.NET NUnit test - Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() is null
You could do something like this with Rhino Mocks: Encapsulate the Assembly.GetEntryAssembly() call into a class with interface IAssemblyLoader and inject it into the class your are testing. This is not tested but something along the lines of this:
[Test] public void TestSomething() {
// arrange
var stubbedAssemblyLoader = MockRepository.GenerateStub<IAssemblyLoader>();
stubbedAssemblyLoader.Stub(x => x.GetEntryAssembly()).Return(Assembly.LoadFrom("assemblyFile"));
// act
var myClassUnderTest = new MyClassUnderTest(stubbedAssemblyLoader);
var result = myClassUnderTest.MethodToTest();
// assert
Assert.AreEqual("expected result", result);
}
public interface IAssemblyLoader {
Assembly GetEntryAssembly();
}
public class AssemblyLoader : IAssemblyLoader {
public Assembly GetEntryAssembly() {
return Assembly.GetEntryAssembly();
}
}
Implement the SetEntryAssembly(Assembly assembly) method given in
http://frostwave.googlecode.com/svn-history/r75/trunk/F2DUnitTests/Code/AssemblyUtilities.cs
to your unit test project.
/// <summary>
/// Use as first line in ad hoc tests (needed by XNA specifically)
/// </summary>
public static void SetEntryAssembly()
{
SetEntryAssembly(Assembly.GetCallingAssembly());
}
/// <summary>
/// Allows setting the Entry Assembly when needed.
/// Use AssemblyUtilities.SetEntryAssembly() as first line in XNA ad hoc tests
/// </summary>
/// <param name="assembly">Assembly to set as entry assembly</param>
public static void SetEntryAssembly(Assembly assembly)
{
AppDomainManager manager = new AppDomainManager();
FieldInfo entryAssemblyfield = manager.GetType().GetField("m_entryAssembly", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic);
entryAssemblyfield.SetValue(manager, assembly);
AppDomain domain = AppDomain.CurrentDomain;
FieldInfo domainManagerField = domain.GetType().GetField("_domainManager", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic);
domainManagerField.SetValue(domain, manager);
}