转载:http://www.ASP.NET/learn/mvc/tutorial-07-cs.aspx
Creating Unit Tests for ASP.NET MVC Applications
The goal of this tutorial is to demonstrate how you can write unit tests for the controllers in your ASP.NET MVC applications. We discuss how to build three different types of unit tests. You learn how to test the view returned by a controller action, how to test the View Data returned by a controller action, and how to test whether or not one controller action redirects you to a second controller action.
Creating the Controller under Test
Let’s start by creating the controller that we intend to test. The controller, named the ProductController
, is contained in Listing 1.
Listing 1 – ProductController.cs
using System; using System.Web.Mvc; namespace Store.Controllers { public class ProductController : Controller { public ActionResult Index() { // Add action logic here throw new NotImplementedException(); } public ActionResult Details(int Id) { return View("Details"); } } }
The ProductController
contains two action methods named Index()
and Details()
. Both action methods return a view. Notice that the Details()
action accepts a parameter named Id.
Testing the View returned by a Controller
Imagine that we want to test whether or not the ProductController
returns the right view. We want to make sure that when the ProductController.Details()
action is invoked, the Details view is returned. The test class in Listing 2 contains a unit test for testing the view returned by the ProductController.Details()
action.
Listing 2 – ProductControllerTest.cs
using System.Web.Mvc; using Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting; using Store.Controllers; namespace StoreTests.Controllers { [TestClass] public class ProductControllerTest { [TestMethod] public void TestDetailsView() { var controller = new ProductController(); var result = controller.Details(2) as ViewResult; Assert.AreEqual("Details", result.ViewName); } } }
The class in Listing 2 includes a test method named TestDetailsView()
. This method contains three lines of code. The first line of code creates a new instance of the ProductController
class. The second line of code invokes the controller’s Details()
action method. Finally, the last line of code checks whether or not the view returned by the Details()
action is the Details view.
The ViewResult.ViewName
property represents the name of the view returned by a controller. One big warning about testing this property. There are two ways that a controller can return a view. A controller can explicitly return a view like this:
public ActionResult Details(int Id) { return View("Details"); }
Alternatively, the name of the view can be inferred from the name of the controller action like this:
public ActionResult Details(int Id) { return View(); }
This controller action also returns a view named Details
. However, the name of the view is inferred from the action name. If you want to test the view name, then you must explicitly return the view name from the controller action.
You can run the unit test in Listing 2 by either entering the keyboard combination Ctrl-R, A or by clicking the Run All Tests in Solution button (see Figure 1). If the test passes, you’ll see the Test Results window in Figure 2.
Testing the View Data returned by a Controller
An MVC controller passes data to a view by using something called View Data
. For example, imagine that you want to display the details for a particular product when you invoke the ProductController Details()
action. In that case, you can create an instance of a Product
class (defined in your model) and pass the instance to the Details
view by taking advantage of View Data
.
The modified ProductController
in Listing 3 includes an updated Details()
action that returns a Product.
Listing 3 – ProductController.cs
using System; using System.Web.Mvc; namespace Store.Controllers { public class ProductController : Controller { public ActionResult Index() { // Add action logic here throw new NotImplementedException(); } public ActionResult Details(int Id) { var product = new Product(Id, "Laptop"); return View("Details", product); } } }
First, the Details()
action creates a new instance of the Product
class that represents a laptop computer. Next, the instance of the Product
class is passed as the second parameter to the View()
method.
You can write unit tests to test whether the expected data is contained in view data. The unit test in Listing 4 tests whether or not a Product representing a laptop computer is returned when you call the ProductController Details()
action method.
Listing 4 – ProductControllerTest.cs
using System.Web.Mvc; using Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting; using Store.Controllers; namespace StoreTests.Controllers { [TestClass] public class ProductControllerTest { [TestMethod] public void TestDetailsViewData() { var controller = new ProductController(); var result = controller.Details(2) as ViewResult; var product = (Product) result.ViewData.Model; Assert.AreEqual("Laptop", product.Name); } } }
In Listing 4, the TestDetailsView()
method tests the View Data returned by invoking the Details()
method. The ViewData
is exposed as a property on the ViewResult
returned by invoking the Details()
method. The ViewData.Model
property contains the product passed to the view. The test simply verifies that the product contained in the View Data has the name Laptop.
Testing the Action Result returned by a Controller
A more complex controller action might return different types of action results depending on the values of the parameters passed to the controller action. A controller action can return a variety of types of action results including a ViewResult
, RedirectToRouteResult
, or JsonResult
.
For example, the modified Details()
action in Listing 5 returns the Details
view when you pass a valid product Id to the action. If you pass an invalid product Id — an Id with a value less than 1 — then you are redirected to the Index()
action.
Listing 5 – ProductController.cs
using System; using System.Web.Mvc; namespace Store.Controllers { public class ProductController : Controller { public ActionResult Index() { // Add action logic here throw new NotImplementedException(); } public ActionResult Details(int Id) { if (Id < 1) return RedirectToAction("Index"); var product = new Product(Id, "Laptop"); return View("Details", product); } } }
You can test the behavior of the Details()
action with the unit test in Listing 6. The unit test in Listing 6 verifies that you are redirected to the Index
view when an Id with the value -1 is passed to the Details()
method.
Listing 6 – ProductControllerTest.cs
using System.Web.Mvc; using Microsoft.VisualStudio.TestTools.UnitTesting; using Store.Controllers; namespace StoreTests.Controllers { [TestClass] public class ProductControllerTest { [TestMethod] public void TestDetailsRedirect() { var controller = new ProductController(); var result = (RedirectToRouteResult) controller.Details(-1); Assert.AreEqual("Index", result.Values["action"]); } } }
When you call the RedirectToAction()
method in a controller action, the controller action returns a RedirectToRouteResult
. The test checks whether the RedirectToRouteResult
will redirect the user to a controller action named Index
.
Summary
In this tutorial, you learned how to build unit tests for MVC controller actions. First, you learned how to verify whether the right view is returned by a controller action. You learned how to use the ViewResult.ViewName
property to verify the name of a view.
Next, we examined how you can test the contents of View Data
. You learned how to check whether the right product was returned in View Data
after calling a controller action.
Finally, we discussed how you can test whether different types of action results are returned from a controller action. You learned how to test whether a controller returns a ViewResult
or a RedirectToRouteResult
.