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<h1>Partial mock objects documentation</h1>
This page...
<ul>
<li>
<a href="#inject">The mock injection problem</a>.
</li>
<li>
Moving creation to a <a href="#creation">protected factory</a> method.
</li>
<li>
<a href="#partial">Partial mocks</a> generate subclasses.
</li>
<li>
Partial mocks <a href="#less">test less than a class</a>.
</li>
</ul>
<div class="content">
<p>
A partial mock is simply a pattern to alleviate a specific problem
in testing with mock objects,
that of getting mock objects into tight corners.
It's quite a limited tool and possibly not even a good idea.
It is included with SimpleTest because I have found it useful
on more than one occasion and has saved a lot of work at that point.
</p>
<h2>
<a class="target" name="inject"></a>The mock injection problem</h2>
<p>
When one object uses another it is very simple to just pass a mock
version in already set up with its expectations.
Things are rather tricker if one object creates another and the
creator is the one you want to test.
This means that the created object should be mocked, but we can
hardly tell our class under test to create a mock instead.
The tested class doesn't even know it is running inside a test
after all.
</p>
<p>
For example, suppose we are building a telnet client and it
needs to create a network socket to pass its messages.
The connection method might look something like...
<pre>
<strong>&lt;?php
require_once('socket.php');
class Telnet {
...
function connect($ip, $port, $username, $password) {
$socket = new Socket($ip, $port);
$socket-&gt;read( ... );
...
}
}
?&gt;</strong>
</pre>
We would really like to have a mock object version of the socket
here, what can we do?
</p>
<p>
The first solution is to pass the socket in as a parameter,
forcing the creation up a level.
Having the client handle this is actually a very good approach
if you can manage it and should lead to factoring the creation from
the doing.
In fact, this is one way in which testing with mock objects actually
forces you to code more tightly focused solutions.
They improve your programming.
</p>
<p>
Here this would be...
<pre>
&lt;?php
require_once('socket.php');
class Telnet {
...
<strong>function connect($socket, $username, $password) {
$socket-&gt;read( ... );
...
}</strong>
}
?&gt;
</pre>
This means that the test code is typical for a test involving
mock objects.
<pre>
class TelnetTest extends UnitTestCase {
...
function testConnection() {<strong>
$socket = new MockSocket();
...
$telnet = new Telnet();
$telnet-&gt;connect($socket, 'Me', 'Secret');
...</strong>
}
}
</pre>
It is pretty obvious though that one level is all you can go.
You would hardly want your top level application creating
every low level file, socket and database connection ever
needed.
It wouldn't know the constructor parameters anyway.
</p>
<p>
The next simplest compromise is to have the created object passed
in as an optional parameter...
<pre>
&lt;?php
require_once('socket.php');
class Telnet {
...<strong>
function connect($ip, $port, $username, $password, $socket = false) {
if (! $socket) {
$socket = new Socket($ip, $port);
}
$socket-&gt;read( ... );</strong>
...
return $socket;
}
}
?&gt;
</pre>
For a quick solution this is usually good enough.
The test now looks almost the same as if the parameter
was formally passed...
<pre>
class TelnetTest extends UnitTestCase {
...
function testConnection() {<strong>
$socket = new MockSocket();
...
$telnet = new Telnet();
$telnet-&gt;connect('127.0.0.1', 21, 'Me', 'Secret', $socket);
...</strong>
}
}
</pre>
The problem with this approach is its untidiness.
There is test code in the main class and parameters passed
in the test case that are never used.
This is a quick and dirty approach, but nevertheless effective
in most situations.
</p>
<p>
The next method is to pass in a factory object to do the creation...
<pre>
&lt;?php
require_once('socket.php');
class Telnet {<strong>
function Telnet($network) {
$this-&gt;_network = $network;
}</strong>
...
function connect($ip, $port, $username, $password) {<strong>
$socket = $this-&gt;_network-&gt;createSocket($ip, $port);
$socket-&gt;read( ... );</strong>
...
return $socket;
}
}
?&gt;
</pre>
This is probably the most highly factored answer as creation
is now moved into a small specialist class.
The networking factory can now be tested separately, but mocked
easily when we are testing the telnet class...
<pre>
class TelnetTest extends UnitTestCase {
...
function testConnection() {<strong>
$socket = new MockSocket();
...
$network = new MockNetwork();
$network-&gt;returnsByReference('createSocket', $socket);
$telnet = new Telnet($network);
$telnet-&gt;connect('127.0.0.1', 21, 'Me', 'Secret');</strong>
}
}
</pre>
The downside is that we are adding a lot more classes to the
library.
Also we are passing a lot of factories around which will
make the code a little less intuitive.
The most flexible solution, but the most complex.
</p>
<p>
Well techniques like "Dependency Injection" tackle the problem of
instantiating a lot of constructor parameters.
Unfortunately knowledge of this pattern is not widespread, and if you
are trying to get older code to work, rearchitecting the whole
application is not really an option.
</p>
<p>
Is there a middle ground?
</p>
<h2>
<a class="target" name="creation"></a>Protected factory method</h2>
<p>
There is a way we can circumvent the problem without creating
any new application classes, but it involves creating a subclass
when we do the actual testing.
