Unit Testing
Unit Testing
Unit Testing
Unit testing
In computer programming, unit testing is a method by which individual units of source code are tested to determine
if they are fit for use. A unit is the smallest testable part of an application. In procedural programming a unit may be
an individual function or procedure. In object-oriented programming a unit is usually a method. Unit tests are created
by programmers or occasionally by white box testers during the development process.
Ideally, each test case is independent from the others: substitutes like method stubs, mock objects,[1] fakes and test
harnesses can be used to assist testing a module in isolation. Unit tests are typically written and run by software
developers to ensure that code meets its design and behaves as intended. Its implementation can vary from being
very manual (pencil and paper) to being formalized as part of build automation.
Benefits
The goal of unit testing is to isolate each part of the program and show that the individual parts are correct.[2] A unit
test provides a strict, written contract that the piece of code must satisfy. As a result, it affords several benefits. Unit
tests find problems early in the development cycle.
Facilitates change
Unit testing allows the programmer to refactor code at a later date, and make sure the module still works correctly
(e.g., in regression testing). The procedure is to write test cases for all functions and methods so that whenever a
change causes a fault, it can be quickly identified and fixed.
Readily-available unit tests make it easy for the programmer to check whether a piece of code is still working
properly.
In continuous unit testing environments, through the inherent practice of sustained maintenance, unit tests will
continue to accurately reflect the intended use of the executable and code in the face of any change. Depending upon
established development practices and unit test coverage, up-to-the-second accuracy can be maintained.
Simplifies integration
Unit testing may reduce uncertainty in the units themselves and can be used in a bottom-up testing style approach.
By testing the parts of a program first and then testing the sum of its parts, integration testing becomes much easier.
An elaborate hierarchy of unit tests does not equal integration testing. Integration with peripheral units should be
included in integration tests, but not in unit tests. Integration testing typically still relies heavily on humans testing
manually; high-level or global-scope testing can be difficult to automate, such that manual testing often appears
faster and cheaper.
Documentation
Unit testing provides a sort of living documentation of the system. Developers looking to learn what functionality is
provided by a unit and how to use it can look at the unit tests to gain a basic understanding of the unit's API.
Unit test cases embody characteristics that are critical to the success of the unit. These characteristics can indicate
appropriate/inappropriate use of a unit as well as negative behaviors that are to be trapped by the unit. A unit test
case, in and of itself, documents these critical characteristics, although many software development environments do
not rely solely upon code to document the product in development.
By contrast, ordinary narrative documentation is more susceptible to drifting from the implementation of the
program and will thus become outdated (e.g., design changes, feature creep, relaxed practices in keeping documents
up-to-date).
Unit testing 2
Design
When software is developed using a test-driven approach, the unit test may take the place of formal design. Each unit
test can be seen as a design element specifying classes, methods, and observable behaviour. The following Java
example will help illustrate this point.
Here is a test class that specifies a number of elements of the implementation. First, that there must be an interface
called Adder, and an implementing class with a zero-argument constructor called AdderImpl. It goes on to assert that
the Adder interface should have a method called add, with two integer parameters, which returns another integer. It
also specifies the behaviour of this method for a small range of values.
In this case the unit test, having been written first, acts as a design document specifying the form and behaviour of a
desired solution, but not the implementation details, which are left for the programmer. Following the "do the
simplest thing that could possibly work" practice, the easiest solution that will make the test pass is shown below.
interface Adder {
int add(int a, int b);
}
class AdderImpl implements Adder {
int add(int a, int b) {
return a + b;
}
}
Unlike other diagram-based design methods, using a unit-test as a design has one significant advantage. The design
document (the unit-test itself) can be used to verify that the implementation adheres to the design. With the unit-test
design method, the tests will never pass if the developer does not implement the solution according to the design.
It is true that unit testing lacks some of the accessibility of a diagram, but UML diagrams are now easily generated
for most modern languages by free tools (usually available as extensions to IDEs). Free tools, like those based on the
xUnit framework, outsource to another system the graphical rendering of a view for human consumption.
into integration tests, and when test cases fail, makes it less clear which component is causing the failure. See also
Fakes, mocks and integration tests
Instead, the software developer should create an abstract interface around the database queries, and then implement
that interface with their own mock object. By abstracting this necessary attachment from the code (temporarily
reducing the net effective coupling), the independent unit can be more thoroughly tested than may have been
previously achieved. This results in a higher quality unit that is also more maintainable.
Applications
Extreme Programming
Unit testing is the cornerstone of Extreme Programming, which relies on an automated unit testing framework. This
automated unit testing framework can be either third party, e.g., xUnit, or created within the development group.
Extreme Programming uses the creation of unit tests for test-driven development. The developer writes a unit test
that exposes either a software requirement or a defect. This test will fail because either the requirement isn't
implemented yet, or because it intentionally exposes a defect in the existing code. Then, the developer writes the
simplest code to make the test, along with other tests, pass.
