I can\'t test a Reliable Service/Actor by just calling it\'s constructor and then test it\'s methods. var testService = new SomeService();
throws a NullReferenceExc
Actually you can test Reliable Services and Actors the same way you'd test any other class in .NET! They're only special in that they use certain hooks into the underlying platform, but other than that you can instantiate your service or actor class normally and call methods on it.
Currently, Reliable Services are a little easier to unit test because the primary hook into the platform, the State Manager, is an interface that's pluggable through the constructor.
For example, your service class might look like this:
EDIT: Updated with the GA release API (2.0.135)
class MyService : StatefulService
{
public MyService (StatefulServiceContext context, IReliableStateManager stateManager)
:base (context, stateManager)
{
}
public void MyMethod()
{
// do stuff..
}
}
Then you can test your service class like so:
[TestMethod]
public TestMyMethod()
{
MockReliableStateManager stateManager = new MockReliableStateManager();
MyService target = new MyService(stateManager);
target.MyMethod();
// validate results and all that good stuff
}
We have a full working example of actual services with lots of dependencies being unit tested available on GitHub: https://github.com/Azure-Samples/service-fabric-dotnet-management-party-cluster
This example has IReliableStateManager and IReliableDictionary mocks as well that you can use as a starting point for your own unit tests.