Katarzynasrom / powermock

Automatically exported from code.google.com/p/powermock
0 stars 0 forks source link

PowerMockRunner processes JUnit Rules incorrectly #407

Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 9 years ago

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
What steps will reproduce the problem?
Use test class in attachment
1. Run testWithoutException() without PowerMockRunner
2. Run testWithoutException() with PowerMockRunner
3. Run testWithException() without PowerMockRunner
4. Run testWithException() with PowerMockRunner

What is the expected output? What do you see instead?
1.
NO EXCEPTION - START
NO EXCEPTION - STOP
Rule1
Rule2

2.
Rule1
NO EXCEPTION - START
NO EXCEPTION - STOP
Rule2

3.
EXCEPTION - START

4.
Rule1
EXCEPTION - START

What version of the product are you using? On what operating system?
JUnit 4.8.2
PowerMock 1.4.12

Please provide any additional information below.
As you can see, PowerMockRunner handles JUnit Rules differently than 
BlockJUnit4ClassRunner. Please compare: 
PowerMockJUnit47RunnerDelegateImpl#executeTest(Method, Object, Runnable) with 
BlockJUnit4ClassRunner#withRules(FrameworkMethod, Object, Statement).

JUnit PASSES each Rule's returned statement and the last declared rule gets 
statement that evaluates test method. On contrary PowerMockRunner runs every 
declared rule one by one.

Please see java doc of MethodRule: "Multiple {@link MethodRule}s can be applied 
to a test method. The Statement that executes the method is passed to each 
annotated Rule in turn, and each may return a substitute or modified Statement, 
which is passed to the next {@link Rule}, if any.".
It means that PowerMockRunner behaviour is wrong.

Original issue reported on code.google.com by Iso.poc...@gmail.com on 9 Nov 2012 at 8:55

Attachments:

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
Thanks for reporting. It would be really nice if you could help out with this 
and fix the rule support in PowerMock and provide a patch. Hopefully a new 
version of PowerMock will be released soon and it would be good if this is 
fixed until then. But I need help from the community.

Original comment by johan.ha...@gmail.com on 29 Nov 2012 at 6:47

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
I'm afraid I am not able to help you. I really appreciate your work but we have 
decided to stop using Power mock. There were some others issue that forces us 
to do so.
The main one was that we cannot run test using PowerMock as Eclipse's JUnit 
Plugin Test (OSGi environment). It was caused by dynamic class loading 
(Class.forName()) which requires us to use Buddy-Policy (which is a lame 
solution). Even so we get some errors from javassist library (probably because 
we are using Java 1.7).

Original comment by Iso.poc...@gmail.com on 29 Nov 2012 at 7:43

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
By the way: is there (sorry that I am asking without even searching) any 
documentation what kind of cases PowerMock are dealing with and how it is going 
to achieve that (what kind of byte code manipulations) ?
Moreover some kind of developer documentation (archotecture overview) and list 
of common problems that you have encountered during your work ?
In other work is it possible to third-party developer can quite easy support 
your work ?
I don't think that fixing this particular problem without seeing whole picture 
can really work. It may or it may not.

How do you test the library ? Do you run test in multiple configurations 
(different Java versions, different versions of JUnit/TestNG) ? 

Original comment by Iso.poc...@gmail.com on 29 Nov 2012 at 7:56

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
You've probably made the right decision not to use PowerMock with OSGi :) Even 
though I'm the founder of PowerMock I usually don't advise people to use it 
unless there's no other way out. PowerMock should be for experienced developers 
since most often than not it'll probably give you more pain (in terms of 
maintainability issues) than what you actually gain. There are corner cases 
where I believe it's legitimate to use PowerMock they are quite few.

Back to your questions (which are excellent), there's no good developer 
implementation and that could of course be a major factor to why it's hard to 
contribute to PowerMock. I've written some blogs about it (such as this one 
that I usually refer to as a very high level introduction: 
http://www.jayway.com/2009/05/17/mocking-static-methods-in-java-system-classes/)
  People have contributed but there has not been any major help in the project 
for a long time. 

