To parallel the conversation on the question "Calling callbacks with Mockito", your lambda might be called synchronously during the execution of your method-under-test, or it might be called later based on some external factor or interaction. Like Dawood's answer there, your answer here using a Mockito Answer will work, and is the only way to go if you are looking for the synchronous style (where mockJdbi
calls your lambda immediately before methodUnderTest
returns). If your lambdas are going to be called asynchronously, or if your system tolerates you calling the lambda asynchronously, you might want to test the state after your method-under-test returns but before you interact with the lambda.
// MockitoJUnitRunner, MockitoRule, or MockitoAnnotations.initMocks populate these.
// Especially useful for the ArgumentCaptor's generic arguments.
@Mock Jdbi mockJdbi;
@Mock OrgUnitDao mockOrgUnitDao;
@Captor ArgumentCaptor<ExtensionConsumer<OrgUnitDao, RuntimeException>>
extensionConsumerCaptor;
@Test public void yourTest() throws Exception {
// No stubbing needed! Just create the system under test.
YourSystemUnderTest systemUnderTest = new YourSystemUnderTest(mockJdbi);
// Call the method under test, which presumably calls useExtension(...).
systemUnderTest.methodUnderTest();
// Assert anything that should be true before the lambda is called.
assertFalse(systemUnderTest.getSomeState());
// Confirm that useExtension was called, and simultaneously acquire the lambda.
// ArgumentCaptor.capture() is a matcher, so every argument requires a matcher like eq.
verify(mockJdbi).useExtension(eq(OrgUnitDao.class), extensionConsumerCaptor.capture());
// Prepare the mock DAO and call the lambda.
when(mockDao.getFoo()).thenReturn("bar");
extensionConsumerCaptor.getValue().useExtension(mockDao);
// Assert anything that should be true after the lambda is called.
assertTrue(systemUnderTest.getSomeState());
}
Though lambdas reduce the boilerplate previously associated with anonymous inner classes, you may also prefer using the Captor style because it saves you from creating lengthy Answer implementations and hiding your test assertions or Mockito verifications in them. This is especially tempting if your project prefers BDD-style mocks with clear "given-when-then" structure (though my example more-closely resembles "given-when-then-when-then").