IsReadOnly
= true;
}
}
}
RaiseListChangedEvents
= true;
}
Now let’s take a look at how most of the mocking frameworks
mock dependencies. Generally one needs to create an interface on
the object we are mocking, and then pass the reference to that interface to the object
we are trying to test. This is essentially the implementation of
the “Dependency
injection pattern”, where the actual implementation is passed as this interface
at run time, or mock object during the tests. This, as far as I
can tell, applies to NMock, EasyMock,
or RhinoMock.
So the problem is that these mocking tools require us to
build “mockable” objects. This will not work with CSLA, or
at least will not be implemented easily. The problem is that, if
one wants to mock dependencies such as data access layer components (db connection,
data reader, command) one would have to instantiate them on the client side and then
“inject” them as arguments into the Factory Method being called, making sure that
they are somehow serialized to the server side. And naturally database
components are not serializable.
So, is it possible to mock CSLA dependencies that
reside only on server side and are not serialized back and forth? The
answer is “Yes”. Yes if you use TypeMock.Net library. What
is the major advantage of this tool when compared to other .Net mocking tools? TypeMock
uses Aspect Oriented technology to redirect calls from the real code to the mock object
instantiated. So how does this work?
Before we try to mock dependencies we have to
remember one of the golden rules of Mocking: “Never to Mock classes/interfaces
you do not own or have source code to”. What does that mean? I
have seen code where developers tried to Mock interfaces as IDataReader (or SqlDataReader)
for example. That interface is too complex and it is not something
I defined or have control over. So the first thing I would like
to do is build a class called Database, that encapsulates all of the database communication
in the Fetch() method. So
let’s do a little refactoring:
private void Fetch(string nameFilter)
{
RaiseListChangedEvents
= false;
using (Database db
= new Database(Database.PTrackerConnection))
{
SqlCommand cm
= db.CreateSPCommand("getProjects");
using (SafeDataReader dr
= db.ExecuteSafeDataReader(cm)) {
IsReadOnly
= false;
while (dr.Read())
{
ProjectInfo info
= new ProjectInfo(
dr.GetGuid(0),
dr.GetString(1));
//
apply filter if necessary
if ((nameFilter.Length
== 0) || (info.Name.IndexOf(nameFilter) == 0))
Add(info);
}
IsReadOnly
= true;
}
}
RaiseListChangedEvents
= true;
}
Let us compare the code above to the original Fetch(). One
can notice that instead of creating SqlConnection object we created a Database object
passing its constructor a desired connection string. You will also
notice that we are not explicitly “Opening” database connection. That
is because the Database class is managing SqlConnection internally and opening it
as needed (for example, within the Database.ExecuteSafeDataReader() call
as you might notice bellow when we take a look at the Database class).
In addition you will notice that we have removed the using
block around the SqlCommand instance. Again the Database instance
manages SqlCommand objects it creates and disposes them at the time it is disposed
itself (together with disposing a SqlConnection).
Below is a simplified version of
the Database class. Some of you might notice s similarity to the
Database class implemented in Enterprise Library. I do generally
use Enterprise Library, and the pattern used in their Data Access Block makes it easier
to test/mock DAL objects.
public class Database : IDisposable
{
private readonly SqlConnection _activeConnection;
private readonly List<SqlCommand>
_createdCmds;
private bool disposed;
public Database(string connection)
{
_activeConnection
= new SqlConnection(connection);
_createdCmds
= new List<SqlCommand>();
}
~Database()
{
Dispose(false);
}
#region Available
Connection Strings
public static string PTrackerConnection
{
get
{
return ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings
["PTracker"].ConnectionString;
}
}
public static string SecurityConnection
{
get { return ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["Security"].ConnectionString;
}
}
#endregion
#region IDisposable
Members
public void Dispose()
{
Dispose(true);
GC.SuppressFinalize(this);
}
protected virtual void Dispose(bool disposing)
{
if (!disposed)
{
if (disposing)
{
//
Dispose managed resources.
