ScalaCheck is a powerful tool for automatic unit testing of Scala and Java programs. It features automatic test case generation and minimization of failing test cases. ScalaCheck started out as a Scala port of the Haskell library QuickCheck, and has since evolved and been extended with features not found in Haskell QuickCheck.
The Grinder is a JavaTM load testing framework that makes it easy to run a distributed test using many load injector machines. It is freely available under a BSD-style open-source license.
The latest news, downloads, and mailing list archives can be found on SourceForge.net.
Key features
* Generic Approach Load test anything that has a Java API. This includes common cases such as HTTP web servers, SOAP and REST web services, and application servers (CORBA, RMI, JMS, EJBs), as well as custom protocols.
* Flexible Scripting Tests are written in the powerful Jython scripting language.
* Distributed Framework A graphical console allows multiple load injectors to be monitored and controlled, and provides centralised script editing and distribution.
* Mature HTTP Support Automatic management of client connections and cookies. SSL. Proxy aware. Connection throttling. Sophisticated record and replay of the interaction between a browser and a web site.
See the longer features list for further details.
p-unit
An open source framework for unit test and performance benchmark, which was initiated by Andrew Zhang, under Apache License v2.0. p-unit supports to run the same tests with single thread or multi-threads, tracks memory and time consumption, and generates the result in the form of plain text, image or pdf file.
AtUnit minimizes boilerplate code in unit tests and guides test development by enforcing good practices.
* mark exactly one field with @Unit to indicate the object under test.
* mark fields with @Mock or @Stub to obtain mock objects
* inject your tests, and your test subjects, using your favorite IoC container
Mock Objects Integration
AtUnit integrates with JMock or EasyMock to provide mock objects:
* obtain a JMock context simply by declaring a field
* annotate fields with @Mock to obtain JMock or EasyMock mock objects
* annotate fields with @Stub to obtain a JMock or EasyMock stub object
... or you can use your own mock objects plug-in with two easy steps:
* implement the MockFramework interface
* annotate your tests with @MockFrameworkClass(MyMockFramework.class)
Container Integration
AtUnit integrates with Guice or Spring to take all of the work out of dependency-injected tests.
With Guice:
* never see the Injector, never write bootstrapping boilerplate!
* @Inject test class fields without even defining a Module
* declaratively obtain mock objects with @Inject @Mock
* if you need more binding flexibility, simply have your test class implement Module
With Spring:
* annotate fields with @Bean to get them from the Spring context
* fields annotated with @Bean which do not appear in your Spring context are added to it automatically! (This includes @Mock and @Stub fields.)
* AtUnit looks for a Spring XML file with the same name as your test, or you can specify the location yourself with @Context("filename")
* Most of the time, you don't even need a Spring XML file!
You can easily plug in other containers in two steps:
* implement the Container interface
* annotate your tests with @ContainerClass(MyContainer.class)
ClassMock is a framework that helps the creation of unit tests for components that use reflection or annotations. In this kind of classes, the behavior is dependent of the class structure. This way, each test case usually works with a different class created specifically for the test. With ClassMock is possible to define and generate classes in runtime, allowing a better test readability and logic sharing between tests.
jDiffChaser is a GUI comparison tool that automates difference detection
between same screens of different versions. You can easily record scenarios
(optionally define zones of the screens to ignore during comparisons) and play suites
of them on two different versions of the same Java Swing application: differences are
then listed in a web page report.
Spring AutoMock is a test enabling framework to allow automatic exposure of Mocked beans for a Spring application. Used in conjunction with Spring autowiring of bean dependencies you can develop teired application contexts that represent the architectural tiers of your application, and thus you testing strategy. The simplest example is a separation of service beans and DAO beans into separate xml application contexts so that the services can be fully tested in isolation of the DAOs. The DAO beans are still required by the services typically as an injected property. Spring AutoMock can automatically register a Mock and a proxy of certain beans, so that the Mocks can be injected into your test cases and the matching proxy into the item under test. This reduces the need for repeated Spring test configuration.
