I am trying use InMemory EF7 database for my xunit repository test.
But my problem is that when i try to Dispose the created context the in memory db persist. It means that one test involve other.
I have read this article Unit Testing Entity Framework 7 with the In Memory Data Store and I have tried to setup the context in the constructor of my TestClass. But this approach doesn't work. When I run tests separately everything is OK, but my first test method add something into DB and second test method start with dirty DB from previous test method. I try add IDispose
into test class but method DatabaseContext and DB persist in memory. What I am doing wrong am i missing something?
My code looks like:
using Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore;
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using Xunit;
namespace Fabric.Tests.Repositories
{
/// <summary>
/// Test for TaskRepository
/// </summary>
public class TaskRepositoryTests:IDisposable
{
private readonly DatabaseContext contextMemory;
/// <summary>
/// Constructor
/// </summary>
public TaskRepositoryTests()
{
var optionsBuilder = new DbContextOptionsBuilder<DatabaseContext>();
optionsBuilder.UseInMemoryDatabase();
contextMemory = new DatabaseContext(optionsBuilder.Options);
}
/// <summary>
/// Dispose DB
/// </summary>
public void Dispose()
{
//this has no effect
if (contextMemory != null)
{
contextMemory.Dispose();
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Positive Test for ListByAssigneeId method
/// </summary>
/// <returns></returns>
[Fact]
public async Task TasksRepositoryListByAssigneeId()
{
// Arrange
var assigneeId = Guid.NewGuid();
var taskList = new List<TaskItem>();
//AssigneeId != assigneeId
taskList.Add(new TaskItem()
{
AssigneeId = Guid.NewGuid(),
CreatorId = Guid.NewGuid(),
Description = "Descr 2",
Done = false,
Id = Guid.NewGuid(),
Location = "Some location 2",
Title = "Some title 2"
});
taskList.Add(new TaskItem()
{
AssigneeId = assigneeId,
CreatorId = Guid.NewGuid(),
Description = "Descr",
Done = false,
Id = Guid.NewGuid(),
Location = "Some location",
Title = "Some title"
});
taskList.Add(new TaskItem()
{
AssigneeId = assigneeId,
CreatorId = Guid.NewGuid(),
Description = "Descr 2",
Done = false,
Id = Guid.NewGuid(),
Location = "Some location 2",
Title = "Some title 2"
});
//AssigneeId != assigneeId
taskList.Add(new TaskItem()
{
AssigneeId = Guid.NewGuid(),
CreatorId = Guid.NewGuid(),
Description = "Descr 2",
Done = false,
Id = Guid.NewGuid(),
Location = "Some location 2",
Title = "Some title 2"
});
//set up inmemory DB
contextMemory.TaskItems.AddRange(taskList);
//save context
contextMemory.SaveChanges();
// Act
var repository = new TaskRepository(contextMemory);
var result = await repository.ListByAssigneeIdAsync(assigneeId);
// Assert
Assert.NotNull(result.Count());
foreach (var td in result)
{
Assert.Equal(assigneeId, td.AssigneeId);
}
}
/// <summary>
/// test for Add method
/// (Skip = "not able to clear DB context yet")
/// </summary>
/// <returns></returns>
[Fact]
public async Task TasksRepositoryAdd()
{
var item = new TaskData()
{
AssigneeId = Guid.NewGuid(),
CreatorId = Guid.NewGuid(),
Description = "Descr",
Done = false,
Location = "Location",
Title = "Title"
};
// Act
var repository = new TaskRepository(contextMemory);
var result = await repository.Add(item);
// Assert
Assert.Equal(1, contextMemory.TaskItems.Count());
Assert.NotNull(result.Id);
var dbRes = contextMemory.TaskItems.Where(s => s.Id == result.Id).SingleOrDefault();
Assert.NotNull(dbRes);
Assert.Equal(result.Id, dbRes.Id);
}
}
}
I am using:
"Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.InMemory": "1.0.0"
"Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore": "1.0.0"
"xunit": "2.2.0-beta2-build3300"
I think the answer Nate gave may be out of date now or maybe I am doing something wrong.
UseInMemoryDatabase()
now requires a db name.Below is what I ended up with. I added a line to create a unique db name. I removed the using statements in favor of using the constructor and dispose that are called once for each test case.
There are some debug lines in there from my testing.
Here is a very basic test case.
I also made 8 of test cases that attempted to delete the same device with the same id and each passed.
From the documentation,
Instead of making the test class disposable and trying to dispose the data context that way, create a new one for each test:
Then, in each test, new up a data context using this method:
This approach should get you a squeaky-clean in-memory database for each test.