Mockito. Verify method arguments
An alternative to ArgumentMatcher
is ArgumentCaptor
.
Official example:
ArgumentCaptor<Person> argument = ArgumentCaptor.forClass(Person.class);
verify(mock).doSomething(argument.capture());
assertEquals("John", argument.getValue().getName());
A captor can also be defined using the @Captor annotation:
@Captor ArgumentCaptor<Person> captor;
//... MockitoAnnotations.initMocks(this);
@Test public void test() {
//...
verify(mock).doSomething(captor.capture());
assertEquals("John", captor.getValue().getName());
}
Are you trying to do logical equality utilizing the object's .equals method? You can do this utilizing the argThat matcher that is included in Mockito
import static org.mockito.Matchers.argThat
Next you can implement your own argument matcher that will defer to each objects .equals method
private class ObjectEqualityArgumentMatcher<T> extends ArgumentMatcher<T> {
T thisObject;
public ObjectEqualityArgumentMatcher(T thisObject) {
this.thisObject = thisObject;
}
@Override
public boolean matches(Object argument) {
return thisObject.equals(argument);
}
}
Now using your code you can update it to read...
Object obj = getObject();
Mockeable mock= Mockito.mock(Mockeable.class);
Mockito.when(mock.mymethod(obj)).thenReturn(null);
Testeable obj = new Testeable();
obj.setMockeable(mock);
command.runtestmethod();
verify(mock).mymethod(argThat(new ObjectEqualityArgumentMatcher<Object>(obj)));
If you are just going for EXACT equality (same object in memory), just do
verify(mock).mymethod(obj);
This will verify it was called once.
argThat
plus lambda
that is how you can fail your argument verification:
verify(mock).mymethod(argThat(
x -> false ));
where
import static org.mockito.ArgumentMatchers.argThat;
import static org.mockito.Mockito.verify;
argThat
plus asserts
the above test will "say" Expected: lambda$... Was: YourClass.toSting...
. You can get a more specific cause of the failure if to use asserts in the the lambda:
verify(mock).mymethod(argThat( x -> {
assertThat(x).isNotNull();
assertThat(x.description).contains("KEY");
return true;
}));
❗️BUT❗️: THIS ONLY WORKS WHEN
- THE CALL IS EXPECTED 1 TIME, or
- the call is expected 2+ times, but all the times the verifier matches (returns
true
).
If the verified method called 2+ times, mockito passes all the called combinations to each verifier. So mockito expects your verifier silently returns true
for one of the argument set, and false
(no assert exceptions) for other valid calls. That expectation is not a problem for 1 method call - it should just return true 1 time.
import static org.assertj.core.api.Assertions.assertThat;
import static org.mockito.ArgumentMatchers.argThat;
import static org.mockito.Mockito.verify;
Now the failed test will say: Expected: Obj.description to contain 'KEY'. Was: 'Actual description'
. NOTE: I used assertJ
asserts, but it's up to you which assertion framework to use.
direct argument
Mokito compares direct arguments using equals()
:
verify(mock).mymethod(expectedArg);
// NOTE: ^ where the parentheses must be closed.
eq
matcher
- Never use
eq
for a single arg. Use the aforementioned direct argument. - Mokito compares direct arguments using
equals()
-
Reason:
eq
would be a SonarQube / SonarClound violation: https://rules.sonarsource.com/java/tag/mockito/RSPEC-6068
argThat
with multiple arguments.
If you use argThat
, all arguments must be provided with matches. E.g. if, in a different case, you had another method with 2 arguments:
verify(mock).mymethod2(eq("VALUE_1"), argThat((x)->false));
// above is correct as eq() is also an argument matcher.
verify(mock).mymethod2("VALUE_1", argThat((x)->false));
// above is incorrect; an exception will be thrown, as the first arg. is given without an argument matcher.
where:
import static org.mockito.ArgumentMatchers.argThat;
import static org.mockito.ArgumentMatchers.eq;
import static org.mockito.Mockito.verify;
THE ROOT CAUSE of original question failure was the wrong place of the parentheses:
-
verify(mock.mymethod...
. That was wrong. The right would be: verify(mock).*
- You don't need the
eq
matcher if you don't use other matchers. - You are not using the correct syntax - your method call should be outside the
.verify(mock)
. You are now initiating verification on the result of the method call, without verifying anything (not making a method call). Hence all tests are passing.
You code should look like:
Mockito.verify(mock).mymethod(obj);
Mockito.verify(mock).mymethod(null);
Mockito.verify(mock).mymethod("something_else");