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Ability to mock protected methods with and without return value #845
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Looks good to me! WDYT @Romfos ?
public static object Protected<T>(this T obj, string methodName, params object[] args) where T : class | ||
{ | ||
if (obj == null) { throw new ArgumentNullException(nameof(obj), "Cannot mock null object"); } | ||
if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(methodName)) { throw new ArgumentException("Must provide valid protected method name to mock", nameof(methodName)); } | ||
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IList<IArgumentSpecification> argTypes = SubstitutionContext.Current.ThreadContext.PeekAllArgumentSpecifications(); | ||
MethodInfo mthdInfo = obj.GetType().GetMethod(methodName, BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance, Type.DefaultBinder, argTypes.Select(x => x.ForType).ToArray(), null); | ||
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if (mthdInfo == null) { throw new Exception($"Method {methodName} not found"); } | ||
if (!mthdInfo.IsVirtual) { throw new Exception($"Method {methodName} is not virtual"); } |
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suggestion (nitpick): ideally should use a custom exception(subclassing SubstituteException
) with details on what they should do to fix the issue. (see NSubstitute.Exceptions
for examples.)
For obj == null
, we have NullSubstituteReferenceException
. Should also ensure receiver is a substitute otherwise throw NotASubstituteException
.
For mthdInfo == null
, maybe include arg types checked, something like "No method found with signature Foo(Int, String) on IMySubstitute. Check the method name and arguments are correct."
For non-virtual, can probably use a summary of the warning given in the documentation.
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Sure, this makes sense
public IList<IArgumentSpecification> PeekAllArgumentSpecifications() | ||
{ | ||
var queue = _argumentSpecifications.Value; | ||
if (queue == null) { throw new SubstituteInternalException("Argument specification queue is null."); } |
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question: do you know under what circumstances this occurs? If it is expected can we just return EmptySpecifications
in that case?
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tbh it doesn't look like it could ever be null. I decided to have/keep this in line with enqueue and dequeue methods in case it is something I failed to see
Should we change all 3 (along with enqueue, dequeue) methods to provide a consistent behavior?
/// <returns>WhenCalled<T>.</returns> | ||
/// <exception cref="System.ArgumentNullException">Substitute - Cannot mock null object</exception> | ||
/// <exception cref="System.ArgumentException">Must provide valid protected method name to mock - methodName</exception> | ||
public static WhenCalled<T> When<T>(this T obj, string methodName, params object[] args) where T : class |
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thought: maybe this should be WhenProtected
or something to more easily distinguish from When
? What do you think? (I'm genuinely not sure, just want something natural for people when both are in scope)
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My ocd prefers seeing a bunch of When
methods for configuring methods with no return value, but I agree it may be more intuitive to some people when the method screams out "Protected", maybe we need a tie breaker if we're both on the fence?
Closes #800