Abbot helps you test your Java UI. It comprises Abbot, which lets you programmatically drive UI components, and Costello (built on Abbot) which allows you to easily launch, explore and control an application. The framework may be used with both scripts and compiled code.
SevenMock is a light-weight Java dynamic mock objects framework. It is unusual in that it places responsibility for verifying operation parameters directly on the unit test code. This enables the test designer to write very clear, precisely targeted tests and makes test failures easier to diagnose.
RMock 2.0.0 is a Java mock object framework to use with jUnit. RMock has support for a setup-modify-run-verify workflow when writing jUnit tests. It integrates better with IDE refactoring support and allows designing classes and interfaces in a true test-first fashion.
JMock is a library that supports test-driven development1 of Java2 code with mock objects3.
Mock objects help you design and test the interactions between the objects in your programs.
The jMock library:
* makes it quick and easy to define mock objects, so you don't break the rhythm of programming.
* lets you precisely specify the interactions between your objects, reducing the brittleness of your tests.
* works well with the autocompletion and refactoring features of your IDE
* plugs into your favourite test framework
* is easy to extend.
This library allows you to use JavaBeans-style property matching for arguments when using EasyMock. Property matching is based on commons-beanutils as documented in Standard JavaBeans.
Unitils is an open source library aimed at making unit testing easy and maintainable. Unitils builds further on existing libraries like DBUnit and EasyMock and integrates with JUnit and TestNG.
Unitils provides general asserion utilities, support for database testing, support for testing with mock objects and offers integration with Spring and Hibernate. It has been designed to offer these services to unit tests in a very configurable and loosely coupled way. As a result, services can be added and extended very easily.
Currently Unitils offers following features:
* General testing utilities
o Equality assertion through reflection, with different options like ignoring Java default/null values and ignoring order of collections
* Database testing utilities
o Automatic maintenance and constraints disabling of unit test databases
+ Support for Oracle, Hsqldb, MySql, DB2, Postgresql and Derby
o Simplify unit test database connection setup
o Simplify insertion of test data with DBUnit
o Simplify Hibernate session management for unit testing
o Automatically test the mapping of Hibernate mapped objects with the database
o Manage transactions during unit testing
* Mock object utilities
o Simplify EasyMock mock object creation
o Simplify mock object injection
o EasyMock argument matching using reflection equality
* Spring integration
o ApplicationContext configuration and easy injection of spring managed beans into a unit test
o Support for using a Spring-configured Hibernate SessionFactory in unit tests.
The project started begin 2006 from an Ordina J-Technologies discussion group on unit testing. The result was a list of guidelines and Unitils emerged in an attempt to write code to support these guidelines.
Documentation
The developer edition provides ALL of the capabilities of the server edition but limits console and terminal connectivity to the first 45 minutes of a managed JVM's processing. Snapshots taken before the expiration time can still be analyzed offline in the console and the console will reconnect to the JVM once it has been stopped and started.
JRat is the Java Runtime Analysis Toolkit. Its purpose is to enable developers to better understand the runtime behavior of their Java programs. The term "behavior" includes, but is not limited to performance profiling.
While JRat is still in beta, without adding code to your application it can...
# accumulate timing statistics (a few ways)
# create trace logging
# track rate methods are called over time
# track the response time of methods over time
In what I hope will be the first of several articles about Guice, a new lightweight dependency injection container from Bob Lee and Kevin Bourillion from Google, this article examines the simplest and most obvious use case for the Guice container, for mocking or faking objects in unit tests. In future articles I will examine other, more ambitious areas where it can be used, including dependency elimination in large code bases.
Popper extends JUnit to allow you to specify theories, general statements about your code's behavior that may be true over infinite sets of input values. For a detailed description of why you might want to do this, see our paper. If you just want to try it out and get started, here's the place.
Canoo WebTest is a free open source tool for automated testing of web applications.
It calls web pages and verifies results, giving comprehensive reports on success and failure. The White Paper provides an overview of the features and the design rationale. Detailed information is provided in the Manual Overview as well as the Install and Troubleshooting guides.