Checking the results of a Factory in a unit test
What you are trying to do is not Unit Testing
If you test whether or not the returned objects are instances of specific concrete classes, you aren't unit testing. You are integration testing. While integration testing is important, it is not the same thing.
In unit testing, you only need to test the object itself. If you assert on the concrete type of the abstract objects returned, you are testing over the implementation of the returned object.
Unit Testing on Objects in general
When unit testing, there are four things, you want to assert:
- Return values of queries (non-void methods) are what you expect them to be.
- Side-effects of commands (void methods) modify the object itself as you expect them to.
- Commands send to other objects are received (This is usually done using mocks).
Furthermore, you only want to test what could be observed from an object instance, i.e. the public interface. Otherwise, you tie yourself to a specific set of implementation details. This would require you to change your tests when those details change.
Unit Testing Factories
Unit testing on Factories is really uninteresting, because you are not interested in the behavior of the returned objects of queries. That behavior is (hopefully) tested elsewhere, presumable while unit testing that object itself. You are only really interested in whether or not the returned object has the correct type, which is guaranteed if your program compiles.
As Factories do not change over time (because then they would be "Builders", which is another pattern), there are no commands to test.
Factories are responsible for instantiating objects, so they should not depend on other factories to do this for them. They might depend on a Builder, but even so, we are not supposed to test the Builder's correctness, only whether or not the Builder receives the message.
This means that all you have to test on Factories is whether or not they send the messages to the objects on which they depend. If you use Dependency Injection, this is almost trivial. Just mock the dependencies in your unit tests, and verify that they receive the messages.
Summary of Unit Testing Factories
- Do not test the behavior nor the implementation details of the returned objects! Your Factory is not responsible for the implementation of the object instances!
- Test whether or not the commands sent to dependencies are received.
That's it. If there are no dependencies, there is nothing to test. Except maybe to assert that the returned object isn't a null
reference.
Integration Testing Factories
If you have a requirement that the returned abstract object type is an instance of a specific concrete type, then this falls under integration testing.
Others here have already answered how to do this using the instanceof
operator.
Since I don't know how your factory method looks like, all I can advise right now is to
Check to see the object is the correct concrete implementation you were looking for:
IMyInterface fromFactory = factory.create(...); Assert.assertTrue(fromFactory instanceof MyInterfaceImpl1);
You can check if the factory setup the concrete instances with valid instance variables.