1. Overview
In this tutorial, we’ll cover all the annotations in the Mockito library – @Mock, @Spy, @Captor and @InjectMocks .
2. Enable Mockito Annotations
First – let’s see how to enable the use of annotations with Mockito tests.
In order for these annotations to be enabled, we’ll need to annotate the JUnit test with a runner – MockitoJUnitRunner as in the following example:
@RunWith(MockitoJUnitRunner.class) public class MockitoAnnotationTest { ... }
Alternatively we can enable these annotations programmatically as well, by invoking MockitoAnnotations.initMocks() as in the following example:
@Before public void init() { MockitoAnnotations.initMocks(this); }
3. @Mock Annotation
The most used widely used annotation in Mockito is @Mock. We can use @Mock to create and inject mocked instances without having to call Mockito.mock manually.
In the following example – we’ll create a mocked ArrayList with the manual way without using @Mock annotation:
@Test public void whenNotUseMockAnnotation_thenCorrect() { List mockList = Mockito.mock(ArrayList.class); mockList.add("one"); Mockito.verify(mockList).add("one"); assertEquals(0, mockList.size()); Mockito.when(mockList.size()).thenReturn(100); assertEquals(100, mockList.size()); }
And now we’ll do the same but we’ll inject the mock using the @Mock annotation:
@Mock List<String> mockedList; @Test public void whenUseMockAnnotation_thenMockIsInjected() { mockedList.add("one"); Mockito.verify(mockedList).add("one"); assertEquals(0, mockedList.size()); Mockito.when(mockedList.size()).thenReturn(100); assertEquals(100, mockedList.size()); }
Note how – in both examples, we’re interacting with the mock and verifying some of these interactions – just to make sure that the mock is behaving correctly.
4. @Spy Annotation
Now – let’s see how to use @Spy annotation to spy on an existing instance.
In the following example – we create a spy of a List with the old way without using @Spy annotation:
@Test public void whenNotUseSpyAnnotation_thenCorrect() { List<String> spyList = Mockito.spy(new ArrayList<String>()); spyList.add("one"); spyList.add("two"); Mockito.verify(spyList).add("one"); Mockito.verify(spyList).add("two"); assertEquals(2, spyList.size()); Mockito.doReturn(100).when(spyList).size(); assertEquals(100, spyList.size()); }
Let’s now do the same – spy on the list – but do so using the @Spy annotation:
@Spy List<String> spiedList = new ArrayList<String>(); @Test public void whenUseSpyAnnotation_thenSpyIsInjected() { spiedList.add("one"); spiedList.add("two"); Mockito.verify(spiedList).add("one"); Mockito.verify(spiedList).add("two"); assertEquals(2, spiedList.size()); Mockito.doReturn(100).when(spiedList).size(); assertEquals(100, spiedList.size()); }
Note how, as before – we’re interacting with the spy here to make sure that it behaves correctly. In this example we:
- Used the real method spiedList.add() to add elements to the spiedList.
- Stubbed the method spiedList.size() to return 100 instead of 2 using Mockito.doReturn().
5. @Captor Annotation
Next – let’s see how to use the @Captor annotation to create an ArgumentCaptor instance.
In the following example – we create an ArgumentCaptor with the old way without using @Captor annotation:
@Test public void whenNotUseCaptorAnnotation_thenCorrect() { List mockList = Mockito.mock(List.class); ArgumentCaptor<String> arg = ArgumentCaptor.forClass(String.class); mockList.add("one"); Mockito.verify(mockList).add(arg.capture()); assertEquals("one", arg.getValue()); }
Let’s now make use of @Captor for the same purpose – to create an ArgumentCaptor instance:
@Mock List mockedList; @Captor ArgumentCaptor argCaptor; @Test public void whenUseCaptorAnnotation_thenTheSam() { mockedList.add("one"); Mockito.verify(mockedList).add(argCaptor.capture()); assertEquals("one", argCaptor.getValue()); }
Notice how the test becomes simpler and more readable when we take out the configuration logic.
6. @InjectMocks Annotation
Now – let’s discuss how to use @InjectMocks annotation – to inject mock fields into the tested object automatically.
In the following example – we use @InjectMocks to inject the mock wordMap into the MyDictionary dic:
@Mock Map<String, String> wordMap; @InjectMocks MyDictionary dic = new MyDictionary(); @Test public void whenUseInjectMocksAnnotation_thenCorrect() { Mockito.when(wordMap.get("aWord")).thenReturn("aMeaning"); assertEquals("aMeaning", dic.getMeaning("aWord")); }
And here is the class MyDictionary:
public class MyDictionary { Map<String, String> wordMap; public MyDictionary() { wordMap = new HashMap<String, String>(); } public void add(final String word, final String meaning) { wordMap.put(word, meaning); } public String getMeaning(final String word) { return wordMap.get(word); } }
7. Notes
Finally – here is some notes about Mockito annotations:
- Use annotation to minimize repetitive mock creation code
- Use annotation to make the test more readable
- Use @InjectMocks to inject both @Spy and @Mock instances
8. Conclusion
In this quick tutorial, we learned the basics of annotations in the Mockito library.
The implementation of all these examples and code snippets can be found in my Mockito github project – this is an Eclipse based project, so it should be easy to import and run as it is.