I am using Simple XML in my project and have following problem
Source code
#Root (name = "Test")
#Order (elements = { "UserName", .... })
public class Test
{
#Element
public String UserName;
#Validate
public void validate() throws Exception
{
if(UserName.length() > 10) {
throw new Exception("User ID is invalid");
}
}
};
In the main code I write something like this
try {
serializer.read(REQ.class, reader);
}
catch(Exception ex) {
Log.i(TAG, ex.getMessage()); <--- HERE I GET MESSAGE: null, not the one I throws.
}
Question
Look like I can't catch exception which I throws, like validate function get my exception and replace it with it's own one. So am I right and what I can do to throw my own exception?
Thank you G.BlakeMeike you were right, the solution is follow:
try {
serializer.read(REQ.class, reader);
}
catch(Exception ex) {
Log.i(TAG, ex.getCause().getMessage());
}
Related
How do I test the catch statement below? My coverlay is failing and I am not sure how to cover this line.
public Method execute(#NonNull final String test) throws ServiceException {
try {
object = javaClient.fetchInfo(test);
} catch (ClientException | InternalServerError e) {
throw serviceExceptionAdapter.apply(e);
}
return object;
}
This is currently what I have in my test file:
#BeforeEach
void setup() {
this.serviceExceptionAdapter = mock(ExceptionAdapter.class);
this.mockJavaClient = mock(JavaClient.class);
proxy = new Proxy(mockJavaClient, serviceExceptionAdapter);
}
#Test
void test_InternalServerError() {
when(mockJavaClient.fetchInfo(any())).thenThrow(InternalServerError.class);
when(serviceExceptionAdapter.apply(any())).thenThrow(ServiceException.class);
assertThrows(ServiceException.class, () -> proxy.execute(test));
verify(serviceExceptionAdapter, times(1)).apply(any());
}
I have to guess a little bit, as you didn't provide a full working example. From what I see in your catch block
} catch (ClientException | InternalServerError e) {
throw serviceExceptionAdapter.apply(e);
}
you expect the return value of your .apply(e) function to be an exception and throw that exception. In your test however, your mocked serviceExceptionAdapter doesn't return an Exception, but throws one instead:
when(serviceExceptionAdapter.apply(any()))
.thenThrow(ServiceException.class);
If my interpretations are correct, your code should work if you change the mentioned line in the test to the following:
when(serviceExceptionAdapter.apply(any()))
.thenReturn(new ServiceException(...));
I need to write a simple code tester program, but I got stuck comparing the given error class with the test expected class. I am supposed to use reflection in this exercise.
I have my code testing class:
public class TestRunner {
private String result = "";
public void runTests(List<String> testClassNames) {
for (String testClassName : testClassNames) {
Class<?> clazz;
try {
clazz = Class.forName(testClassName);
} catch (ClassNotFoundException e) {
throw new IllegalStateException("No such class.");
}
Method[] methods = clazz.getMethods();
for (Method method : methods) {
if (method.getAnnotation(MyTest.class) != null) {
if (testClassName.equals("reflection.tester.ExampleTests1")) {
result += method.getName() + "() - ";
ExampleTests1 instance = new ExampleTests1();
try {
// if null, result = OK
method.invoke(instance);
result += "OK\n";
} catch (IllegalArgumentException | IllegalAccessException | InvocationTargetException e) {
// if error is caught result = FAILED
result += "FAILED\n";
}
} else {
// the second class. should only return "OK" if the error is implemented from the exception class
result += method.getName() + "() - ";
ExampleTests2 instance = new ExampleTests2();
try {
method.invoke(instance);
result += "FAILED\n";
} catch (RuntimeException e) {
Throwable original = e.getCause();
Object expected = method.getReturnType();
if (original.getClass().isAssignableFrom(expected.getClass())) {
result += "OK\n";
} else {
result += "FAILED\n";
}
} catch (InvocationTargetException | IllegalAccessException e) {
result += "ERROR\n";
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
Also have two test classes. In the first one there is only one rule, if the test won't throw an exception the test should pass, and it is working. The second class is more complicated. If the thrown error class is implemented or same to the expected error class then the test should pass and OK should be added to the result. Currently my code won't catch RunTimeException at all and moves to the last catch block. How can I fix this?
