How to mock the default constructor of the Date class with JMockit?

柔情痞子 提交于 2019-11-29 15:48:05
asmaier

al nik's answer was a good hint for me. It is better to mock the System class instead of the Date class to generate a fake time. My own solution in the end was simply to mock the System.currentTimeMillis() method (this method is called by Date() internally).

JMockit 1.5 and later

new MockUp<System>(){

    @Mock
    public long currentTimeMillis() {

        // Now is always 11/11/2011
        Date fake = new Date(111,10,11);
        return fake.getTime();
    }
};

JMockit 1.4 and earlier

@MockClass(realClass = System.class)
public static class MockedSystem {

    @Mock
    public long currentTimeMillis() {

        // Now is always 11/11/2011
        Date fake = new Date(111,10,11);
        return fake.getTime();
    }
}

As suggested in the Test Driven book it's good practice to use a SystemTime abstraction in your java classes. Replace your method calls (System#currentTimeMillis and Calendar#getInstance) and direct construction (new Date()) with static method calls like:

long time = SystemTime.asMillis();
Calendar calendar = SystemTime.asCalendar();
Date date = SystemTime.asDate();

To fake the time you just need to modify what's returned by your SystemTime class.
SystemTime use a TimeSource interface that by default delegates to System.currentTimeMillis()

public interface TimeSource {
    long millis();
}

a configurable SystemTime implementation could be something like this

public class SystemTime {
    private static final TimeSource defaultSrc =
            new TimeSource() {
                public long millis() {
                    return System.currentTimeMillis();
                }
            };

    private static TimeSource source = null;
    public static long asMillis() {
        return getTimeSource().millis();
    }

    public static Date asDate() {
        return new Date(asMillis());
    }
    public static void reset() {
        setTimeSource(null);
    }
    public static void setTimeSource(TimeSource source) {
        SystemTime.source = source;
    }
    private static TimeSource getTimeSource() {
        return (source != null ? source : defaultSrc);
    }
}

and to fake the returned time you simply do

@Test
public void clockReturnsFakedTimeInMilliseconds() throws Exception {
    final long fakeTime = 123456790L;
    SystemTime.setTimeSource(new TimeSource() {
        public long millis() {
                return fakeTime;
        }
    });
    long clock = SystemTime.asMillis();
    assertEquals("Should return fake time", fakeTime, clock);
}

Joda-Time library simplifies working with dates in Java and offers you something like this out of the box

You mocked the constructor, and inside you made an instance of Date (that has nothing to do with the one constructed) and just threw it away. Since the default constructor is mocked out, date is not initialized to the current time, and so you get the time of zero (which represents 1970-01-01).

To modify the returned date you need to use a magic "it" attribute, like so:

@MockClass(realClass=Date.class)
public static class MockedDate {

    public Date it;
    @Mock
    public void $init() {
        // This is sick!
        it.setDate(31);
        it.setYear(110); // 110 = 2010!
        it.setMonth(11); // 11 = December!
    }
}
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!