JUnit Testing Exceptions [duplicate]

Solution 1:

@Test(expected = Exception.class)  

Tells Junit that exception is the expected result so test will be passed (marked as green) when exception is thrown.

For

@Test

Junit will consider test as failed if exception is thrown, provided it's an unchecked exception. If the exception is checked it won't compile and you will need to use other methods. This link might help.

Solution 2:

are you sure you told it to expect the exception?

for newer junit (>= 4.7), you can use something like (from here)

@Rule
public ExpectedException exception = ExpectedException.none();

@Test
public void testRodneCisloRok(){
    exception.expect(IllegalArgumentException.class);
    exception.expectMessage("error1");
    new RodneCislo("891415",dopocitej("891415"));
}

and for older junit, this:

@Test(expected = ArithmeticException.class)  
public void divisionWithException() {  
  int i = 1/0;
}

Solution 3:

If your constructor is similar to this one:

public Example(String example) {
    if (example == null) {
        throw new NullPointerException();
    }
    //do fun things with valid example here
}

Then, when you run this JUnit test you will get a green bar:

@Test(expected = NullPointerException.class)
public void constructorShouldThrowNullPointerException() {
    Example example = new Example(null);
}

Solution 4:

An adventage of use ExpectedException Rule (version 4.7) is that you can test exception message and not only the expected exception.

And using Matchers, you can test the part of message you are interested:

exception.expectMessage(containsString("income: -1000.0"));

Solution 5:

Though @Test(expected = MyException.class) and the ExpectedException rule are very good choices, there are some instances where the JUnit3-style exception catching is still the best way to go:

@Test public void yourTest() {
  try {
    systemUnderTest.doStuff();
    fail("MyException expected.");
  } catch (MyException expected) {

    // Though the ExpectedException rule lets you write matchers about
    // exceptions, it is sometimes useful to inspect the object directly.

    assertEquals(1301, expected.getMyErrorCode());
  }

  // In both @Test(expected=...) and ExpectedException code, the
  // exception-throwing line will be the last executed line, because Java will
  // still traverse the call stack until it reaches a try block--which will be
  // inside the JUnit framework in those cases. The only way to prevent this
  // behavior is to use your own try block.

  // This is especially useful to test the state of the system after the
  // exception is caught.

  assertTrue(systemUnderTest.isInErrorState());
}

Another library that claims to help here is catch-exception; however, as of May 2014, the project appears to be in maintenance mode (obsoleted by Java 8), and much like Mockito catch-exception can only manipulate non-final methods.