A mocking library for the Elixir language.
We use the Erlang meck library to provide module mocking functionality for Elixir. It uses macros in Elixir to expose the functionality in a convenient manner for integrating in Elixir tests.
See the full reference documentation.
- Mock
- Installation
- with_mock - Mocking a single module
- with_mocks - Mocking multiple modules
- test_with_mock - with_mock helper
- setup_with_mocks - Configure all tests to have the same mocks
- Mocking input dependant output
- Mocking functions with different arities
- passthrough - partial mocking of a module
- Assert called - assert a specific function was called
- Assert not called - assert a specific function was not called
- Assert called exactly - assert a specific function was called exactly x times
- NOT SUPPORTED - Mocking internal function calls
- Tips
- Help
- Suggestions
First, add mock to your mix.exs
dependencies:
def deps do
[{:mock, "~> 0.3.0", only: :test}]
end
and run $ mix deps.get
.
The Mock library provides the with_mock
macro for running tests with
mocks.
For a simple example, if you wanted to test some code which calls
HTTPotion.get
to get a webpage but without actually fetching the
webpage you could do something like this:
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "test_name" do
with_mock HTTPotion, [get: fn(_url) -> "<html></html>" end] do
assert "<html></html>" == HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
end
end
end
The with_mock
macro creates a mock module. The keyword list provides a set
of mock implementation for functions we want to provide in the mock (in
this case just get
). Inside with_mock
we exercise the test code
and we can check that the call was made as we expected using called
and
providing the example of the call we expected.
You can mock up multiple modules with with_mocks
.
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "multiple mocks" do
with_mocks([
{Map,
[],
[get: fn(%{}, "http://example.com") -> "<html></html>" end]},
{String,
[],
[reverse: fn(x) -> 2*x end,
length: fn(_x) -> :ok end]}
]) do
assert Map.get(%{}, "http://example.com") == "<html></html>"
assert String.reverse(3) == 6
assert String.length(3) == :ok
end
end
end
The second parameter of each tuple is opts
- a list of optional arguments
passed to meck.
An additional convenience macro test_with_mock
is supplied which internally
delegates to with_mock
. Allowing the above test to be written as follows:
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test_with_mock "test_name", HTTPotion,
[get: fn(_url) -> "<html></html>" end] do
HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
assert_called HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
end
end
The test_with_mock
macro can also be passed a context argument
allowing the sharing of information between callbacks and the test
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
setup do
doc = "<html></html>"
{:ok, doc: doc}
end
test_with_mock "test_with_mock with context", %{doc: doc}, HTTPotion, [],
[get: fn(_url, _headers) -> doc end] do
HTTPotion.get("http://example.com", [foo: :bar])
assert_called HTTPotion.get("http://example.com", :_)
end
end
The setup_with_mocks
mocks up multiple modules prior to every single test
along while calling the provided setup block. It is simply an integration of the
with_mocks
macro available in this module along with the setup
macro defined in elixir's ExUnit
.
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
setup_with_mocks([
{Map, [], [get: fn(%{}, "http://example.com") -> "<html></html>" end]}
]) do
foo = "bar"
{:ok, foo: foo}
end
test "setup_with_mocks" do
assert Map.get(%{}, "http://example.com") == "<html></html>"
end
end
The behaviour of a mocked module within the setup call can be overridden using any
of the methods above in the scope of a specific test. Providing this functionality
by setup_all
is more difficult, and as such, setup_all_with_mocks
is not currently
supported.
Currently, mocking modules cannot be done asynchronously, so make sure that you
are not using async: true
in any module where you are testing.
Also, because of the way mock overrides the module, it must be defined in a separate file from the test file.
If you have a function that should return different values depending on what the input is, you can do as follows:
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "mock functions with multiple returns" do
with_mock(Map, [
get: fn
(%{}, "http://example.com") -> "<html>Hello from example.com</html>"
(%{}, "http://example.org") -> "<html>example.org says hi</html>"
end
]) do
assert Map.get(%{}, "http://example.com") == "<html>Hello from example.com</html>"
assert Map.get(%{}, "http://example.org") == "<html>example.org says hi</html>"
end
end
end
You can mock functions in the same module with different arity:
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "mock functions with different arity" do
with_mock String,
[slice: fn(string, range) -> string end,
slice: fn(string, range, len) -> string end]
do
assert String.slice("test", 1..3) == "test"
assert String.slice("test", 1, 3) == "test"
end
end
end
By default, only the functions being mocked can be accessed from within the test.
Trying to call a non-mocked function from a mocked Module will result in an error.
This can be circumvented by passing the :passthrough
option like so:
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test_with_mock "test_name", IO, [:passthrough], [] do
IO.puts "hello"
assert_called IO.puts "hello"
end
end
You can check whether or not your mocked module was called.
It is possible to assert that the mocked module was called with a specific input.
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "test_name" do
with_mock HTTPotion, [get: fn(_url) -> "<html></html>" end] do
HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
assert_called HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
end
end
end
It is also possible to assert that the mocked module was called with any value
by passing the :_
wildcard.
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "test_name" do
with_mock HTTPotion, [get: fn(_url) -> "<html></html>" end] do
HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
assert_called HTTPotion.get(:_)
end
end
end
assert_called
will check argument equality using ==
semantics, not pattern matching.
