Compared with the class-granularity mocking practices of existing mock tools, `TestableMock` allows developers to directly define a single method and use it for mocking. With the principle of convention over configuration, mock method replacement will automatically happen when the specified method in the test class match an invocation in the class under test.
> - Mock non-constructive method, copy the original method definition to the mock class, add a `@MockMethod` annotation
> - Mock construction method, copy the original method definition to the mock class, replace the return value with the constructed type, the method name is arbitrary, and add a `@MockContructor` annotation
The detail mock method definition convention is as follows.
#### 0. Pre-step, prepare the mock class
First, create a mock class as the container for mock methods associated with the test class. The simplest way is to add a static inner class named `Mock` to the test class. E.g:
Define an ordinary method annotated with `@MockMethod` in the mock class with exactly the same signature (name, parameter, and return value type) as the method to be mocked, and then add the type of target object (which the method originally belongs to) as `targetMethod` parameter of `@MockMethod` annotation.
At this time, all invocations to that original method in the class under test will be automatically replaced with invocations to the above-mentioned mock method when the unit test is running.
For example, there is a call to `"anything".substring(1, 2)` in the class under test, and we want to change it to a fixed string when running the test, we only need to define the following method in the mock class:
When several methods to be mocked have the same name, you can put the name of the method to be mocked in the `targetMethod` parameter of `@MockMethod` annotation, so that the mock method itself can be named at will.
Sometimes, the mock method need to access the member variables in the original object that initiated the invocation, or invoke other methods of the original object. At this point, you can remove the `targetClass` parameter in the `@MockMethod` annotation, and then add a extra parameter whose type is the original object type of the method to the first index of the method parameter list.
The `TestableMock` convention is that when the `targetClass` parameter value of the `@MockMethod` annotation is empty, the first parameter of the mock method is the type of the target method, and the parameter name is arbitrary. In order to facilitate code reading, it is recommended to name this parameter as `self` or `src`. Example as follows:
```java
// Adds a `String` type parameter to the first position the mock method parameter list (parameter name is arbitrary)
// This parameter can be used to get the value and context of the actual invoker at runtime
@MockMethod
private String substring(String self, int i, int j) {
For complete code examples, see the `should_mock_common_method()` test cases in the `java-demo` and `kotlin-demo` sample projects. (Because Kotlin has made magical changes to the String type, the method under test in the Kotlin example adds a layer of encapsulation to the `BlackBox` class)
For example, there is a private method with the signature `String innerFunc(String)` in the class under test. If we want to replace it during testing, we only need to define the following method in the mock class:
Similarly, if the method in the above example needs to access the original tested object that initiated the call, it may not use the `targetClass` parameter, but when defining the mock method, add a parameter of type `DemoMock` to the first index of the method parameter list.
For example, if the static method `secretBox()` of the `BlackBox` type is invoked in the class under test, and the method signature is `BlackBox secretBox()`, then the mock method is as follows:
Define an ordinary method annotated with `@MockContructor` in the mock class, make the return value type of the method the type of the object to be created, and the method parameters are exactly the same as the constructor parameters to be mocked, the method name is arbitrary.
At this time, all operations in the class under test that use `new` to create the specified class (and use the constructor that is consistent with the mock method parameters) will be replaced with calls to the custom method.
For example, if there is a call to `new BlackBox("something")` in the class under test, and you want to change it during unit testing (usually by replacing it with a mock object, or by replacing it with a temporary object created with test parameters), just define the following mock method:
```java
// The signature of the constructor to be mocked is `BlackBox(String)`
// No need to add additional parameters to the mock method parameter list, and the name of the mock method is arbitrary
> You can still use the `@MockMethod` annotation, and configure the `targetMethod` parameter value to `"<init>"`, and the rest is the same as above. The effect is the same as using the `@MockContructor` annotation
In the mock method, you can use the `TestableTool.SOURCE_METHOD` variable to identify **the method name of the class under test before entering the mock method**; in addition, the `TestableTool.MOCK_CONTEXT` variable can **inject additional context parameters into the mock method**, to distinguish and process different calling scenarios.
For complete code examples, see the `should_get_source_method_name()` and `should_get_test_case_name()` test cases in the `java-demo` and `kotlin-demo` sample projects.
#### 6. Verify the sequence and parameters of the mock method being invoked
In test cases, you can use the `TestableTool.verify()` method, and cooperate with `with()`, `withInOrder()`, `without()`, `withTimes()` and other methods to verify the mock call situation.
For details, please refer to the [Check Mock Call](en-us/doc/matcher.md) document.