corda/docs/source/api-testing.rst
2018-02-22 14:38:02 +00:00

19 KiB

API: Testing

Flow testing

MockNetwork

Flow testing can be fully automated using a MockNetwork composed of StartedMockNode nodes. Each StartedMockNode behaves like a regular Corda node, but its services are either in-memory or mocked out.

A MockNetwork is created as follows:

class FlowTests {
    private lateinit var mockNet: MockNetwork

    @Before
    fun setup() {
        network = MockNetwork(listOf("my.cordapp.package", "my.other.cordapp.package"))
    }
}
public class IOUFlowTests {
    private MockNetwork network;

    @Before
    public void setup() {
        network = new MockNetwork(ImmutableList.of("my.cordapp.package", "my.other.cordapp.package"));
    }
}

The MockNetwork requires at a minimum a list of packages. Each package is packaged into a CorDapp JAR and installed as a CorDapp on each StartedMockNode.

Configuring the MockNetwork

The MockNetwork is configured automatically. You can tweak its configuration using a MockNetworkParameters object, or by using named paramters in Kotlin:

val network = MockNetwork(
        cordappPackages = listOf("my.cordapp.package", "my.other.cordapp.package"),
        // If true then each node will be run in its own thread. This can result in race conditions in your
        // code if not carefully written, but is more realistic and may help if you have flows in your app that
        // do long blocking operations.
        threadPerNode = false,
        // The notaries to use on the mock network. By default you get one mock notary and that is usually
        // sufficient.
        notarySpecs = listOf(MockNetworkNotarySpec(DUMMY_NOTARY_NAME)),
        // If true then messages will not be routed from sender to receiver until you use the
        // [MockNetwork.runNetwork] method. This is useful for writing single-threaded unit test code that can
        // examine the state of the mock network before and after a message is sent, without races and without
        // the receiving node immediately sending a response.
        networkSendManuallyPumped = false,
        // How traffic is allocated in the case where multiple nodes share a single identity, which happens for
        // notaries in a cluster. You don't normally ever need to change this: it is mostly useful for testing
        // notary implementations.
        servicePeerAllocationStrategy = InMemoryMessagingNetwork.ServicePeerAllocationStrategy.Random())

val network2 = MockNetwork(listOf("my.cordapp.package", "my.other.cordapp.package"), MockNetworkParameters(
        // If true then each node will be run in its own thread. This can result in race conditions in your
        // code if not carefully written, but is more realistic and may help if you have flows in your app that
        // do long blocking operations.
        threadPerNode = false,
        // The notaries to use on the mock network. By default you get one mock notary and that is usually
        // sufficient.
        notarySpecs = listOf(MockNetworkNotarySpec(DUMMY_NOTARY_NAME)),
        // If true then messages will not be routed from sender to receiver until you use the
        // [MockNetwork.runNetwork] method. This is useful for writing single-threaded unit test code that can
        // examine the state of the mock network before and after a message is sent, without races and without
        // the receiving node immediately sending a response.
        networkSendManuallyPumped = false,
        // How traffic is allocated in the case where multiple nodes share a single identity, which happens for
        // notaries in a cluster. You don't normally ever need to change this: it is mostly useful for testing
        // notary implementations.
        servicePeerAllocationStrategy = InMemoryMessagingNetwork.ServicePeerAllocationStrategy.Random())
)
MockNetwork network = MockNetwork(ImmutableList.of("my.cordapp.package", "my.other.cordapp.package"),
        new MockNetworkParameters()
                // If true then each node will be run in its own thread. This can result in race conditions in
                // your code if not carefully written, but is more realistic and may help if you have flows in
                // your app that do long blocking operations.
                .setThreadPerNode(false)
                // The notaries to use on the mock network. By default you get one mock notary and that is
                // usually sufficient.
                .setNotarySpecs(ImmutableList.of(new MockNetworkNotarySpec(DUMMY_NOTARY_NAME)))
                // If true then messages will not be routed from sender to receiver until you use the
                // [MockNetwork.runNetwork] method. This is useful for writing single-threaded unit test code
                // that can examine the state of the mock network before and after a message is sent, without
                // races and without the receiving node immediately sending a response.
                .setNetworkSendManuallyPumped(false)
                // How traffic is allocated in the case where multiple nodes share a single identity, which
                // happens for notaries in a cluster. You don't normally ever need to change this: it is mostly
                // useful for testing notary implementations.
                .setServicePeerAllocationStrategy(new InMemoryMessagingNetwork.ServicePeerAllocationStrategy.Random()));

