java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: A ServletContext is required to configure default servlet handling

大兔子大兔子 提交于 2019-11-27 07:11:01

One of your @Configuration classes is obviously annotated with @EnableWebMvc. That's how DelegatingWebMvcConfiguration ends up in your stack trace, since it is imported by @EnableWebMvc.

So although you think you don't need a WebApplicationContext (and hence a ServletContext), you in fact do need it simply because you are loading an application context with @EnableWebMvc.

You have two options:

  • Compose the configuration classes for your integration test so that you are not including the web-related configuration (i.e., the @Configuration class(es) annotated with @EnableWebMvc).
  • Annotate your test class with @WebAppConfiguration as suggested in other comments above.

Regards,

Sam (author of the Spring TestContext Framework)

It seems like you are missing

@WebAppConfiguration

from your test class.

The documentation states

The resource base path is used behind the scenes to create a MockServletContext which serves as the ServletContext for the test’s WebApplicationContext.

Typically a Servlet container would provide the ServletContext. Since you are in a testing environment, you need a fake. @WebAppConfiguration provides that.

For you to instantiate the Servlet context, you would have to use the annotation.

@WebAppConfiguration

A class-level annotation that is used to declare that the ApplicationContext loaded for an integration test should be a WebApplicationContext. The mere presence of @WebAppConfiguration on a test class ensures that a WebApplicationContext will be loaded for the test, using the default value of "file:src/main/webapp" for the path to the root of the web application (i.e., the resource base path). The resource base path is used behind the scenes to create a MockServletContext which serves as the ServletContext for the test’s WebApplicationContext.

Robert Hunt

I was getting a similar error but whilst running the application normally rather than trying to run tests.

It turns out if you're making use of a custom PermissionEvaluator then you need to declare it in a separate @Configuration class to the one with your main Spring security configuration in.

See: How do I add method based security to a Spring Boot project?

There is also an open Github issue: https://github.com/spring-projects/spring-boot/issues/4875

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