Junit Testing JNDI InitialContext outside the application server

久未见 提交于 2019-11-28 08:17:54
Tom Anderson

The orthodox thing to do here would be to change you code so that the Context is injected into it (by a dependency injection framework, or manually). Then, you simply pass in a mock in your unit test.

If you can't do this, and your code must create the IntialContext itself, then you will need to set up a fake JNDI implementation into which you can inject mocks. If you search the web for in-memory JNDI implementation or mock JNDI implementation, you will find various options, or you could write one yourself. Basically, you will need an implementation of InitialContextFactory which simply returns a suitable mock, which you then select by setting the java.naming.factory.initial system property.

I had a crack at writing the necessary classes. Here you go:

public class MockInitialContextFactory implements InitialContextFactory {

    private static final ThreadLocal<Context> currentContext = new ThreadLocal<Context>();

    @Override
    public Context getInitialContext(Hashtable<?, ?> environment) throws NamingException {
        return currentContext.get();
    }

    public static void setCurrentContext(Context context) {
        currentContext.set(context);
    }

    public static void clearCurrentContext() {
        currentContext.remove();
    }

}

public class MockInitialContextRule implements TestRule {

    private final Context context;

    public MockInitialContextRule(Context context) {
        this.context = context;
    }

    @Override
    public Statement apply(final Statement base, Description description) {
        return new Statement() {
            @Override
            public void evaluate() throws Throwable {
                System.setProperty(Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY, MockInitialContextFactory.class.getName());
                MockInitialContextFactory.setCurrentContext(context);
                try {
                    base.evaluate();
                } finally {
                    System.clearProperty(Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY);
                    MockInitialContextFactory.clearCurrentContext();
                }
            }
        };
    }
}

Use as follows:

public class FooTest {

    private final Context context = mock(Context.class);

    @Rule
    public MockInitialContextRule mockInitialContextRule = new MockInitialContextRule(context);

    @Test
    public void testName() throws Exception {
        // set up stubbings on the context mock
        // invoke the code under test
    }
}

You can use the Spring implementation, it works like this:

import org.springframework.mock.jndi.SimpleNamingContextBuilder;

[...]

SimpleNamingContextBuilder builder = new SimpleNamingContextBuilder();
builder.bind("jdbc/myDataSource", myDS);
builder.activate();

This is easily done with Simple-JNDI. Create a property file "jdbc/multiDS.properties" in your working directory to configure your datasource with these properties:

type=javax.sql.DataSource
driver=org.gjt.mm.mysql.Driver
url=jdbc:mysql://localhost/testdb
user=testuser
password=testing

Then instantiate the context with

final Hashtable<String, String> env = new Hashtable<String, String>();
env.put("org.osjava.sj.root", "working_dir");
env.put("org.osjava.sj.jndi.shared", "true");
env.put("java.naming.factory.initial", "org.osjava.sj.SimpleContextFactory");
env.put("org.osjava.sj.delimiter", "/");
env.put("org.osjava.sj.space", "java:comp/env")
Context ctx = new InitialContext(env);

After that you can call

dataSource = (DataSource) context.lookup("java:comp/env/jdbc/multiDS");

Find more info about Simple-JNDI here https://github.com/h-thurow/Simple-JNDI

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