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JMockit is a Java toolkit for automated developer testing.
It contains mocking/faking APIs and a code coverage tool, supporting both JUnit and TestNG.
The mocking APIs allow all kinds of Java code, without testability restrictions, to be tested
in isolation from selected dependencies.
/*
* Copyright (c) 2006 JMockit developers
* This file is subject to the terms of the MIT license (see LICENSE.txt).
*/
package mockit;
import java.lang.annotation.*;
import static java.lang.annotation.ElementType.*;
import static java.lang.annotation.RetentionPolicy.*;
/**
* Indicates an instance field of a test class as being a mock field, or a parameter of a test method as a
* mock parameter; in either case, the declared type of the field/parameter is a mocked type, whose
* instances are mocked instances.
*
* Mocked types can also be introduced by other annotations: {@linkplain Injectable @Injectable},
* {@link Capturing @Capturing}.
* Their effect is to extend and/or constrain the mocking capabilities here specified.
*
* Any type can be mocked, except for primitive and array types.
* A mocked instance of that type is automatically created and assigned to the mock field/parameter, for use when
* {@linkplain Expectations recording} and/or {@linkplain Verifications verifying} expectations.
* For a mock field, the test itself can provide the instance by declaring the field as final and
* assigning it the desired instance (or null).
*
* The effect of declaring a @Mocked type, by default, is that all new instances of that type, as well
* as those previously created, will also be mocked instances; this will last for the duration of each test where the
* associated mock field/parameter is in scope.
* All non-private methods of the mocked type will be mocked.
*
* When the mocked type is a class, all super-classes up to but not including java.lang.Object are also mocked.
* Additionally, static methods and constructors are mocked as well, just like instance methods;
* native methods are also mocked, provided they are public or protected.
*
* While a method or constructor is mocked, an invocation does not result in the execution of the original code, but in
* a (generated) call into JMockit, which then responds with either a default or a recorded
* {@linkplain Expectations#result result} (or with a {@linkplain Expectations#times constraint} violation, if the
* invocation is deemed to be unexpected).
*
* Mocking will automatically cascade into the return types of all non-void
methods belonging to
* the mocked type, except for non-eligible ones (primitive wrappers, String, and collections/maps).
* When needed, such cascaded returns can be overridden by explicitly recording a return value for the mocked method.
* If there is a mock field/parameter with the same type (or a subtype) of some cascaded type, then the original
* instance from that mock field/parameter will be used as the cascaded instance, rather than a new one being created;
* this applies to all cascading levels, and even to the type of the mock field/parameter itself (ie, if a method in
* class/interface "A
" has return type A, then it will return itself by default).
* Finally, when new cascaded instances are created, {@linkplain Injectable @Injectable} semantics apply.
*
* Static class initializers (including assignments to static fields) of a mocked class are not
* affected, unless {@linkplain #stubOutClassInitialization specified otherwise}.
*
* @see #stubOutClassInitialization
* @see Tutorial
*/
@Retention(RUNTIME)
@Target({FIELD, PARAMETER})
public @interface Mocked
{
/**
* Indicates whether static initialization code in the mocked class should be stubbed out or not.
* Static initialization includes the execution of assignments to static fields of the class and the execution of
* static initialization blocks, if any.
* (Note that static final fields initialized with compile-time constants are not assigned at
* runtime, remaining unaffected whether the class is stubbed out or not.)
*
* By default, static initialization code in a mocked class is not stubbed out.
* The JVM will only perform static initialization of a class once, so stubbing out the initialization code
* can have unexpected consequences.
* Static initialization will occur the first time the class is instantiated, has a static method called on it, or
* has a static field whose value is defined at runtime accessed; these are the only events which prompt the JVM to
* initialize a class.
* If the original class initialization code was stubbed out, then it will not be there to be executed at the time of
* static initialization, potentially leaving static fields null and later causing
* NullPointerException's to occur.
*/
boolean stubOutClassInitialization() default false;
}