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Mimic

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A sane way of using mocks in Elixir. It borrows a lot from both Meck & Mox! Thanks @eproxus & @josevalim.

Installation

Just add :mimic to your list of dependencies in mix.exs:

def deps do
  [
    {:mimic, "~> 1.10", only: :test}
  ]
end

If :applications key is defined inside your mix.exs or you run mix test --no-start, you probably want to add Application.ensure_all_started(:mimic) in your test_helper.exs

Using

Modules need to be prepared so that they can be used.

You must first call copy in your test_helper.exs for each module that may have the behaviour changed.

Mimic.copy(Calculator)

ExUnit.start()

Calling copy will not change the behaviour of the module.

The user must call stub/1, stub/3, expect/4 or reject/1 so that the functions can behave differently.

Then for the actual tests one could use it like this:

use ExUnit.Case, async: true
use Mimic

test "invokes mult once and add twice" do
  Calculator
  |> stub(:add, fn x, y -> :stub end)
  |> expect(:add, fn x, y -> x + y end)
  |> expect(:mult, 2, fn x, y -> x * y end)

  assert Calculator.add(2, 3) == 5
  assert Calculator.mult(2, 3) == 6

  assert Calculator.add(2, 3) == :stub
end

Stub, Expect and Reject

Stub

stub/1 will change every module function to throw an exception if called.

stub(Calculator)

** (Mimic.UnexpectedCallError) Stub! Unexpected call to Calculator.add(3, 7) from #PID<0.187.0>
     code: assert Calculator.add(3, 7) == 10

stub/3 changes a specific function to behave differently. If the function is not called no verification error will happen.

Expect

expect/4 changes a specific function and it works like a queue of operations. It has precedence over stubs and if not called a verification error will be thrown.

If the same function is called with expect/4 the order will be respected:

Calculator
|> stub(:add, fn _x, _y -> :stub end)
|> expect(:add, fn _, _ -> :expected_1 end)
|> expect(:add, fn _, _ -> :expected_2 end)

assert Calculator.add(1, 1) == :expected_1
assert Calculator.add(1, 1) == :expected_2
assert Calculator.add(1, 1) == :stub

expect/4 has an optional parameter which is the amount of calls expected:

Calculator
|> expect(:add, 2, fn x, y -> {:add, x, y} end)

assert Calculator.add(1, 3) == {:add, 1, 3}
assert Calculator.add(4, 5) == {:add, 4, 5}

With use Mimic, verification expect/4 function call of is done automatically on test case end. verify!/1 can be used in case custom verification timing required:

Calculator
|> expect(:add, 2, fn x, y -> {:add, x, y} end)

# Will raise error because Calculator.add is not called
# ** (Mimic.VerificationError) error while verifying mocks for #PID<0.3182.0>:
#   * expected Calculator.add/2 to be invoked 1 time(s) but it has been called 0 time(s)
verify!()

Using expect/4 on intra-module functions will not work, unless the function is referenced by it's fully qualified name.

defmodule Calculator do
  def mult(x, y) do
    x * y
  end

  def negation(x) do
    mult(x, -1)
  end
end

Calculator
|> expect(:mult, fn x, y -> x + y end)

assert Calculator.negation(5) == -5

# Will raise error because because BEAM optimises this case and jumps directly to the appropriate bytecode.
# ** (Mimic.VerificationError) error while verifying mocks for #PID<0.207.0>:
#   * expected Calculator.mult/2 to be invoked 1 time(s) but it has been called 0 time(s)
verify!()

To ensure that the stubbed Mimic function is called, it can be referenced by Calculator.mult/2 instead of mult/2.

Reject

One may want to reject calls to a specific function. reject/1 can be used to achieved this behaviour.

reject(&Calculator.add/2)
assert_raise Mimic.UnexpectedCallError, fn -> Calculator.add(4, 2) end

Private and Global mode

The default mode is private which means that only the process and explicitly allowed process will see the different behaviour.

Calling allow/2 will permit a different pid to call the stubs and expects from the original process.