foreach (SqlCommand cmd in _createdCmds)
cmd.Dispose();
_createdCmds.Clear();
if (_activeConnection
!= null && _activeConnection.State != ConnectionState.Closed)
_activeConnection.Close();
}
//
Dispose unmanaged resources
}
disposed
= true;
}
#endregion
protected void OpenConnection()
{
if (_activeConnection.State!=ConnectionState.Open)
_activeConnection.Open();
}
public SqlCommand CreateSPCommand(string cmdName)
{
SqlCommand cm
= _activeConnection.CreateCommand();
cm.CommandType
= CommandType.StoredProcedure;
cm.CommandText
= cmdName;
_createdCmds.Add(cm);
return cm;
}
public SafeDataReader ExecuteSafeDataReader(SqlCommand cm)
{
OpenConnection();
return new SafeDataReader(cm.ExecuteReader());
}
public void AddWithValue(SqlCommand cm, string paramName, object value)
{
cm.Parameters.AddWithValue(paramName,
value);
}
}
NUnit uses
Test Fixture concept to group tests applied to a single unit of code. So
since we are going to test the ProjectList object let’s create that Test Fixture:
[TestFixture]
public class ProjectListTest
{
[SetUp]
public void Start()
{
///<remark>Initialize
TypeMock before each test</remark>
MockManager.Init();
}
[TearDown]
public void Finish()
{
///<remark>We
will verify that the mocks have been called correctly at the end of each test</remark>
MockManager.Verify();
}
}
As you can see in order to use TypeMock in
our tests we need to Initialize the TypeMock’s MockManager first and then call Verify() at
after the test has run.
Now we are ready to write our first test. Generally
my first test is something extremely simple like making sure that the operation returned
a result. So the first test is going to be the one that ensures
that the ProjectList.GetProjectList() creates
and adds a single ProjectInfo object.
[Test]
public void LoadsOne()
{
ProjectList item
= ProjectList.GetProjectList();
Assert.AreEqual(1,item.Count);
}
This first test does not have any mocks obviously, and if
we run it we are going to see the following error:
ProjectTracker.Library.Tests.ProjectListTest.LoadsOne
: Csla.DataPortalException : DataPortal.Fetch failed (System.NullReferenceException:
Object reference not set to an instance of an object.
at
ProjectTracker.Library.Database.get_PTrackerConnection() in C:\Development\csla20cs\ProjectTracker20cs\ProjectTracker.Library\Database.cs:line
37
at
ProjectTracker.Library.ProjectList.Fetch(String nameFilter) in C:\Development\csla20cs\ProjectTracker20cs\ProjectTracker.Library\ProjectList.cs:line
73
at
ProjectTracker.Library.ProjectList.DataPortal_Fetch(Criteria criteria) in C:\Development\csla20cs\ProjectTracker20cs\ProjectTracker.Library\ProjectList.cs:line
62)
---->
Csla.Server.CallMethodException : DataPortal_Fetch method call failed
---->
System.NullReferenceException : Object reference not set to an instance of an object.
The error above states that the line where we tried
to call new Database(Database.PTTrackerConnection) failed
due to static property PTTrackerConnection trying to access external configuration
file to read a connection string. So we will need to mock that
call. In addition we will need to mock the whole Database instance,
since the Database object internally instantiates the SqlConnection (another external
resource not available to us for this unit test). So let us write
the code that does that.