I will also add the test class for more information.
public class ExampleTests2 {
#MyTest(expected = RuntimeException.class)
public void test3() {
throw new IllegalStateException();
}
#MyTest(expected = IllegalStateException.class)
public void test4() {
throw new RuntimeException();
}
#MyTest(expected = IllegalStateException.class)
public void test5() {
throw new IllegalStateException();
}
#MyTest(expected = IllegalStateException.class)
public void test6() {
}
public void helperMethod() {
}
}
test3() and test5() should pass, test4() and test6() should fail, helperMethod() won't be checked because I only need to use the tests with #MyTest annotation.
JUnit has an assertThrows method that checks that an Exception is thrown. It has a method signature of
static <T extends Throwable> assertThrows​(Class<T> expectedType, Executable executable){}
Here's the documentation: https://junit.org/junit5/docs/current/api/org.junit.jupiter.api/org/junit/jupiter/api/Assertions.html#assertThrows(java.lang.Class,org.junit.jupiter.api.function.Executable)
and here's how JUnit implements it:
https://github.com/junit-team/junit5/blob/main/junit-jupiter-api/src/main/java/org/junit/jupiter/api/AssertThrows.java
UPDATE: Here's the full test:
#Test(expected = NullPointerException.class)
public void testMissingData() throws Exception{
Resource<ObjectDataModel, Content, Status> resource = builder.build(content, argA1Response,
argA2Response, objFilterParam, argA3Response);}
And here's the build method:
public Resource<ObjectDataModel, Content, Status> build(Content argContent,
ResponseA1 argA1Response,
ResponseA2 argA2Response, String argObjectTypeFilter,
ResponseA3 argA3Response) {
try {
viewDataModel.setObjectType(this.buildObjectType(filteredObjectType,
argA1Response.getData().getDataObject().getCategories().get(0).getObjectTypes().get(0)));
}
catch (Exception e) {
String msg = "Exception occoured while buildng the Object Data Model";
LOG.error(msg, e);
}
// we have the required information gathered to return
return Resource.okFromDataAndContent(viewDataModel, argContent);
}
And here's the buildObjectType() method:
private ObjectType buildObjectType(ObjectTypes argA1ProductType,
PendingObjectTypes argA2ProductType) {
ProductType objectType = new ObjectType();
List<Plan> plans = argA1ObjectType.getPlan();
List<PendingObjectSummary> objPlans = argA1ObjectType.getData();
if (objectType.getData() == null) {
objectType.setData(new ArrayList<>());
}
PendingObjectSummary tempPlan = null;
for (Plan currPlan : plans) {
tempPlan = plans.stream()
.filter(plan -> plan.getObjId().equals(currPlan.getObjId()))
.findFirst()
.orElseThrow(NullPointerException::new);
}
return objectType;
}
I'm using an Optional to test for null and I can confirm that the exception is being thrown -- but JUnit isn't catching it. Here's the test case:
#Test(expected = NullPointerException.class)
public void testMissingData() throws Exception{
Object<> response = fixture.create();
assertNotNull(response);
assertNotNull(response.getData());
assertNull(resource.getData().getObjectType());
}
In my create method I'm simply iterating over a bunch of objects to try and find one that matches my ID; if not found then throw a NullPointerException:
for (Object currObj : objects) {
tempObj = myOtherCollection.stream()
.filter(obj -> obj.getId().equals(currObj.getId()))
.findFirst()
.orElseThrow(NullPointerException::new);
}
The JUnit output clearly isn't catching the exception - here's the output:
java.lang.AssertionError: Expected exception: java.lang.NullPointerException
And my tomcat logs are definitely throwing the exception here:
18:48:30.015 [main] ERROR com.myCompany.src.ModelBuilder - Exception occoured while buildng the Data Model
java.lang.NullPointerException: null
at java.util.Optional.orElseThrow(Optional.java:290)
The only issue I can see is that maybe where I assign tempObj that the code is wrong. Am I missing anything obvious? Thanks for any helpful tips.
