I have a relatively small Java library that implements a few dozen beans (no database or GUI). I have created a Spring Bean configuration file that other Java projects use to in
What to put in the app context file. The way the TestContext Framework works is that it allows you to reuse app wiring in the context of your integration tests. So for the most part, there isn't anything special to tests you'd put inside your app context config files. If your controller has a service bean dependency in your app, then it will have that in your integration test too. If your DAO has a SessionFactory in your app, then same for your integration test. That way you don't have to wire all that stuff up all over again when you write integration tests. Very cool.
I said for the most part above because there's at least one exception that comes to mind. Normally your app will use JNDI to locate a DataSource, but in an integration test (at least an out-of-container integration test), you won't normally have a JNDI environment available. So you should typically isolate the DataSource bean creation to a separate file, and use a JNDI version for your live app and a non-JNDI version (e.g. just create a straight BasicDataSource
, say) for your integration test. Here's an example of the former:
and here's an example of the latter:
These would go in separate files. The first might go in beans-datasource.xml
for normal app use and the second in beans-datasource-it.xml
for integration tests. The configuration that's common to normal app use and integration tests (i.e., the vast majority of your bean config in most cases) should be in a common config file or files.
Also, Spring 3 introduces a new jdbc
namespace that allows you to create an embedded database, like an HSQLDB database or a Derby database, etc. It looks like this:
That would replace the BasicDataSource
config described above, if you want to use this.
Why the error is happening. The error you are seeing is happening because your @ContextConfiguration
value is implicitly indicating that the app context file should be on the classpath. IMPORTANT: Remove the /resources
piece. That is Maven innards; when it builds your JAR or WAR, it copies the contents of the resources
directory into your classpath, not resources
itself. That should help.
EDIT:
To address the "no symbol found" errors, you will need to add your test dependencies to your Maven POM. This will be JUnit and the Spring Test module as well, both with
. In addition if you are using a mock framework like Mockito, you will need to add that dependency (with test scope) to your POM as well. Try that and please report back on what happens.