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Singleton Unit Testing (2): Follow up

Singleton Unit Testing (2): Follow up

In my previous Singleton Unit Testing, I proposed a possible solution for unit testing a singleton (I'll name it the ShortLivingSingleton approach). Omer Van Kloeten came up with another approach (the KillTheSingleton approach), Darren Oakey with the CreateForTesting approach and , Len Holgate finishes the picture tearing appart our the first 2 solutions (the SingletonIsBad approach). Since comments on this topic have been interresting, they are worth a little summary.

The problem

The application you are developping is using a Singleton, that you need to test. How do you test a singleton ?

SingletonIsBad approach

  1. Singleton are evil! If you have the opportunity to refactory the code, make sure you definitely need this singleton, otherwize get rid of it.
  2. You have no choice and you cannot get rid of the singleton. Make sure you split the singleton functionalities in two classes: The class that does all the work and the singleton aspect that prevents multiple instances. Doing so, you will not have to cheat to test the singleton.
  3. You could not fullfill any of the point above, and you will need to cheat...

The two first point came from Len Holgate and I totally agree with him. The third point is for tester who do not have the possiblity of avoiding or refactoring the singleton. To tackle this problem, I and Omer have proposed 2 cheats and Darrel Oakley proposed a wider solution to the problem.

CreateForTesting approach

The approach asks you to embed some functionality in a class that helps other people test it. The most common thing is to add - to most objects - a function CreateTestFoo, where Foo is the object that you are testing. This gives you a new and fully initialized version of Foo - however complicated Fooactually is.

Cheating the singleton.

Both cheat solutions are based on Reflection, therefore they will not work if you have denied Reflection on your tested assembly (Haacked's  comment).

ShortLivingSingleton  approach

This approach consists of creating a new non-singleton approach for each test and do the testing on this instance. To do so, we use reflection to access the private constructor and instanciate the singleton. Therefore, the singleton is never created and never used.

KillTheSingleton approach

This approach kills the singleton after each test, in the TearDown method for example. To "kill" the singleton, the static field holding the singleton reference is nullified using Reflection and garbage collection is forced.

Conclusions

Singletons are evil but yet you find people using them (shame on me). They are problematic to test because you cannot separate the unit tests.  The first step for testing them is actually to refactor your application and get rid of the singleton. If this cannot be done, you have to cheat the singleton using Reflection to properly test them.

ps: I'd like to thank all the people who commented the blog entry for their constructive comments :) Cheers, Jonathan