I'm writing some integration tests towards my jax-rs service where I have a set of exception mappers. So, when performing a given request I expect a certain response code based on the exception mapper. The problem is that I cannot get the exception mappers to be invoked when running in this environment.
My service which should throw a logicalexception in my test:
@Stateless
@Path("/baseCustomer")
public class BaseCustomerService {
@EJB //this one gets mocked in the unittest
private BaseCustomerManagerBean customerManager;
@POST
@Path("crud")
@Consumes({MediaType.APPLICATION_XML})
@Produces({MediaType.APPLICATION_XML, MediaType.TEXT_XML})
public Hkunde createCustomer(Hkunde newCustomer) throws LogicalException {
//throws exception according to mocking
return customerManager.createCustomer(newCustomer);
}
And the exception mapper:
@Provider
public class LogicalExceptionMapper implements ExceptionMapper<LogicalException> {
@Override
public Response toResponse(LogicalException exception) {
return Response.status(Response.Status.FORBIDDEN).build();
}
}
I set up my tests like this:
@Mock
private BaseCustomerManagerBean baseCustomerManager;
private HttpClient httpClient;
private BaseCustomerServiceClient client;
@Configuration
public Properties config() throws Exception {
Properties properties = new Properties();
properties.setProperty(Context.INITIAL_CONTEXT_FACTORY, "org.apache.openejb.client.RemoteInitialContextFactory");
properties.setProperty(OpenEjbContainer.OPENEJB_EMBEDDED_REMOTABLE, Boolean.TRUE.toString());
properties.setProperty(DeploymentFilterable.CLASSPATH_INCLUDE, LogicalExceptionMapper.class.getName());
properties.setProperty("openejb.jaxrs.providers.auto", "true");
properties.setProperty("openejb.servicemanager.enabled", "true");
return properties;
}
@MockInjector
public Class<?> mockitoInjector() {
return MockitoInjector.class;
}
@Module
public EjbModule createModule() throws Exception {
final StatelessBean bean = (StatelessBean) new StatelessBean(BaseCustomerService.class).localBean();
bean.setRestService(true);
final EjbJar ejbJar = new EjbJar();
ejbJar.addEnterpriseBean(bean);
final OpenejbJar openejbJar = new OpenejbJar();
openejbJar.addEjbDeployment(new EjbDeployment(ejbJar.getEnterpriseBeans()[0]));
EjbModule module = new EjbModule(ejbJar);
module.setOpenejbJar(openejbJar);
return module;
}
@Module
public Class[] exceptionMappers() {
return new Class[]{LogicalExceptionMapper.class};
}
@Before
public void setup() {
ServiceHost serviceHost = new ServiceHost("http://localhost:4204/BaseCustomerServiceTest");
httpClient = new HttpClient(serviceHost);
client = new BaseCustomerServiceClient(httpClient);
}
@Test
public void createCustomer_givenLogicalException_expectsLogicalException() throws LogicalException {
Hkunde expected = new Hkunde(true);
when(baseCustomerManager.createCustomer(expected)).thenThrow(new LogicalException("mock"));
try {
client.createCustomer(expected);
fail("Expected LogicalException");
} catch (LogicalException ex) {
}
verify(baseCustomerManager).createCustomer(expected);
}
So when I execute the test, my client
will read the response code from the response and throw an exception based on this code.
The problem is that the exception mapper is never invoked, and I always receive a 500 internal server error, instead of the "forbidden" response. I'm guessing I need to add some more info when setting up the ejbjar or something like that.
Thanks!