简体   繁体   中英

Unit testing FluentValidation rules for classes with sub/child classes

Is it possible to write unit tests for fluentvalidation classes when the object we are validating has child classes that are also being validated.

As an example: My class looks like this

public class TestModel
{

    public class SubData
    {
        public int SubDataVal { get; set; }
    }

    public int ParentVal { get; set; }
    public SubData Sub { get; set; }

}

My validation logic looks like this:

public class TestModelValidator : AbstractValidator<TestModel>
{
    public TestModelValidator()
    {
        RuleFor(o => o.ParentVal).GreaterThan(0);
        RuleFor(o => o.Sub.SubDataVal).GreaterThan(0);
    }
}

And when I write the following unit test

    [Test]
    public void Should_have_error_when_val_is_zero()
    {
        validator = new TestModelValidator();
        validator.ShouldHaveValidationErrorFor(model => model.ParentVal, 0);
    }

I get a "System.NullReferenceException : Object reference not set to an instance of an object." exception from FluentValidation.TestHelper.ValidatorTester`2.ValidateError(T instanceToValidate)

(if I remove the RuleFor(o => o.Sub.SubDataVal).GreaterThan(0); line, then it works!)

Similarly if I try and unit test the actual child class with:

    [Test]
    public void Should_have_error_when_sub_dataVal_is_zero()
    {
        validator = new TestModelValidator();
        validator.ShouldHaveValidationErrorFor(model => model.Sub.SubDataVal, 0);
    }

I get a "System.Reflection.TargetException : Object does not match target type." from FluentValidation.TestHelper.ValidatorTester`2.ValidateError(T instanceToValidate)

You can unit test models and child models but you will need to change your validation class to use a separate validator class which just validates the child model:

public class TestModelValidator : AbstractValidator<TestModel>
{
    public TestModelValidator()
    {
        RuleFor(o => o.ParentVal).GreaterThan(0);
        RuleFor(o => o.Sub).SetValidator(new SubDataValidator());
    }
}

public class SubDataValidator : AbstractValidator<SubData>
{
    public SubDataValidator()
    {
        RuleFor(o => o.SubDataVal).GreaterThan(0);
    }
}

You can then write your unit tests to test each validator or both together.

I have come to the conclusion that for this ShouldHaveValidationErrorFor is just not capabable of dealing with subclasses, so have resorted to doing it manually. ie

    [Test]
    public void Should_have_error_when_val_is_zero()
    {
        validator = new TestModelValidator();
        TestModel testRequest = new TestModel();
        //populate with dummy data
        var result = validator.Validate(testRequest);
        Assert.That(result.Errors.Any(o => o.PropertyName== "ParentVal"));
    }

With MSTest and FluentAssertions you can write

[TestMethod]
public void Should_have_error_when_val_is_zero()
{
    // Given
    var validator = new TestModelValidator();
    var testModel = TestModel
    {
        ParentVal = 0
    }; // You should create a invalid TestModel object here

    // When
    validator.Validate(testModel).IsValid.Should().BeFalse();
}

The technical post webpages of this site follow the CC BY-SA 4.0 protocol. If you need to reprint, please indicate the site URL or the original address.Any question please contact:yoyou2525@163.com.

 
粤ICP备18138465号  © 2020-2024 STACKOOM.COM