public class IterableOfProtosSubject<S extends IterableOfProtosSubject<S,M,C>,M extends com.google.protobuf.Message,C extends Iterable<M>> extends Subject<S,C>
ProtoTruth.assertThat(actual).containsExactly(expected)
performs the same assertion as
Truth.assertThat(actual).containsExactly(expected)
. By default, the assertions are strict
with respect to repeated field order, missing fields, etc. This behavior can be changed with the
configuration methods on this subject, e.g. ProtoTruth.assertThat(actual).ignoringRepeatedFieldOrder().containsExactlyEntriesIn(expected)
.
Equality tests, and other methods, may yield slightly different behavior for versions 2 and 3 of Protocol Buffers. If testing protos of multiple versions, make sure you understand the behaviors of default and unknown fields so you don't under or over test.
Modifier and Type | Class and Description |
---|---|
static class |
IterableOfProtosSubject.IterableOfMessagesSubject<M extends com.google.protobuf.Message>
Default implementation of
IterableOfProtosSubject . |
failureStrategy
Modifier | Constructor and Description |
---|---|
protected |
IterableOfProtosSubject(FailureStrategy failureStrategy,
C messages) |
Modifier and Type | Method and Description |
---|---|
<A,E> IterableSubject.UsingCorrespondence<A,E> |
comparingElementsUsing(Correspondence<A,E> correspondence)
Starts a method chain for a test proposition in which the actual elements (i.e.
|
void |
contains(Object element)
Attests (with a side-effect failure) that the subject contains the supplied item.
|
Ordered |
containsAllIn(Iterable<?> expected)
Attests that the actual iterable contains at least all of the expected elements or fails.
|
Ordered |
containsAllOf(Object firstExpected,
Object secondExpected,
Object... restOfExpected)
Attests that the actual iterable contains at least all of the expected elements or fails.
|
void |
containsAnyIn(Iterable<?> expected)
Attests that the subject contains at least one of the objects contained in the provided
collection or fails.
|
void |
containsAnyOf(Object first,
Object second,
Object... rest)
Attests that the subject contains at least one of the provided objects or fails.
|
Ordered |
containsExactly(Object... varargs)
Attests that a subject contains exactly the provided objects or fails.
|
Ordered |
containsExactlyElementsIn(Iterable<?> expected)
Attests that a subject contains exactly the provided objects or fails.
|
void |
containsNoDuplicates()
Attests that the subject does not contain duplicate elements.
|
void |
containsNoneIn(Iterable<?> excluded)
Attests that a actual iterable contains none of the elements contained in the excluded iterable
or fails.
|
void |
containsNoneOf(Object firstExcluded,
Object secondExcluded,
Object... restOfExcluded)
Attests that a actual iterable contains none of the excluded objects or fails.
|
void |
doesNotContain(Object element)
Attests (with a side-effect failure) that the subject does not contain the supplied item.
|
void |
hasSize(int expectedSize)
Fails if the subject does not have the given size.
|
IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> |
ignoringFieldAbsence()
Specifies that the 'has' bit of individual fields should be ignored when comparing for
equality.
|
IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> |
ignoringFieldDescriptors(com.google.protobuf.Descriptors.FieldDescriptor firstFieldDescriptor,
com.google.protobuf.Descriptors.FieldDescriptor... rest)
Excludes all message fields matching the given
Descriptors.FieldDescriptor s from the comparison. |
IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> |
ignoringFieldDescriptors(Iterable<com.google.protobuf.Descriptors.FieldDescriptor> fieldDescriptors)
Excludes all message fields matching the given
Descriptors.FieldDescriptor s from the comparison. |
IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> |
ignoringFields(int firstFieldNumber,
int... rest)
Excludes the top-level message fields with the given tag numbers from the comparison.
|
IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> |
ignoringFields(Iterable<Integer> fieldNumbers)
Excludes the top-level message fields with the given tag numbers from the comparison.
|
IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> |
ignoringFieldScope(FieldScope fieldScope)
Excludes all specific field paths under the argument
FieldScope from the comparison. |
IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> |
ignoringRepeatedFieldOrder()
Specifies that the ordering of repeated fields, at all levels, should be ignored when comparing
for equality.
|
void |
isEmpty()
Fails if the subject is not empty.
