'Approvalcrest' is a library that extends the functionality of Shazamcrest.
Assertions on complete beans are made simpler by serialising the actual and expected beans to json, and comparing the two. The diagnostics are leveraging the comparison functionality of IDEs like Eclipse or IntelliJ.
Having a Person bean with the following structure:
Person person |-- String name |-- String surname |-- Address address |-- String streetName |-- int streetNumber |-- String postcode
to compare two Person beans with Approvalcrest we would write:
assertThat(actualPerson, sameBeanAs(expectedPerson));
instead of explicitly match every field of the bean and sub-beans:
assertThat(actualPerson, allOf(
hasProperty("name", equalTo(expectedPerson.name)),
hasProperty("surname", equalTo(expectedPerson.surname)),
hasProperty("address", allOf(
hasProperty("streetName", equalTo(expectedPerson.address.streetName)),
hasProperty("streetNumber", equalTo(expectedPerson.address.streetNumber)),
hasProperty("postcode", equalTo(expectedPerson.address.postcode)))
)
));
Creating the expected beans like the Person bean above can be a cumbersome task especially in more complex cases. sameJsonAsApproved meant to help with this task, instead of creating the expected bean to match against, it serializes the actual bean to json on the first run, and stores it in a file. By verifying and renaming the file, the user approves the content thus creating the expectations. Every additional run will use the file as the expected bean.
If the person address streetName does not match the expectations, the following diagnostic message is displayed:
org.junit.ComparisonFailure: address.streetName Expected: Via Roma got: Via Veneto expected:<... "streetName": "Via [Roma]", "streetNumber...> but was:<... "streetName": "Via [Veneto]", "streetNumber...>
The exception thrown is a ComparisonFailure which can be used by IDEs like Eclipse and IntelliJ to display a visual representation of the differences.
Note: in order to get the ComparisonFailure on mismatch the "assertThat" to use is com.github.karsaig.approvalcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat rather than org.hamcrest.MatcherAssert.assertThat
If we are not interested in matching the street name, we can ignore it by specifying the field path:
assertThat(actualPerson, sameBeanAs(expectedPerson).ignoring("address.streetName"));
If we want to match the address only by the postcode, we can ignore street name and number by specifying the fields name pattern:
assertThat(actualPerson, sameBeanAs(expectedPerson).ignoring(startsWith("street")));
where startsWith is an Hamcrest matcher.
If we want to make sure that the street name starts with "Via" at least:
assertThat(actualPerson, sameBeanAs(expectedPerson).with("address.streetName"), startsWith("Via"));
Having a Shop bean with the following structure:
Shop shop |-- String name |-- Store store |-- Boss boss |-- Clerk clerk |-- Store store |-- Boss boss
Comparing two Shop objects throws a StackOverflowError, because of the cycles Clerk -> Store -> Boss -> Clerk and Clerk -> Boss -> Clerk.
From version 0.10 the circular reference is detected automatically and the serialiser is instructed to serialise the instance once and replace all the other occurrences with a pointer:
assertThat(actualShop, sameBeanAs(expectedShop));
produces the following representation:
{ "store": { "0x1": { "0x1": { "0x1": { "boss": "0x2" } } }, "0x2": { "0x1": { "0x1": { "clerk": { "boss": "0x2", "store": "0x1" } } } } }, "name": "shop" }
To use add the following to your project's pom.xml:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.karsaig</groupId>
<artifactId>approvalcrest</artifactId>
<version>0.62.3</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.karsaig</groupId>
<artifactId>approvalcrest-junit-jupiter</artifactId>
<version>0.62.3</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.github.karsaig</groupId>
<artifactId>approvalcrest-junit-jupiter-kotlin</artifactId>
<version>0.62.3</version>
</dependency>