Most code in a system is unit tested, but not necessarily all paths through the code. Extreme Programming mandates
a "test everything that can possibly break" strategy, over the traditional "test every execution path" method. This
leads developers to develop fewer tests than classical methods, but this isn't really a problem, more a restatement of
fact, as classical methods have rarely ever been followed methodically enough for all execution paths to have been
thoroughly tested. Extreme Programming simply recognizes that testing is rarely exhaustive (because it is often too
Unit testing 4
expensive and time-consuming to be economically viable) and provides guidance on how to effectively focus limited
resources.
Crucially, the test code is considered a first class project artifact in that it is maintained at the same quality as the
implementation code, with all duplication removed. Developers release unit testing code to the code repository in
conjunction with the code it tests. Extreme Programming's thorough unit testing allows the benefits mentioned
above, such as simpler and more confident code development and refactoring, simplified code integration, accurate
documentation, and more modular designs. These unit tests are also constantly run as a form of regression test.
Unit testing is also critical to the concept of Emergent Design. As Emergent Design is heavily dependent upon
Refactoring, unit tests are integral component.[5]
Techniques
Unit testing is commonly automated, but may still be performed manually. The IEEE does not favor one over the
other.[6] A manual approach to unit testing may employ a step-by-step instructional document. Nevertheless, the
objective in unit testing is to isolate a unit and validate its correctness. Automation is efficient for achieving this, and
enables the many benefits listed in this article. Conversely, if not planned carefully, a careless manual unit test case
may execute as an integration test case that involves many software components, and thus preclude the achievement
of most if not all of the goals established for unit testing.
To fully realize the effect of isolation while using an automated approach, the unit or code body under test is
executed within a framework outside of its natural environment. In other words, it is executed outside of the product
or calling context for which it was originally created. Testing in such an isolated manner reveals unnecessary
dependencies between the code being tested and other units or data spaces in the product. These dependencies can
then be eliminated.
Using an automation framework, the developer codes criteria into the test to verify the unit's correctness. During test
case execution, the framework logs tests that fail any criterion. Many frameworks will also automatically flag these
failed test cases and report them in a summary. Depending upon the severity of a failure, the framework may halt
subsequent testing.
As a consequence, unit testing is traditionally a motivator for programmers to create decoupled and cohesive code
bodies. This practice promotes healthy habits in software development. Design patterns, unit testing, and refactoring
often work together so that the best solution may emerge.
Notes
[1] Fowler, Martin (2007-01-02). "Mocks aren't Stubs" (http:/ / martinfowler. com/ articles/ mocksArentStubs. html). . Retrieved 2008-04-01.
[2] Kolawa, Adam; Huizinga, Dorota (2007). Automated Defect Prevention: Best Practices in Software Management (http:/ / www. wiley. com/
WileyCDA/ WileyTitle/ productCd-0470042125. html). Wiley-IEEE Computer Society Press. p. 75. ISBN 0470042125. .
[3] Cramblitt, Bob (2007-09-20). "Alberto Savoia sings the praises of software testing" (http:/ / searchsoftwarequality. techtarget. com/
originalContent/ 0,289142,sid92_gci1273161,00. html). . Retrieved 2007-11-29.
[4] daVeiga, Nada (2008-02-06). "Change Code Without Fear: Utilize a regression safety net" (http:/ / www. ddj. com/ development-tools/
206105233). . Retrieved 2008-02-08.
[5] http:/ / www. agilesherpa. org/ agile_coach/ engineering_practices/ emergent_design/
[6] IEEE Standards Board, "IEEE Standard for Software Unit Testing: An American National Standard, ANSI/IEEE Std 1008-1987" (http:/ /
iteso. mx/ ~pgutierrez/ calidad/ Estandares/ IEEE 1008. pdf) in IEEE Standards: Software Engineering, Volume Two: Process Standards;
1999 Edition; published by The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc. Software Engineering Technical Committee of the IEEE
Computer Society.
[7] Bullseye Testing Technology (2006–2008). "Intermediate Coverage Goals" (http:/ / www. bullseye. com/ coverage. html#intermediate). .
Retrieved 24 March 2009.
External links
• Unit Testing Guidelines from GeoSoft (http://geosoft.no/development/unittesting.html)
• Test Driven Development (Ward Cunningham's Wiki) (http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?TestDrivenDevelopment)
• Unit Testing 101 for the Non-Programmer (http://www.saravanansubramanian.com/Saravanan/
Articles_On_Software/Entries/2010/1/19_Unit_Testing_101_For_Non-Programmers.html)
• Step-by-Step Guide to JPA-Enabled Unit Testing (Java EE) (http://www.sizovpoint.com/2010/01/
step-by-step-guide-to-jpa-enabled-unit.html)
Article Sources and Contributors 6
License
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