You are catching the nullpointer exception so the exception is not propagated to your test.
see
try {
viewDataModel.setObjectType(this.buildObjectType(filteredObjectType,
argA1Response.getData().getDataObject().getCategories().get(0).getObjectTypes().get(0)));
}
catch (Exception e) {
String msg = "Exception occoured while buildng the Object Data Model";
LOG.error(msg, e);
}
If you want to test for an exception you could throw an exception in your error handling (for example a custom ObjectCreationExcepion) and assert that that one is thrown, like
try {
viewDataModel.setObjectType(this.buildObjectType(filteredObjectType,
argA1Response.getData().getDataObject().getCategories().get(0).getObjectTypes().get(0)));
}
catch (Exception e) {
String msg = "Exception occoured while buildng the Object Data Model";
LOG.error(msg, e);
throw new ObjectCreationException(msg);
}
and in your test
#Test(expected = ObjectCreationException.class)
public void testMissingData() throws Exception{
Object<> response = fixture.create();
}
#Test(expected = ObjectCreationException.class) only handles exceptions that are not handled within the tested code OR the test itself.
So what you could do is
public Resource<ObjectDataModel, Content, Status> build(Content argContent,
ResponseA1 argA1Response,
ResponseA2 argA2Response, String argObjectTypeFilter,
ResponseA3 argA3Response) throws NullPointerExceptions // << notice thrwoing declatration
{ // do some stuf}
and then in test you can handle it like you where trying by
public void testMissingData() throws Exception{
Resource<ObjectDataModel, Content, Status> resource = builder.build(content, argA1Response,
argA2Response, objFilterParam, argA3Response);
}
I am new to JUnit and I have to test a method using JUnit api. One method internall calls another. My test case goes inside the method but while catchign the exception it fails.
Method under test is
public void checkANDCondition( Map<String, Message> messagesMap ) throws EISClientException
{
List<String> codes = getMessageCodes();
if(isAllReturnedMessagesContainCodes(codes, messagesMap))
{
StringBuffer buff = new StringBuffer("All of the specified message codes matched returned errors.");
for(String code: codes )
{
Message message = messagesMap.get(code);
buff.append(message.getMessageCode() + ": " + message.getMessageType() + ": " + message.getMessageText() + " ");
}
throw new EISClientException(buff.toString());
}
}
public boolean isAllReturnedMessagesContainCodes(List<String> codes, Map<String, Message> messagesMap)
{
if(codes!=null)
{
for(String code: codes)
{
if(!messagesMap.containsKey(code))
{
return false;
}
}
}
return true;
}
What I have done so far is
#Test
public void testPostProcess() throws Exception {
clientResponse = mock(ClientResponse.class);
MessageToExceptionPostProcessFilter postProcessFilter = new MessageToExceptionPostProcessFilter();
RetrieveBillingServiceResponse serviceResponse = new RetrieveBillingServiceResponse();caughtException = false;
try {
postProcessFilter.setCondition(ConditionOperator.AND);
List<String> messagesCodes = new ArrayList<String>();
messagesCodes.add("200");
messagesCodes.add("400");
Message message = new Message();
message.setMessageCode("200");
message.setMessageType(MessageTypeEnum.MESSAGE_TYPE_INFO);
message.setMessageText("Service completed successfully");
serviceResponse.setMessages(Arrays.asList(message));
postProcessFilter.setMessageCodes(messagesCodes);
serviceResponse = postProcessFilter.postProcess(serviceResponse, clientResponse);
assertNotNull(serviceResponse.getMessages());
} catch (EISClientException ex) {
caughtException = true;
assertEquals("All of the specified message codes matched returned errors.", ex.getMessage());
}
assertTrue(caughtException);
}
How can I make it pass?
