8
votes

I am implementing a message translator pattern with Apache Camel, to consume messages from a RESTful endpoint and send them onward to an AMQP endpoint.

The enclosing application is based on Spring Boot, and so I'm using Camel's "spring-boot" component to integrate the two frameworks. As suggested by the documentation in this spring-boot link, I'm implementing my Camel route inside of a @Configuration-annotated class which extends RouteBuilder:

@Component
public class MyRestToAmqpRouter extends RouteBuilder {

   @Override
   public void configure() throws Exception {

      from("jetty:http://my-restful-url")
         .process(exchange -> {
            // convert the message body from JSON to XML, take some 
            // incoming header values and put them in the outgoing
            // body, etc...
         }).to("rabbitmq://my-rabbitmq-url");

   }

}

My question involves how to go about unit-testing this translation, without needing an actual RESTful endpoint or configured RabbitMQ broker? I've read many online examples, as well as the Camel in Action book... and it seems like the typical approach for unit testing a Camel route is to cut-n-paste the route into your unit test, and replace one or more endpoint URL's with "mock:whatever".

I guess that sorta works... but it's awfully brittle, and your test suite won't recognize when someone later changes the real code without updating the unit test.

I've tried to adapt some Spring-based unit testing examples with mocks, like this:

@RunWith(CamelSpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration(classes = {Application.class})
public class MyRestToAmqpRouterTest extends AbstractJUnit4SpringContextTests {

    @Produce(uri = "jetty:http://my-restful-url")
    private ProducerTemplate fakeRest;

    @EndpointInject(uri = "rabbitmq://my-rabbit-url")
    private MockEndpoint fakeRabbit;

    @Test
    @DirtiesContext
    public void testRouter() throws InterruptedException {
        fakeRabbit.expectedMessageCount(1);
        fakeRest.sendBodyAndHeader("", "header-1", "some value");
        fakeRabbit.assertIsSatisfied();
    }

}

My hope was that Camel would take those endpoint URLs from the unit test, register them as mocks... and then use the mocks rather than the real endpoint when the real code tries to use those URLs.

However, I'm not sure that this is possible. When I use the real URLs in the unit test I get IllegalArgumentException's, because you apparently can't inject a "real" endpoint URL into a MockEndpoint instance (only URLs prefixed with "mock:").

When I do use a "mock:..." endpoint URL in my unit test, then it's useless because there's nothing tying it to the real endpoint URL in the class under test. So that real endpoint URL is never overridden. When the real code is executed, it just uses the real endpoint as normal (and the goal is to be able to test without an external dependency on RabbitMQ).

Am I missing something on a really fundamental level here? It seems like there would be a way for unit tests to inject fake routes into a class like this, so that the code under test could switch from real endpoints to mock ones without even realizing it. Alternatively, I suppose that I could refactor my code so that the anonymous Processor were elevated to a standalone class... and then I could unit test its translation logic independently of the route. But that just seems like an incomplete test.

1

1 Answers

4
votes

Some pointers what you may do.

You can read the Camel book again about testing, and pay attention to using advice with

And there is also mockEndpointsAndSkip

And you can also use the stub component

Or use property placeholders in your routes, and then configure the uris to be mock/stub etc for testing, and use the real ones for production