public class SoftAssertions extends AbstractStandardSoftAssertions
Suppose we have a test case and in it we'd like to make numerous assertions. In this case, we're hosting a dinner party and we want to ensure not only that all our guests survive but also that nothing in the mansion has been unduly disturbed:
@Test
public void host_dinner_party_where_nobody_dies() {
Mansion mansion = new Mansion();
mansion.hostPotentiallyMurderousDinnerParty();
assertThat(mansion.guests()).as("Living Guests").isEqualTo(7);
assertThat(mansion.kitchen()).as("Kitchen").isEqualTo("clean");
assertThat(mansion.library()).as("Library").isEqualTo("clean");
assertThat(mansion.revolverAmmo()).as("Revolver Ammo").isEqualTo(6);
assertThat(mansion.candlestick()).as("Candlestick").isEqualTo("pristine");
assertThat(mansion.colonel()).as("Colonel").isEqualTo("well kempt");
assertThat(mansion.professor()).as("Professor").isEqualTo("well kempt");
}
After running the test, JUnit provides us with the following exception message:
org.junit.ComparisonFailure: [Living Guests] expected:<[7]> but was:<[6]>
Oh no! A guest has been murdered! But where, how, and by whom?
Unfortunately frameworks like JUnit halt the test upon the first failed assertion. Therefore, to collect more evidence, we'll have to rerun the test (perhaps after attaching a debugger or modifying the test to skip past the first assertion). Given that hosting dinner parties takes a long time, this seems rather inefficient.
Instead let's change the test so that at its completion we get the result of all assertions at once. We can do that
by using a SoftAssertions instance instead of the static methods on Assertions
as follows:
@Test
public void host_dinner_party_where_nobody_dies() {
Mansion mansion = new Mansion();
mansion.hostPotentiallyMurderousDinnerParty();
SoftAssertions softly = new SoftAssertions();
softly.assertThat(mansion.guests()).as("Living Guests").isEqualTo(7);
softly.assertThat(mansion.kitchen()).as("Kitchen").isEqualTo("clean");
softly.assertThat(mansion.library()).as("Library").isEqualTo("clean");
softly.assertThat(mansion.revolverAmmo()).as("Revolver Ammo").isEqualTo(6);
softly.assertThat(mansion.candlestick()).as("Candlestick").isEqualTo("pristine");
softly.assertThat(mansion.colonel()).as("Colonel").isEqualTo("well kempt");
softly.assertThat(mansion.professor()).as("Professor").isEqualTo("well kempt");
softly.assertAll();
}
Now upon running the test our JUnit exception message is far more detailed:
org.assertj.core.api.SoftAssertionError: The following 4 assertions failed:
1) [Living Guests] expected:<[7]> but was:<[6]>
2) [Library] expected:<'[clean]'> but was:<'[messy]'>
3) [Candlestick] expected:<'[pristine]'> but was:<'[bent]'>
4) [Professor] expected:<'[well kempt]'> but was:<'[bloodied and disheveled]'>
Aha! It appears that perhaps the Professor used the candlestick to perform the nefarious deed in the library. We should let the police take it from here.
You can also use the static method assertSoftly. the assertAll method will be called automatically after the lambda function completes.
@Test
public void host_dinner_party_where_nobody_dies() {
Mansion mansion = new Mansion();
mansion.hostPotentiallyMurderousDinnerParty();
SoftAssertions.assertSoftly(softly -> {
softly.assertThat(mansion.guests()).as("Living Guests").isEqualTo(7);
softly.assertThat(mansion.kitchen()).as("Kitchen").isEqualTo("clean");
softly.assertThat(mansion.library()).as("Library").isEqualTo("clean");
softly.assertThat(mansion.revolverAmmo()).as("Revolver Ammo").isEqualTo(6);
softly.assertThat(mansion.candlestick()).as("Candlestick").isEqualTo("pristine");
softly.assertThat(mansion.colonel()).as("Colonel").isEqualTo("well kempt");
softly.assertThat(mansion.professor()).as("Professor").isEqualTo("well kempt");
});
}
SoftAssertions works by providing you with proxies of the AssertJ assertion objects (those created by
Assertions
#assertThat...) whose assertion failures are caught and stored. Only when you call
assertAll()
will a SoftAssertionError
be thrown containing the error messages of those
previously caught assertion failures.
Note that because SoftAssertions is stateful you should use a new instance of SoftAssertions per test method. Also,
if you forget to call assertAll() at the end of your test, the test will pass even if any assertion
objects threw exceptions (because they're proxied, remember?). So don't forget. You might use
JUnitSoftAssertions
or AutoCloseableSoftAssertions
to get assertAll() to be called automatically.
It is recommended to use AbstractAssert.as(String, Object...)
so that the multiple failed assertions can be
easily distinguished from one another.
proxies
Constructor and Description |
---|
SoftAssertions() |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
void |
assertAll()
Verifies that no soft assertions have failed.
|
static void |
assertSoftly(Consumer<SoftAssertions> softly)
Use this to avoid having to call assertAll manually.
|
assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat
assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThat, assertThatCode, assertThatObject, assertThatThrownBy, assertThatThrownBy
decorateErrorsCollected, errorsCollected, fail, fail, fail, failBecauseExceptionWasNotThrown, proxy, shouldHaveThrown, wasSuccess
public void assertAll()
org.opentest4j.MultipleFailuresError
- if possible or SoftAssertionError if any proxied assertion objects threw an AssertionError
public static void assertSoftly(Consumer<SoftAssertions> softly)
@Test
public void host_dinner_party_where_nobody_dies() {
Mansion mansion = new Mansion();
mansion.hostPotentiallyMurderousDinnerParty();
SoftAssertions.assertSoftly(softly -> {
softly.assertThat(mansion.guests()).as("Living Guests").isEqualTo(7);
softly.assertThat(mansion.kitchen()).as("Kitchen").isEqualTo("clean");
softly.assertThat(mansion.library()).as("Library").isEqualTo("clean");
softly.assertThat(mansion.revolverAmmo()).as("Revolver Ammo").isEqualTo(6);
softly.assertThat(mansion.candlestick()).as("Candlestick").isEqualTo("pristine");
softly.assertThat(mansion.colonel()).as("Colonel").isEqualTo("well kempt");
softly.assertThat(mansion.professor()).as("Professor").isEqualTo("well kempt");
});
}
softly
- the SoftAssertions instance that you can call your own assertions on.org.opentest4j.MultipleFailuresError
- if possible or SoftAssertionError if any proxied assertion objects threw an AssertionError
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