|
void |
isNotEmpty()
Fails if the subject is empty.
|
void |
isOrdered(Comparator<?> comparator)
Fails if the iterable is not ordered, according to the given comparator.
|
void |
isStrictlyOrdered(Comparator<?> comparator)
Fails if the iterable is not strictly ordered, according to the given comparator.
|
IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> |
reportingMismatchesOnly()
If set, in the event of a comparison failure, the error message printed will list only those
specific fields that did not match between the actual and expected values.
|
IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> |
withPartialScope(FieldScope fieldScope)
Limits the comparison of Protocol buffers to the defined
FieldScope . |
actual, actualAsString, actualCustomStringRepresentation, check, equals, fail, fail, fail, failComparing, failComparing, failWithBadResults, failWithCustomSubject, failWithoutActual, failWithoutSubject, failWithRawMessage, failWithRawMessageAndCause, getDisplaySubject, getSubject, hashCode, ignoreCheck, internalCustomName, isAnyOf, isEqualTo, isIn, isInstanceOf, isNoneOf, isNotEqualTo, isNotIn, isNotInstanceOf, isNotNull, isNotSameAs, isNull, isSameAs, named
protected IterableOfProtosSubject(FailureStrategy failureStrategy, @Nullable C messages)
public void isEmpty()
public void isNotEmpty()
public void hasSize(int expectedSize)
public void contains(@Nullable Object element)
public void doesNotContain(@Nullable Object element)
public void containsNoDuplicates()
public void containsAnyOf(@Nullable Object first, @Nullable Object second, @Nullable Object... rest)
public void containsAnyIn(Iterable<?> expected)
public Ordered containsAllOf(@Nullable Object firstExpected, @Nullable Object secondExpected, @Nullable Object... restOfExpected)
To also test that the contents appear in the given order, make a call to inOrder()
on the object returned by this method. The expected elements must appear in the given order
within the actual elements, but they are not required to be consecutive.
public Ordered containsAllIn(Iterable<?> expected)
To also test that the contents appear in the given order, make a call to inOrder()
on the object returned by this method. The expected elements must appear in the given order
within the actual elements, but they are not required to be consecutive.
public Ordered containsExactly(@Nullable Object... varargs)
Multiplicity is respected. For example, an object duplicated exactly 3 times in the parameters asserts that the object must likewise be duplicated exactly 3 times in the subject.
To also test that the contents appear in the given order, make a call to inOrder()
on the object returned by this method.
public Ordered containsExactlyElementsIn(Iterable<?> expected)
Multiplicity is respected. For example, an object duplicated exactly 3 times in the Iterable
parameter asserts that the object must likewise be duplicated exactly 3 times in the
subject.
To also test that the contents appear in the given order, make a call to inOrder()
on the object returned by this method.
public void containsNoneOf(@Nullable Object firstExcluded, @Nullable Object secondExcluded, @Nullable Object... restOfExcluded)
public void containsNoneIn(Iterable<?> excluded)
public void isStrictlyOrdered(Comparator<?> comparator)
ClassCastException
- if any pair of elements is not mutually Comparablepublic void isOrdered(Comparator<?> comparator)
ClassCastException
- if any pair of elements is not mutually Comparablepublic <A,E> IterableSubject.UsingCorrespondence<A,E> comparingElementsUsing(Correspondence<A,E> correspondence)
Iterable
under test) are compared to expected elements using the given Correspondence
. The actual elements must be of type A
, the expected elements must be
of type E
. The proposition is actually executed by continuing the method chain. For
example:
assertThat(actualIterable).comparingElementsUsing(correspondence).contains(expected);
where actualIterable
is an Iterable<A>
(or, more generally, an Iterable<? extends A>
), correspondence
is a Correspondence<A, E>
, and expected
is an E
.
Any of the methods on the returned object may throw ClassCastException
if they
encounter an actual element that is not of type A
.
Note that the IterableOfProtosSubject
is designed to save you from having to write
your own Correspondence
. The configuration methods, such as ignoringRepeatedFieldOrder()
will construct a Correspondence
under the hood which
performs protobuf comparisons with ignoringRepeatedFieldOrder()
.
public IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> ignoringFieldAbsence()
For version 2 Protocol Buffers, this setting determines whether two protos with the same
value for a primitive field compare equal if one explicitly sets the value, and the other
merely implicitly uses the schema-defined default. This setting also determines whether unknown
fields should be considered in the comparison. By ignoringFieldAbsence()
, unknown
fields are ignored, and value-equal fields as specified above are considered equal.