Firstly we move the socket creation into its own method...
<pre>
&lt;?php
require_once('socket.php');
class Telnet {
...
function connect($ip, $port, $username, $password) {
<strong>$socket = $this-&gt;createSocket($ip, $port);</strong>
$socket-&gt;read( ... );
...
}<strong>
protected function createSocket($ip, $port) {
return new Socket($ip, $port);
}</strong>
}
?&gt;
</pre>
This is a pretty safe step even for very tangled legacy code.
This is the only change we make to the application.
</p>
<p>
For the test case we have to create a subclass so that
we can intercept the socket creation...
<pre>
<strong>class TelnetTestVersion extends Telnet {
var $mock;
function TelnetTestVersion($mock) {
$this-&gt;mock = $mock;
$this-&gt;Telnet();
}
protected function createSocket() {
return $this-&gt;mock;
}
}</strong>
</pre>
Here I have passed the mock in the constructor, but a
setter would have done just as well.
Note that the mock was set into the object variable
before the constructor was chained.
This is necessary in case the constructor calls
<span class="new_code">connect()</span>.
Otherwise it could get a null value from
<span class="new_code">createSocket()</span>.
</p>
<p>
After the completion of all of this extra work the
actual test case is fairly easy.
We just test our new class instead...
<pre>
class TelnetTest extends UnitTestCase {
...
function testConnection() {<strong>
$socket = new MockSocket();
...
$telnet = new TelnetTestVersion($socket);
$telnet-&gt;connect('127.0.0.1', 21, 'Me', 'Secret');</strong>
}
}
</pre>
The new class is very simple of course.
It just sets up a return value, rather like a mock.
It would be nice if it also checked the incoming parameters
as well.
Just like a mock.
It seems we are likely to do this often, can
we automate the subclass creation?
</p>
<h2>
<a class="target" name="partial"></a>A partial mock</h2>
<p>
Of course the answer is "yes" or I would have stopped writing
this by now!
The previous test case was a lot of work, but we can
generate the subclass using a similar approach to the mock objects.
</p>
<p>
Here is the partial mock version of the test...
<pre>
<strong>Mock::generatePartial(
'Telnet',
'TelnetTestVersion',
array('createSocket'));</strong>
class TelnetTest extends UnitTestCase {
...
function testConnection() {<strong>
$socket = new MockSocket();
...
$telnet = new TelnetTestVersion();
$telnet-&gt;setReturnReference('createSocket', $socket);
$telnet-&gt;Telnet();
$telnet-&gt;connect('127.0.0.1', 21, 'Me', 'Secret');</strong>
}
}
</pre>
The partial mock is a subclass of the original with
selected methods "knocked out" with test
versions.
The <span class="new_code">generatePartial()</span> call
takes three parameters: the class to be subclassed,
the new test class name and a list of methods to mock.
</p>
<p>
Instantiating the resulting objects is slightly tricky.
The only constructor parameter of a partial mock is
the unit tester reference.
As with the normal mock objects this is needed for sending
test results in response to checked expectations.
</p>
<p>
The original constructor is not run yet.
This is necessary in case the constructor is going to
make use of the as yet unset mocked methods.
We set any return values at this point and then run the
constructor with its normal parameters.
This three step construction of "new", followed
by setting up the methods, followed by running the constructor
proper is what distinguishes the partial mock code.
</p>
<p>
Apart from construction, all of the mocked methods have
the same features as mock objects and all of the unmocked
methods behave as before.
We can set expectations very easily...
<pre>
class TelnetTest extends UnitTestCase {
...
function testConnection() {
$socket = new MockSocket();
...
$telnet = new TelnetTestVersion();
$telnet-&gt;setReturnReference('createSocket', $socket);
<strong>$telnet-&gt;expectOnce('createSocket', array('127.0.0.1', 21));</strong>
$telnet-&gt;Telnet();
$telnet-&gt;connect('127.0.0.1', 21, 'Me', 'Secret');
}
}
</pre>
Partial mocks are not used often.
I consider them transitory.
Useful while refactoring, but once the application has
all of it's dependencies nicely separated then the
partial mocks can wither away.
</p>
<h2>
<a class="target" name="less"></a>Testing less than a class</h2>
<p>
The mocked out methods don't have to be factory methods,
they could be any sort of method.
In this way partial mocks allow us to take control of any part of
a class except the constructor.
We could even go as far as to mock every method
except one we actually want to test.
</p>
<p>
This last situation is all rather hypothetical, as I've hardly
tried it.
I am a little worried that
forcing object granularity may be better for the code quality.
I personally use partial mocks as a way of overriding creation
or for occasional testing of the TemplateMethod pattern.
</p>
<p>
It's all going to come down to the coding standards of your
project to decide if you allow test mechanisms like this.
</p>
</div>
References and related information...
<ul>
<li>
SimpleTest project page on <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/simpletest/">SourceForge</a>.
</li>
<li>
<a href="http://simpletest.org/api/">Full API for SimpleTest</a>
from the PHPDoc.
</li>
<li>
The protected factory is described in
<a href="http://www-106.ibm.com/developerworks/java/library/j-mocktest.html">this paper from IBM</a>.
This is the only formal comment I have seen on this problem.
</li>
</ul>
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