Adding nodes to the network

Nodes are created on the MockNetwork using:

class FlowTests {
    private lateinit var mockNet: MockNetwork
    lateinit var nodeA: StartedMockNode
    lateinit var nodeB: StartedMockNode

    @Before
    fun setup() {
        network = MockNetwork(listOf("my.cordapp.package", "my.other.cordapp.package"))
        nodeA = network.createPartyNode()
        // We can optionally give the node a name.
        nodeB = network.createPartyNode(CordaX500Name("Bank B", "London", "GB"))
    }
}
public class IOUFlowTests {
    private MockNetwork network;
    private StartedMockNode a;
    private StartedMockNode b;

    @Before
    public void setup() {
        network = new MockNetwork(ImmutableList.of("my.cordapp.package", "my.other.cordapp.package"));
        nodeA = network.createPartyNode(null);
        // We can optionally give the node a name.
        nodeB = network.createPartyNode(new CordaX500Name("Bank B", "London", "GB"));
    }
}

Registering a node's initiated flows

Regular Corda nodes automatically register any response flows defined in their installed CorDapps. When using a MockNetwork, each StartedMockNode must manually register any responder flows it wishes to use.

Responder flows are registered as follows:

nodeA.registerInitiatedFlow(ExampleFlow.Acceptor::class.java)
nodeA.registerInitiatedFlow(ExampleFlow.Acceptor.class);

Running the network

Regular Corda nodes automatically process received messages. When using a MockNetwork with networkSendManuallyPumped set to false, you must manually initiate the processing of received messages.

You manually process received messages as follows:

  • StartedMockNode.pumpReceive to process a single message from the node's queue

  • MockNetwork.runNetwork to process all the messages in every node's queue. This may generate additional messages that must in turn be processed

    • network.runNetwork(-1) (the default in Kotlin) will exchange messages until there are no further messages to process

Running flows

A StartedMockNode starts a flow using the StartedNodeServices.startFlow method. This method returns a future representing the output of running the flow.

val signedTransactionFuture = nodeA.services.startFlow(IOUFlow(iouValue = 99, otherParty = nodeBParty))
CordaFuture<SignedTransaction> future = startFlow(a.getServices(), new ExampleFlow.Initiator(1, nodeBParty));

The network must then be manually run before retrieving the future's value:

val signedTransactionFuture = nodeA.services.startFlow(IOUFlow(iouValue = 99, otherParty = nodeBParty))
// Assuming network.networkSendManuallyPumped == false.
network.runNetwork()
val signedTransaction = future.get();
CordaFuture<SignedTransaction> future = startFlow(a.getServices(), new ExampleFlow.Initiator(1, nodeBParty));
// Assuming network.networkSendManuallyPumped == false.
network.runNetwork();
SignedTransaction signedTransaction = future.get();

Accessing StartedMockNode internals

Creating a node database transaction

Whenever you query a node's database (e.g. to extract information from the node's vault), you must wrap the query in a database transaction, as follows:

nodeA.database.transaction {
    // Perform query here.
}
node.getDatabase().transaction(tx -> {
    // Perform query here.
}

Querying a node's vault

Recorded states can be retrieved from the vault of a StartedMockNode using:

nodeA.database.transaction {
    val myStates = nodeA.services.vaultService.queryBy<MyStateType>().states
}
node.getDatabase().transaction(tx -> {
    List<MyStateType> myStates = node.getServices().getVaultService().queryBy(MyStateType.class).getStates();
}

This allows you to check whether a given state has (or has not) been stored, and whether it has the correct attributes.

