Monday, 3 February 2014

Testing on Android : Unit Tests

JUnit Tests

There's no reason you can't use normal JUnit 4 testing for Android applications... as long as you stay away from anything Android.

Normally you compile against the SDK's android.jar, which contains nothing but stubbed methods that throw exceptions when run.  When you actually upload your APK to a device, it uses the device's implementations of all those stubs.  As a result, when running normal unit tests in your IDE, you get no access to those framework implementations (instead receiving mountains of exceptions).  This is not a big deal if you're testing some simple functionality that doesn't touch Android itself.

Pros:

            Fast and easy
Cons:
            Cannot use any Android framework classes



The Android Testing Framework

The Android testing framework is the official method of unit testing on Android.  It loads your application onto a device, then runs JUnit-based test suites.  Since it runs on the actual OS you can use the Android framework as you normally would in your application and can conduct a series of realistic tests that way.

Ostensibly the testing framework is unit testing, but the slowness of having to fully compile and upload your app onto a device before executing any tests makes testing slow.  Plus, you have to make sure you've got a device attached or an emulator running.  As a result, I might consider the testing framework for semi-regular tests (e.g., whenever you push a new commit, or nightly tests) but I would have trouble using them while actively developing.

Pros:

            Access to the Android framework
Cons:
            Slow
            Requires attached device or running emulator
            Uses JUnit 3 (instead of the newer JUnit 4)



Robolectric

Robolectric is a project that unifies the speed of unit testing with the ability to access the Android framework.  It does this by implementing all those stubs with mocked classes.

Having tried it out, it is lightning fast and works as expected.  I'm also impressed with the amount of active development on it - this is a rapidly improving framework.  However, the active development does take a toll; documentation is a bit lacking, plus some new versions of Robolectric break things in previous versions.  Plus, it can't mock everything - for example, inter-app communication - since it's not on an actual Android OS.  That said, the benefits here far outweigh the negatives when it comes to unit testing Android.

Pros:

            Fast
            Can access mocked Android framework
            Actively developed
Cons:
            Not the true Android framework
            Not everything is mocked
            Lacking documentation

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