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Specflow test step inheritance causes “Ambiguous s

2019-04-20 01:42发布

问题:

I want to have the following test step class structure:

[Binding]
public class BaseStep
{
    [Given(@"there is a customer")]
    public void GivenThereIsACustomer(Table table)
    {
        HandleCustomer(table);
    }

    protected virtual void HandleCustomer(Table table)
    {
    }
}

[Binding]
public class FeatureOneStep : BaseStep
{
    protected override void HandleCustomer(Table table)
    {
         // feature one action
    }

    [Given(@"feature one specific step")]
    public void GivenFeatureOneSpecificAction(Table table)
    {
        // do something
    }

}

[Binding]
public class FeatureTwoStep : BaseStep
{
    protected override void HandleCustomer(Table table)
    {
         // feature two action
    }

    [Given(@"feature two specific step")]
    public void GivenFeatureTwoSpecificAction(Table table)
    {
        // do something
    }
}

"Given there is a customer" is a common step that is used in both FeatureOne and FeatureTwo, but it will have different handling logic inside the two features. So I decide to put this step definition into a base class and override the protected methods in two derived classes respectively.

However, when I ran the tests, I have the following error:

TechTalk.SpecFlow.BindingException: Ambiguous step definitions found for step
'Given there is a customer': 
CustomerTestBase.GivenThereIsACustomer(Table),   
CustomerTestBase.GivenThereIsACustomer(Table)

Can any one tell me how to fix this issue?

回答1:

Just figuring this out now myself, so a couple of notes (hopefully somebody can use this in the future):

  • Don't include the [Binding] attribute on the base class
  • Create a derived class for each feature file
    • Add the [Binding] attribute to the derived class (will automatically include all step definitions in the base class)
    • Add a [Scope] attribute to the derived class; specify the name of the feature for the named parameter Feature


回答2:

The answer is simple; Don't use inheritance to define your bindings.

At run time SpecFlow finds its methods to call by scanning globally across all public classes looking for methods with matching [Given] attributes. This means that you can't have two different implementations for the same Given there is a customer statement, which if you think about it is quite a sensible design decision that will reduce ambiguity.



回答3:

This worked well for me :

public class BaseSteps
{
    [Given(@"Method called")]
    public virtual void WhenMethodCalled()
    {

    }
}    



[Binding]
[Scope(Feature= "specific_feature")
public class DerivedSteps : BaseSteps
{
    [Given(@"Method called")]
    [Scope(Feature= "specific_feature", Tag ="specific_tag")]
    public override void WhenMethodCalled()
    {

    }
}