Writing flow testsΒΆ

A flow can be a fairly complex thing that interacts with many services and other parties over the network. That means unit testing one requires some infrastructure to provide lightweight mock implementations. The MockNetwork provides this testing infrastructure layer; you can find this class in the test-utils module.

A good example to examine for learning how to unit test flows is the ResolveTransactionsFlow tests. This flow takes care of downloading and verifying transaction graphs, with all the needed dependencies. We start with this basic skeleton:

class ResolveTransactionsFlowTest {
    lateinit var net: MockNetwork
    lateinit var a: MockNetwork.MockNode
    lateinit var b: MockNetwork.MockNode
    lateinit var notary: Party

    @Before
    fun setup() {
        net = MockNetwork()
        val nodes = net.createSomeNodes()
        a = nodes.partyNodes[0]
        b = nodes.partyNodes[1]
        notary = nodes.notaryNode.info.notaryIdentity
        net.runNetwork()
    }

    @After
    fun tearDown() {
        net.stopNodes()
    }
}

We create a mock network in our @Before setup method and create a couple of nodes. We also record the identity of the notary in our test network, which will come in handy later. We also tidy up when we’re done.

Next, we write a test case:

    @Test
    fun `resolve from two hashes`() {
        val (stx1, stx2) = makeTransactions()
        val p = ResolveTransactionsFlow(setOf(stx2.id), a.info.legalIdentity)
        val future = b.services.startFlow(p).resultFuture
        net.runNetwork()
        val results = future.getOrThrow()
        assertEquals(listOf(stx1.id, stx2.id), results.map { it.id })
        databaseTransaction(b.database) {
            assertEquals(stx1, b.storage.validatedTransactions.getTransaction(stx1.id))
            assertEquals(stx2, b.storage.validatedTransactions.getTransaction(stx2.id))
        }
    }

We’ll take a look at the makeTransactions function in a moment. For now, it’s enough to know that it returns two SignedTransaction objects, the second of which spends the first. Both transactions are known by node A but not node B.

The test logic is simple enough: we create the flow, giving it node A’s identity as the target to talk to. Then we start it on node B and use the net.runNetwork() method to bounce messages around until things have settled (i.e. there are no more messages waiting to be delivered). All this is done using an in memory message routing implementation that is fast to initialise and use. Finally, we obtain the result of the flow and do some tests on it. We also check the contents of node B’s database to see that the flow had the intended effect on the node’s persistent state.

Here’s what makeTransactions looks like:

    private fun makeTransactions(signFirstTX: Boolean = true, withAttachment: SecureHash? = null): Pair<SignedTransaction, SignedTransaction> {
        // Make a chain of custody of dummy states and insert into node A.
        val dummy1: SignedTransaction = DummyContract.generateInitial(0, notary, MEGA_CORP.ref(1)).let {
            if (withAttachment != null)
                it.addAttachment(withAttachment)
            if (signFirstTX)
                it.signWith(MEGA_CORP_KEY)
            it.signWith(DUMMY_NOTARY_KEY)
            it.toSignedTransaction(false)
        }
        val dummy2: SignedTransaction = DummyContract.move(dummy1.tx.outRef(0), MINI_CORP_PUBKEY).let {
            it.signWith(MEGA_CORP_KEY)
            it.signWith(DUMMY_NOTARY_KEY)
            it.toSignedTransaction()
        }
        databaseTransaction(a.database) {
            a.services.recordTransactions(dummy1, dummy2)
        }
        return Pair(dummy1, dummy2)
    }

We’re using the DummyContract, a simple test smart contract which stores a single number in its states, along with ownership and issuer information. You can issue such states, exit them and re-assign ownership (move them). It doesn’t do anything else. This code simply creates a transaction that issues a dummy state (the issuer is MEGA_CORP, a pre-defined unit test identity), signs it with the test notary and MegaCorp keys and then converts the builder to the final SignedTransaction. It then does so again, but this time instead of issuing it re-assigns ownership instead. The chain of two transactions is finally committed to node A by sending them directly to the a.services.recordTransaction method (note that this method doesn’t check the transactions are valid) inside a databaseTransaction. All node flows run within a database transaction in the nodes themselves, but any time we need to use the database directly from a unit test, you need to provide a database transaction as shown here.

And that’s it: you can explore the documentation for the MockNetwork API here.