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time-test

This repo contains a handy tooling to enable you to test your time sensitive code. Forget about:

  • using Thread.sleep and wasting you CPU budget for waitings within your tests
  • making a Spring bean from java.time.Clock and injecting it everywhere
  • manually mocking java.time.Clock with some mock library (with more verbosity)

Instead you can use developer friendly API for managing time. See Getting started

Getting started

The easiest way to integrate this library is to include io.github.gallyamb.time.test:time-test-core:0.1.0 and io.github.gallyamb.time.test:time-test-mockito:0.1.0 in your tests classpath

Example

// just fixed the time at specififc moment
NowTest.withMoment(OffsetDateTime.parse("2020-05-12T11:23:55T-04:00"), () -> {
  ServiceTime serviceTime = ... // a schedule when some service is available
  ZoneId zoneId = ... // some time zone where we will do our calculations
  // imagine, that such method determines current time internally via OffsetDateTime.now()
  OffsetDateTime result = timingService.calculateNearestServisedTime(serviceTime, zoneId);

  // cause we expect this time to be within service time
  Assertions.assertEquals(OffsetDateTime.parse("2020-05-22T11:23:55T-04:00"), result);

  Now.tick(Duration.parse("P5D"));

  OffsetDateTime result = timingService.calculateNearestServisedTime(serviceTime, zoneId);

  // cause we expect at this time service is unavailable. And nearest service time was at 19:00 of previous day
  Assertions.assertEquals(OffsetDateTime.parse("2020-05-16T19:00:00T-04:00"), result);
})

Testing concurrent code

The above approach will work. Even library code will reflect time changes. But of course there will be some limitations: clock changes will be visilbe only within current thread. This is often enough

If you want for some reason to test concurrent code, that works with time, you have another option - io.github.gallyamb.time:time-core:0.1.0 and io.github.gallyamb.time.test:time-test-plain:0.1.0!

Adding io.github.gallyamb.time:time-core:0.1.0 to your production classpath allows you to obtain current time from Now.offsetDateTime() and other methods (there are a lot in io.github.gallyamb.time.Now). And adding io.github.gallyamb.time.test:time-test-plain:0.1.0 allows you to change time not only within one thread, but all threads at once. Of course, it'll work only if you obtain time instances from org.time.Now. But it's not such a big deal, if you want to get testable code

Example

// MyService.java
public class MyService {
  public OffsetDateTime getTimeBasedResult() {
    return Now.offsetDateTime();
  }
}

// MyServiceTest.java
public class MyServiceTest {

  @Test
  public void testMyService_Concurrent() {
    var myService = new MyService();

    // just fixed the time at specififc moment
    var time = Now.withMoment(OffsetDateTime.parse("2020-05-12T11:23:55T-04:00"), () -> {
      var result = new AtomicReference<OffsetDateTime>();
      new Thread(() -> {
        result.set(myService.getTimeBasedResult());
      }).start();
      while (result.get() == null) {
        Thread.sleep(100);
      }
      return result.get();
    }

    Assertions.assertEqual(OffsetDateTime.parse("2020-05-12T11:23:55T-04:00"), time)
  }
}

JUnit5 integration

There are JUnit5 integration available. With this you can write more obviuous tests. Just include io.github.gallyamb.time.test:time-test-junit5-integration:0.1.0

Example

// will fix the time at the test start moment for every test
@FixedTime
public class MyTest {

  @Test
  public void testOffsetDateTimesDifference() {
    var start = OffsetDateTime.now();
    var end = OffsetDateTime.now().plusHours(5);

    // This will never become flaky, because time is fixed
    Assertions.assertEquals(Duration.parse("PT5H"), Duration.between(start, end));
  }

  @Test
  @FixedTime("2020-05-12T11:23:55T-04:00")
  public void testAtSpecificTime() {
    // you can write test assuming that time is always fixed at specific moment
  }
}

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This repo contains a handy tooling to enable you to test your time sensitive code

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