[Test]
public void LoadsOne()
{
Mock mockDb
= MockManager.Mock(typeof(Database));
mockDb.ExpectGet("PTrackerConnection", string.Empty);
mockDb.ExpectAndReturn("CreateSPCommand", null);
mockDb.ExpectAndReturn("ExecuteSafeDataReader", new SafeDataReader(GetDataReaderStub()))
.Args(null);
mockDb.ExpectCall("Dispose");
ProjectList item
= ProjectList.GetProjectList();
Assert.AreEqual(1,item.Count);
}
private IDataReader GetDataReaderStub()
{
return new DataTable().CreateDataReader();
}
We have added few lines to our test. The
first line allows defines the object that we are going to mock. Following
four lines define the behaviors of the Database objects that we are going to intercept
and replace with our values that we need for the test, therefore taking the database
out of equation. As we can see from line:
mockDb.ExpectGet("PTrackerConnection", string.Empty);
We are expecting a Property Get call on the property
called PTrackerConection and we want it to return a constant string.Empty. Then
we are expecting a method call to “CreateSPCommand”
to be called, and want our mock Database to return null (we do not care about the
SqlCommand since the mock Database object is not going to be using it anyway). Following
line is where it gets interesting:
mockDb.ExpectAndReturn("ExecuteSafeDataReader", new SafeDataReader(GetDataReaderStub()))
.Args(null);
As you can see we expect that the call to ExecuteSafeDataReader
returns Data Reader as defined in the GetDataReaderStub() method. If
we run the test now following will be the output:
NUnit.Framework.AssertionException: Expected:
1
But
was: 0
at NUnit.Framework.Assert.That(Object actual, IConstraint constraint, String message,
Object[] args)
at NUnit.Framework.Assert.AreEqual(Int32 expected, Int32 actual, String message, Object[]
args)
at NUnit.Framework.Assert.AreEqual(Int32 expected, Int32 actual)
at ProjectTracker.Library.Tests.ProjectListTest.LoadsOne() in ProjectListTest.cs:line
42
Since the GetDataReaderStub() method
is supposed to return a IDataReader that is constructed from the empty DataTable,
then the number of items in the ProjectList should be zero. More
importantly we have successfully mocked the data access layer code although our test
is still failing (we want to ensure that our test inserts one item from mock Database
into the ProjectList). Proof of successful mock is the fact that
we are not getting any ado.net exceptions when we run the test – meaning that all
of the calls to the Database object are intercepted as we expected. Assuring
that test is successful will require us to modify the GetDataReaderStub() method
to create a DataTable with the signature that is expected in fetch method, and with
the number of the records that are expected in the result (1).
But before we do that let’s first clean the test code. I
generally do not want to crowd the code in the actual test with bunch of the details
of the internal mocks. In addition it seems
that there will be a common pattern in the way we fetch records, so I believe we can
extract the Mock calls to a helper method called MockDatabaseFetchCall(). Also
if this is to be method that is shared between multiple Test Fixtures we should move
it outside of this Test Fixture. Let’s see how our code looks like
after that refactoring.
internal class MockHelper
{
public static void MockDatabaseFetchCall(string connectionName, int noOfAddInParamCalls, IDataReaderStubFactory drFactory)
{
Mock mockDb
= MockManager.Mock(typeof(Database));
mockDb.ExpectGet(connectionName, string.Empty);
mockDb.ExpectAndReturn("CreateSPCommand", null);
mockDb.ExpectCall("AddWithValue",
noOfAddInParamCalls);
mockDb.ExpectAndReturn("ExecuteSafeDataReader",
drFactory.GetDataReaderStub())
.Args(null);
mockDb.ExpectCall("Dispose");
}
}
We can see that the MockDatabaseFetchCall() method
has 3 parameters. The necessity for the first parameter is due
to the fact that our Database object has two “connection string” properties: “PTrackerConnection”
and “SecurityConnection”. Argument connectionName, allows us to
specify which of the two we will mock. We can see that the second
parameter is related to the new line in our method:
mockDb.ExpectCall("AddWithValue",
noOfAddInParamCalls);
What does that line mean? The line states that we
expect a call to the method called AddWithValue() noOfAddInParamCalls times,
and that we are going to ignore parameters or the return value. We
just want to ensure that the calls are made. But the method AddWithValue
did not exist in our original definition of the Database class. We
have added this method as a part of this last refactoring. Here is what it does:
public void AddWithValue(SqlCommand cm, string paramName, object value)
{
cm.Parameters.AddWithValue(paramName,
value);
}
In some of the Fetch() methods
we want to pass parameters to the stored procedure that allow us to filter the data
within stored procedure. Then our Fetch call signature changes. For
each parameter there is an extra call to the AddWithValue() method.
Now let’s move onto the third parameter: IDataReaderStubFactory
drFactory. It is an interface
that defines a single method:
internal interface IDataReaderStubFactory
{
SafeDataReader GetDataReaderStub();
}
Basically since MockHelper.MockDatabaseFetchCall() is
a shared method, and every list object’s (BusinessListBase<T>, or ReadOnlyBase<T>)
Test Fixture will have one or more IDataReader Stubs, I decided to implement them
as an interface. Here is the implementation for our “one record
fetch” of the ProjectList:
public class ProjectListFetchOneDRStub : IDataReaderStubFactory {
public SafeDataReader GetDataReaderStub()
{
DataTable stubTable
= new DataTable();
stubTable.Columns.Add("pk",typeof(Guid));
stubTable.Columns.Add("desc", typeof (string));
stubTable.Rows.Add(new object[]{Guid.NewGuid(),string.Empty});
return new SafeDataReader(stubTable.CreateDataReader());
}
}
As you can see we are actually generating a DataTable
with columns that match structure expected in ProjectList.Fetch() method. In
addition we are generating a single row of data.
