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package io.mats3.test.junit;

import javax.sql.DataSource;

import org.junit.ClassRule;
import org.junit.rules.TestRule;
import org.junit.runner.Description;
import org.junit.runners.model.Statement;

import io.mats3.impl.jms.JmsMatsFactory;
import io.mats3.serial.MatsSerializer;
import io.mats3.serial.json.MatsSerializerJson;
import io.mats3.test.TestH2DataSource;
import io.mats3.test.abstractunit.AbstractMatsTest;

/**
 * {@link ClassRule} which provides a full Mats harness for unit testing by creating {@link JmsMatsFactory MatsFactory}
 * utilizing an in-vm Active MQ broker, and optionally a {@link TestH2DataSource} for database tests.
 * 

* Notice: If you are in a Spring-context, this is probably not what you are looking for, as the MatsFactory then * should reside as a bean in the Spring context. Look in the 'mats-spring-test' package for testing tools for Spring. *

* By default the {@link #create() rule} will create a {@link MatsSerializerJson} which will be the serializer utilized * by the created {@link JmsMatsFactory MatsFactory}. Should one want to use a different serialize then this can be * specified using the method {@link #create(MatsSerializer)}. *

* {@link Rule_Mats} shall be considered a {@link ClassRule} and thus annotated as such, being a {@link ClassRule} also * means that the instance field shall be static. Therefore to utilize {@link Rule_Mats} one should add it to a test * class in this fashion: * *

 *     public class YourTestClass {
 *         @ClassRule
 *         public static final Rule_Mats MATS = Rule_Mats.create() // Or provide your own serializer
 *     }
 * 
* * To get a variant that has a {@link TestH2DataSource} contained, and the MatsFactory set up with transactional * handling of that, use the {@link #createWithDb()} methods. In this case, you might want to clean the database before * each test method, which can be accomplished as such: * *
 *     public class YourTestClass {
 *         @ClassRule
 *         public static Rule_Mats MATS = Rule_Mats.createWithDb() // Or provide your own serializer
 *
 *         @Before  // Will clean the database before each test - if this is what you want.
 *         public void cleanDatabase() {
 *             MATS.getDataSource().cleanDatabase()
 *         }
 *     }
 * 
* * * @author Endre Stølsvik - 2015 - http://endre.stolsvik.com * @author Kevin Mc Tiernan, 2020-10-18, [email protected] */ public class Rule_Mats extends AbstractMatsTest implements TestRule { protected Rule_Mats(MatsSerializer matsSerializer) { super(matsSerializer); } protected Rule_Mats(MatsSerializer matsSerializer, DataSource dataSource) { super(matsSerializer, dataSource); } /** * Creates a {@link Rule_Mats} utilizing the {@link MatsSerializerJson Mats default serializer} */ public static Rule_Mats create() { return new Rule_Mats(MatsSerializerJson.create()); } /** * Creates a {@link Rule_Mats} utilizing the user provided {@link MatsSerializer} which serializes to the type of * String. */ public static Rule_Mats create(MatsSerializer matsSerializer) { return new Rule_Mats(matsSerializer); } public static Rule_Mats createWithDb() { return createWithDb(MatsSerializerJson.create()); } public static Rule_Mats createWithDb(MatsSerializer matsSerializer) { TestH2DataSource testH2DataSource = TestH2DataSource.createStandard(); return new Rule_Mats(matsSerializer, testH2DataSource); } public TestH2DataSource getDataSource() { return (TestH2DataSource) super.getDataSource(); } // ================== Junit LifeCycle ============================================================================= /** * Note: Shamelessly inspired from: How to combine @Rule * and @ClassRule in JUnit 4.12 */ @Override public Statement apply(Statement base, Description description) { // :: Rule handling. if (description.isTest()) { throw new IllegalStateException("The Rule_Mats should be applied as a @ClassRule, NOT as a @Rule"); } return new Statement() { public void evaluate() throws Throwable { beforeAll(); try { base.evaluate(); } finally { afterAll(); } } }; } }




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