If you are using Task there is no need to use global mode as Tasks can see the same expectations and stubs from the calling process.

Global mode can be used with set_mimic_global like this:

setup :set_mimic_global

test "invokes add and mult" do
  Calculator
  |> expect(:add, fn x, y -> x + y end)
  |> expect(:mult, fn x, y -> x * y end)

  parent_pid = self()

  spawn_link(fn ->
    assert Calculator.add(2, 3) == 5
    assert Calculator.mult(2, 3) == 6

    send parent_pid, :ok
  end)

  assert_receive :ok
end

This means that all processes will get the same behaviour defined with expect & stub. This option is simpler but tests running concurrently will have undefined behaviour. It is important to run with async: false. One could use :set_mimic_from_context instead of using :set_mimic_global or :set_mimic_private. It will be private if async: true, global otherwise.

DSL Mode

To use DSL Mode use Mimic.DSL rather than use Mimic in your test. DSL Mode enables a more expressive api to the Mimic functionality.

  use Mimic.DSL

  test "basic example" do
    stub Calculator.add(_x, _y), do: :stub
    expect Calculator.add(x, y), do: x + y
    expect Calculator.mult(x, y), do: x * y

    assert Calculator.add(2, 3) == 5
    assert Calculator.mult(2, 3) == 6

    assert Calculator.add(2, 3) == :stub
  end

Stubs with fake module

stub_with/2 enable substitute function call of a module with another similar module.

  defmodule BadCalculator do
    def add(x, y), do: x*y
    def mult(x, y), do: x+y
  end

  test "basic example" do
    stub_with(Calculator, BadCalculator)

    assert Calculator.add(2, 3) == 6
    assert Calculator.mult(2, 3) == 5
  end

Calling the original

call_original/3 allows to call original unmocked version of the function.

setup :set_mimic_private

test "calls original function even if it has been is stubbed" do
  stub_with(Calculator, InverseCalculator)

  assert call_original(Calculator, :add, [1, 2]) == 3
end

Experimental type checking for copied modules

One can pass type_check: true when a module is copied to also get the function expected/stubbed to validate the arguments and return value using Ham which is essentially what Hammox improved on Mox.

Mimic.copy(:cowboy_req, type_check: true)

If there is any problem with the arguments or return values of the stubbed functions on your tests you might see an error like this one:

     ** (Mimic.TypeCheckError) :cowboy_req.parse_qs/1: 1st argument value %{} does not match 1st parameter's type :cowboy_req.req().
       Could not find a map entry matching required(:method) => binary().

This feature is experimental at the moment which means that it might change a little bit how this is configured and used. Feedback is welcome!

Implementation Details & Performance

After calling Mimic.copy(MyModule), calls to functions belonging to this module will first go through an ETS table to check which pid sees what (stubs, expects or call original).

It is really fast but it won't be as fast as calling a no-op function. Here's a very simple benchmark:

defmodule Enumerator do
 def to_list(x, y), do: Enum.to_list(x..y)
end

Benchmarking Enumerator.to_list(1, 100) :

Name               ips        average  deviation         median         99th %
mimic         116.00 K        8.62 μs   ±729.13%           5 μs          29 μs
original       19.55 K       51.15 μs   ±302.46%          34 μs         264 μs

Comparison:
mimic         116.00 K
original       19.55 K - 5.93x slower

Benchmarking Enumerator.to_list(1, 250) :

Name               ips        average  deviation         median         99th %
original      131.49 K        7.61 μs   ±167.90%           7 μs          16 μs
mimic         105.47 K        9.48 μs   ±145.21%           9 μs          27 μs

Comparison:
original      131.49 K
mimic         105.47 K - 1.25x slower

There's a small fixed price to pay when mimic is used but it is unnoticeable for tests purposes.

Acknowledgements

Thanks to @jimsynz and @alissonsales for all the help! 🎉

Thanks to @mendokusai for the nice logo!

Copyright and License

Copyright (c) 2016 Eduardo Gurgel

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.