Taking all this into account our modified test code should
look like this:
[Test]
public void LoadsOne()
{
MockHelper.MockDatabaseFetchCall("PTrackerConnection",
0, new ProjectListFetchOneDRStub());
ProjectList item
= ProjectList.GetProjectList();
Assert.AreEqual(1,item.Count);
}
After running this test we can see that the test passes. Project
list successfully fetches and inserts one item. Now this looks
like a lot of work for our first test, but note how easy it is to create future tests
of this type. Let’s say we want to test the other path in creation
of the Project List – ProjectList.GetProjectList(string
name).
[Test(Description
= "DataReader returns 3 items but only one should be
inserted, based on filter")]
public void LoadsThreeFiltersTwo()
{
MockHelper.MockDatabaseFetchCall("PTrackerConnection",
0, new ProjectListFetchThreeDRStub());
ProjectList item
= ProjectList.GetProjectList("test");
Assert.AreEqual(1,
item.Count);
}
The main difference between this one and our first
test, besides us calling the GetProjectList(“test”) with
the string argument is that we pass a different IDataReaderStubFactory implementation
– ProjectListFetchThreeDRStub. And
that class is defined as:
public class ProjectListFetchThreeDRStub : ProjectListFetchBaseDRStub {
public override SafeDataReader GetDataReaderStub()
{
DataTable stubTable
= GetStubTable();
stubTable.Rows.Add(new object[]
{ Guid.NewGuid(), "test
is important" });
stubTable.Rows.Add(new object[]
{ Guid.NewGuid(), "" });
stubTable.Rows.Add(new object[]
{ Guid.NewGuid(), "this
test record will not be included" });
return new SafeDataReader(stubTable.CreateDataReader());
}
}
You will notice that I have followed my usual behavior and
have refactored ProjectListFetchThreeDRStub (when compared to original ProjectListFetchOneDRStub). I
have extracted the code that instantiates a DataTable, and creates column structure
into a method called GetStubTable(). This method was moved into
a base abstract class called ProjectListFetchBaseDRStub, and both ProjectListFetchThreeDRStub,
and ProjectListFetchOneDRStub now inherit from it. Here is the
code of the base class:
public abstract class ProjectListFetchBaseDRStub : IDataReaderStubFactory {
public abstract SafeDataReader GetDataReaderStub();
protected static DataTable GetStubTable()
{
DataTable stubTable
= new DataTable();
stubTable.Columns.Add("pk", typeof(Guid));
stubTable.Columns.Add("desc", typeof(string));
return stubTable;
}
}
Second test also passes. Although
the we have a SafeDataReader with 3 rows only the first one has a Name that begins
with “test”.
We can use the same IDataReader Stub to construct the ProjectInfo
tests, like:
[TestFixture]
public class ProjectInfoTest
{
[Test]
public void AssureFieldsMapped()
{
SafeDataReader dr
= (new ProjectListFetchOneDRStub()).GetDataReaderStub();
dr.Read();
ProjectInfo info
= new ProjectInfo(
dr.GetGuid(0),
dr.GetString(1));
Assert.IsNotNull(info);
Assert.AreEqual(string.Empty,info.Name);
}
}
Again this is a rather simple test just to show you
one of the possible patterns to use in BusinessBase<T> or ReadOnlyBase<T> tests. Once
you have your object constructed from the Data Stub you can run tests that involve
business logic, state and behavior of the object.
One might notice that there was a possibility of mocking
a DataPortal itself within ProjectList.GetProjectList() method. Two
important issues with that path are that first we would not be testing the code running
within the Fetch() method,
and the necessity to change an accessibility of constructor of the ProjectList class
from private to public (to have Mock DataPortal return an instance).
In future posts I will explore mocking of the portions of
the code that perform DB insert/update/delete, as well as more efficient way of generating
IDataReader Stubs.
>>
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