For structs, you must provide every property present on the argument as it was called or
it will fail. To use pattern matching (useful when you only care about a few properties on
the argument or need to perform advanced matching like regex matching), provide custom
argument matcher(s) using :meck.is/1
.
defmodule User do
defstruct [:id, :name, :email]
end
defmodule Network do
def update(%User{} = user), do: # ...
end
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "test_name" do
with_mock Network, [update: fn(_user) -> :ok end] do
user = %User{id: 1, name: "Jane Doe", email: "[email protected]"}
Network.update(user)
assert_called Network.update(
:meck.is(fn user ->
assert user.__struct__ == User
assert user.id == 1
# matcher must return true when the match succeeds
true
end)
)
end
end
end
assert_not_called
will assert that a mocked function was not called.
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "test_name" do
with_mock HTTPotion, [get: fn(_url) -> "<html></html>" end] do
# Using Wildcard
assert_not_called HTTPotion.get(:_)
HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
# Using Specific Value
assert_not_called HTTPotion.get("http://another-example.com")
end
end
end
assert_called_exactly
will assert that a mocked function was called exactly the expected number of times.
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "test_name" do
with_mock HTTPotion, [get: fn(_url) -> "<html></html>" end] do
HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
# Using Wildcard
assert_called_exactly HTTPotion.get(:_), 2
# Using Specific Value
assert_called_exactly HTTPotion.get("http://example.com"), 2
end
end
end
call_history
will return the meck.history(Module)
allowing you assert on the order of the function invocation:
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "test_name" do
with_mock HTTPotion, [get: fn(_url) -> "<html></html>" end] do
HTTPotion.get("http://example.com")
assert call_history(HTTPotion) ==
[
{pid, {HTTPotion, :get, ["http://example.com"]}, "<html></html>"}
]
end
end
end
You can use any valid Elixir pattern matching/multiple function heads to accomplish
this more succinctly, but remember that the matcher will be executed for all function
calls, so be sure to include a fallback case that returns false
. For mocked functions
with multiple arguments, you must include a matcher/pattern for each argument.
defmodule Network.V2 do
def update(%User{} = user, changes), do: # ...
def update(id, changes) when is_integer(id), do: # ...
def update(_, _), do: # ...
end
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "test_name" do
with_mock Network.V2, [update: fn(_user, _changes) -> :ok end] do
Network.V2.update(%User{id: 456, name: "Jane Doe"}, %{name: "John Doe"})
Network.V2.update(123, %{name: "John Doe", email: "[email protected]"})
Network.V2.update(nil, %{})
# assert that `update` was called with user id 456
assert_called Network.V2.update(
:meck.is(fn
%User{id: 456} -> true
_ -> false
end),
:_
)
# assert that `update` was called with an email change
assert_called Network.V2.update(
:_,
:meck.is(fn
%{email: "[email protected]"} -> true
_ -> false
end)
)
end
end
end
A common issue a lot of developers run into is Mock's lack of support for mocking internal functions. Mock will behave as follows:
defmodule MyApp.IndirectMod do
def value do
1
end
def indirect_value do
value()
end
def indirect_value_2 do
MyApp.IndirectMod.value()
end
end
defmodule MyTest do
use ExUnit.Case, async: false
import Mock
test "indirect mock" do
with_mocks([
{ MyApp.IndirectMod, [:passthrough], [value: fn -> 2 end] },
]) do
# The following assert succeeds
assert MyApp.IndirectMod.indirect_value_2() == 2
# The following assert also succeeds
assert MyApp.IndirectMod.indirect_value() == 1
end
end
end
It is important to understand that only fully qualified function calls get mocked. The reason for this is because of the way Meck is structured. Meck creates a thin wrapper module with the name of the mocked module (and passes through any calls to the original Module in case passthrough is used). The original module is renamed, but otherwise unmodified. Once the call enters the original module, the local function call jumps stay in the module.
Big thanks to @eproxus (author of Meck) who helped explain this to me. We're looking into some alternatives to help solve this, but it is something to be aware of in the meantime. The issue is being tracked in Issue 71.
In order to workaround this issue, the indirect_value
can be rewritten like so:
def indirect_value do
__MODULE__.value()
end
Or, like so:
def indirect_value do
MyApp.IndirectMod.value()
end
The use of mocking can be somewhat controversial. I personally think that it works well for certain types of tests. Certainly, you should not overuse it. It is best to write as much as possible of your code as pure functions which don't require mocking to test. However, when interacting with the real world (or web services, users etc.) sometimes side-effects are necessary. In these cases, mocking is one useful approach for testing this functionality.
Also, note that Mock has a global effect so if you are using Mocks in multiple
tests set async: false
so that only one test runs at a time.
Open an issue.
For library maintainers, the following is an example of how to publish new versions of the package. Run the following commands assuming you incremented the version in the mix.exs
file from 0.3.4 to 0.3.5:
git commit -am "Increase version from 0.3.4 to 0.3.5"
git tag -a v0.3.5 -m "Git tag 0.3.5"
git push origin --tags
mix hex.publish
I'd welcome suggestions for improvements or bugfixes. Just open an issue.