Thanks
#Test(expected = EISCLientException.class)
public void testPostProcess() throws Exception {
...
serviceResponse.getMessages();
fail("Shouldn't reach this point");
}
That way you don't need to catch, with expected if it does not get throw a EISClientException it will fail.
edit: There are two times I can think of where you wouldn't want to use this.
1) You are mocking exceptions that are thrown mock(exception.class);
this i believe then throws some Mockito excpetion and it will not match the expected exception.
2) You are wrapping caught exceptions in your code, and throwing a generic exception. Example of code:
try {
} catch (FileParseException e){
throw new (ProjectFailingException(e, "file is bad");
}
if you have multiple catches and are wrapping them as ProjectFailingExceptions then you may want to catch in the test like this...
#Test ( expected = FileParseException.class)
public void testProcess() {
try {
...
} catch (ProjectFailingException e){
throw e.getCause();
}
Then the proper exception is thrown and you can make sure that process isn't throwing an exception from a a different catch.
main method:
public static void main(String[] args) throws Exception
{
if (args.length != EXPECTED_NUMBER_OF_ARGUMENTS)
{
System.err.println("Usage - java XFRCompiler ConfigXML PackageXML XFR");
}
String configXML = args[0];
String packageXML = args[1];
String xfr = args[2];
AutoConfigCompiler compiler = new AutoConfigCompiler();
compiler.setConfigDocument(loadDocument(configXML));
compiler.setPackageInfoDoc(loadDocument(packageXML));
// compiler.setVisiblityDoc(loadDocument("VisibilityFilter.xml"));
compiler.compileModel(xfr);
}
private static Document loadDocument(String fileName) throws Exception
{
TXDOMParser parser = (TXDOMParser) ParserFactory.makeParser(TXDOMParser.class.getName());
InputSource source = new InputSource(new FileInputStream(fileName));
parser.parse(source);
return parser.getDocument();
}
testcase:
#Test
public void testCompileModel() throws Exception
{
// construct parameters
URL configFile = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResource("Ford_2008_Mustang_Config.xml");
URL packageFile = Thread.currentThread().getContextClassLoader().getResource("Ford_2008_Mustang_Package.xml");
File tmpFile = new File("Ford_2008_Mustang_tmp.xfr");
if(!tmpFile.exists()) {
tmpFile.createNewFile();
}
String[] args = new String[]{configFile.getPath(),packageFile.getPath(),tmpFile.getPath()};
try {
// test main method
XFRCompiler.main(args);
} catch (Exception e) {
assertTrue(true);
}
try {
// test args length is less than 3
XFRCompiler.main(new String[]{"",""});
} catch (Exception e) {
//ignore
}
tmpFile.delete();
}
Coverage outputs displayed as the lines from String configXML = args[0]; in main method
are not covered.
assertTrue(true); is a pointless no-op
Remove the try/catch around the call to XFRCompiler.main(args);, since all it does is swallow excpetions and make debugging harder; most likely you will then see an exception that tells you where the problem is.
There should be a call to fail() after the call to XFRCompiler.main(new String[]{"",""}); since you expect it to throw an exception
Put the two calls in separate test methods.
I'm worried about all those assertTrue(true). If there can't be an exception, then the assert is not necessary. If there is an unexpected exception, then this code will swallow it and you will get the behavior you see right now.
Then, if you expect an exception, you should code like this:
try {
... code that will throw an exception ...
fail("No exception was thrown");
} catch (SpecficTypeOfException e) {
assertEquals("message", e.getMessage());
}
That way, wrong types of exception and the exception message will be checked.
PS: Don't post questions with "urgent". We already help as fast as we can.