Examining a node's transaction storage

Recorded transactions can be retrieved from the transaction storage of a StartedMockNode using:

val transaction = nodeA.services.validatedTransactions.getTransaction(transaction.id)
SignedTransaction transaction = nodeA.getServices().getValidatedTransactions().getTransaction(transaction.getId())

This allows you to check whether a given transaction has (or has not) been stored, and whether it has the correct attributes.

This allows you to check whether a given state has (or has not) been stored, and whether it has the correct attributes.

Further examples

  • See the flow testing tutorial here <flow-testing>
  • Further examples are available in the Example CorDapp in Java and Kotlin

Contract testing

The Corda test framework includes the ability to create a test ledger by calling the ledger function on an implementation of the ServiceHub interface.

MockServices

A mock implementation of ServiceHub is provided in MockServices. This is a minimal ServiceHub that suffices to test contract logic. It has the ability to insert states into the vault, query the vault, and construct and check transactions.

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/kotlin/net/corda/docs/tutorial/testdsl/TutorialTestDSL.kt

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/java/net/corda/docs/java/tutorial/testdsl/CommercialPaperTest.java

Alternatively, there is a helper constructor which just accepts a list of TestIdentity. The first identity provided is the identity of the node whose ServiceHub is being mocked, and any subsequent identities are identities that the node knows about. Only the calling package is scanned for cordapps and a test IdentityService is created for you, using all the given identities.

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/kotlin/net/corda/docs/tutorial/testdsl/TutorialTestDSL.kt

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/java/net/corda/docs/java/tutorial/testdsl/CommercialPaperTest.java

Writing tests using a test ledger

The ServiceHub.ledger extension function allows you to create a test ledger. Within the ledger wrapper you can create transactions using the transaction function. Within a transaction you can define the input and output states for the transaction, alongside any commands that are being executed, the timeWindow in which the transaction has been executed, and any attachments, as shown in this example test:

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/kotlin/net/corda/docs/tutorial/testdsl/TutorialTestDSL.kt

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/java/net/corda/docs/java/tutorial/testdsl/CommercialPaperTest.java

Once all the transaction components have been specified, you can run verifies() to check that the given transaction is valid.

Checking for failure states

In order to test for failures, you can use the failsWith method, or in Kotlin the fails with helper method, which assert that the transaction fails with a specific error. If you just want to assert that the transaction has failed without verifying the message, there is also a fails method.

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/kotlin/net/corda/docs/tutorial/testdsl/TutorialTestDSL.kt

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/java/net/corda/docs/java/tutorial/testdsl/CommercialPaperTest.java

Note

The transaction DSL forces the last line of the test to be either a verifies or fails with statement.

Testing multiple scenarios at once

Within a single transaction block, you can assert several times that the transaction constructed so far either passes or fails verification. For example, you could test that a contract fails to verify because it has no output states, and then add the relevant output state and check that the contract verifies successfully, as in the following example:

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/kotlin/net/corda/docs/tutorial/testdsl/TutorialTestDSL.kt

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/java/net/corda/docs/java/tutorial/testdsl/CommercialPaperTest.java

You can also use the tweak function to create a locally scoped transaction that you can make changes to and then return to the original, unmodified transaction. As in the following example:

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/kotlin/net/corda/docs/tutorial/testdsl/TutorialTestDSL.kt

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/java/net/corda/docs/java/tutorial/testdsl/CommercialPaperTest.java

Chaining transactions

The following example shows that within a ledger, you can create more than one transaction in order to test chains of transactions. In addition to transaction, unverifiedTransaction can be used, as in the example below, to create transactions on the ledger without verifying them, for pre-populating the ledger with existing data. When chaining transactions, it is important to note that even though a transaction verifies successfully, the overall ledger may not be valid. This can be verified separately by placing a verifies or fails statement within the ledger block.

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/kotlin/net/corda/docs/tutorial/testdsl/TutorialTestDSL.kt

../../docs/source/example-code/src/test/java/net/corda/docs/java/tutorial/testdsl/CommercialPaperTest.java

Further examples

  • See the flow testing tutorial here <tutorial-test-dsl>
  • Further examples are available in the Example CorDapp in Java and Kotlin