I'm trying my best to make PowerMock go around but it's hard to find all the 
time needed. PowerMock is really something I maintain on my spare time and I 
have other open source projects as well which I'm more interested in right now. 
And if that's not enough I have two jobs and (quite amazingly :)) a girlfriend 
so time is quite precious :)

Original comment by johan.ha...@gmail.com on 30 Nov 2012 at 5:42

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
I can agree that in most cases developers should not use PowerMock but just 
refactor code to create classes that are testable (program to interfaces, use 
Dependency Injection, prevent creating highly coupled classes, avoid sharing 
complex business logic through static utility classes, etc), but ...
I see potential of PowerMock when your code relay on third-party-libraries or 
frameworks. For example: Eclipse 3.x Platform lacks of IoC container, which 
encourages to use static utilicty classes/methods a lot. Moreover there are 
plenty of places when you need to obtain Eclipse's Workbench - through some 
static methods.
The other example is when you are using third party library's class which is 
final or has some final methods. To do some unit tests you have to (want to ?) 
mock this class.

But lets back to the original issue. I'll try to provide some patch but I'm not 
an expert of JUnit. Moreover as far as I know the newest version of JUnit 
deprecates usage of MethodRule in favour of TestRule. So it may (or may not) be 
handled differently in the newest version (currently I'm using JUnit 4.8.2).

Generally I think that fact that PowerMock needs it own runner: PowerMockRunner 
is a source of maintenance hell. If JUnit implements new feature you also have 
to do it (or maybe I'm wrong - I'm not very familiar how exactly 
PowerMockRunner works. I only imagine that the "only" think that it should do 
is to somehow cheat class loader ;. Here comes idea whether we can use Aspect 
Programming to achieve that)).

For me personally I want to use PowerMock to:
- mock final classes
- mock final methods
- mock static methods in utility classes

I'm thinking about investigate how to deal with it basing on yours experience. 
I'm not familiar with PowerMock requirements but form me it should work under 
JUnit and EasyMock and to be as more transparent as possible.

Original comment by Iso.poc...@gmail.com on 30 Nov 2012 at 9:31

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
I forget to write that I know you have implement some PowerMockRule to not to 
be force to use PowerMock Runner. I think that is the good path, but how does 
it fits into TestNG (I'm also not familiar with this testing library) ?

Original comment by Iso.poc...@gmail.com on 30 Nov 2012 at 9:33

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
Yes when using certain containers you're sometimes "forced" to use something 
like PowerMock but in several cases there are other ways to go about (but not 
always, and this is when PowerMock can be useful). And even if you need to use 
PowerMock you should consider if you really need _mocking_. Many times it's 
better to use the stubbing API in PowerMock (see 
http://code.google.com/p/powermock/wiki/SuppressUnwantedBehavior) to simply 
stub, suppress or replace a method/field etc.

The PowerMockRunner IS a maintenance hell. It was initially created back in 
2007 and if I only had enough time it would be rewritten from scratch a long 
time ago. Especially now that JUnit has change a lot of internal stuff and the 
runner could be made MUCH simpler. There are lots of technical accidental 
complexity in there. 

I'm not that well-rounded with TestNG either so I haven't fully explored 
something similar to the rule in TestNG. But you can use a java agent based 
bootstrap approach for TestNG 
(http://code.google.com/p/powermock/wiki/PowerMockAgent).

Original comment by johan.ha...@gmail.com on 30 Nov 2012 at 9:51

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
I have some kind of proposal to you. I would like to do "review" of your work. 
I'll explore PowerMock wiki, and the link that you have provided to gather some 
requirements.
Then I'll mark those requirements that are really useful (especially for me) 
and check how the current code is fitting there. I'll try to create some 
prototype how to do it better/easier/more transparent/easier to maintenance (of 
course If I only can and it is possible) in contrast to some requirements 
subset.

From you I "only" require expert knowledge and some feedback. Of course this 
kind of cooperation can take forever and I am aware of that (I have also a lot 
of my own work).

Original comment by Iso.poc...@gmail.com on 30 Nov 2012 at 10:16

GoogleCodeExporter commented 9 years ago
That sounds good to me. Just let me know and I'll try to answer. Feel free to 
e-mail me directly if you like.

Original comment by johan.ha...@gmail.com on 30 Nov 2012 at 10:28