For version 3 Protocol Buffers, this setting has no effect. Primitive fields set to their default value are indistinguishable from unset fields in proto 3. Proto 3 also eliminates unknown fields, so this setting has no effect there either.
public IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> ignoringRepeatedFieldOrder()
This setting applies to all repeated fields recursively, but it does not ignore structure.
For example, with ignoringRepeatedFieldOrder()
, a repeated int32
field bar
, set inside a repeated message field foo
, the following protos will all compare
equal:
message1: {
foo: {
bar: 1
bar: 2
}
foo: {
bar: 3
bar: 4
}
}
message2: {
foo: {
bar: 2
bar: 1
}
foo: {
bar: 4
bar: 3
}
}
message3: {
foo: {
bar: 4
bar: 3
}
foo: {
bar: 2
bar: 1
}
}
However, the following message will compare equal to none of these:
message4: {
foo: {
bar: 1
bar: 3
}
foo: {
bar: 2
bar: 4
}
}
This setting does not apply to map fields, for which field order is always ignored. The serialization order of map fields is undefined, and it may change from runtime to runtime.
public IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> withPartialScope(FieldScope fieldScope)
FieldScope
.
This method is additive and has well-defined ordering semantics. If the invoking ProtoFluentAssertion
is already scoped to a FieldScope
X
, and this method is
invoked with FieldScope
Y
, the resultant ProtoFluentAssertion
is
constrained to the intersection of FieldScope
s X
and Y
.
By default, ProtoFluentAssertion
is constrained to FieldScopes.all()
, that
is, no fields are excluded from comparison.
public IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> ignoringFields(int firstFieldNumber, int... rest)
This method adds on any previous FieldScope
related settings, overriding previous
changes to ensure the specified fields are ignored recursively. All sub-fields of these field
numbers are ignored, and all sub-messages of type M
will also have these field numbers
ignored.
If an invalid field number is supplied, the terminal comparison operation will throw a runtime exception.
public IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> ignoringFields(Iterable<Integer> fieldNumbers)
This method adds on any previous FieldScope
related settings, overriding previous
changes to ensure the specified fields are ignored recursively. All sub-fields of these field
numbers are ignored, and all sub-messages of type M
will also have these field numbers
ignored.
If an invalid field number is supplied, the terminal comparison operation will throw a runtime exception.
public IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> ignoringFieldDescriptors(com.google.protobuf.Descriptors.FieldDescriptor firstFieldDescriptor, com.google.protobuf.Descriptors.FieldDescriptor... rest)
Descriptors.FieldDescriptor
s from the comparison.
This method adds on any previous FieldScope
related settings, overriding previous
changes to ensure the specified fields are ignored recursively. All sub-fields of these field
descriptors are ignored, no matter where they occur in the tree.
If a field descriptor which does not, or cannot occur in the proto structure is supplied, it is silently ignored.
public IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> ignoringFieldDescriptors(Iterable<com.google.protobuf.Descriptors.FieldDescriptor> fieldDescriptors)
Descriptors.FieldDescriptor
s from the comparison.
This method adds on any previous FieldScope
related settings, overriding previous
changes to ensure the specified fields are ignored recursively. All sub-fields of these field
descriptors are ignored, no matter where they occur in the tree.
If a field descriptor which does not, or cannot occur in the proto structure is supplied, it is silently ignored.
public IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> ignoringFieldScope(FieldScope fieldScope)
FieldScope
from the comparison.
This method is additive and has well-defined ordering semantics. If the invoking ProtoFluentAssertion
is already scoped to a FieldScope
X
, and this method is
invoked with FieldScope
Y
, the resultant ProtoFluentAssertion
is
constrained to the subtraction of X - Y
.
By default, ProtoFluentAssertion
is constrained to FieldScopes.all()
, that
is, no fields are excluded from comparison.
public IterableOfProtosFluentAssertion<M> reportingMismatchesOnly()
This a purely cosmetic setting, and it has no effect on the behavior of the test.
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