Xunit does not support any built-in dependency injection features, therefore developers have to come up with a solution to recruit their favourite dependency injection framework in their tests.
This library brings in Microsoft's dependency injection container to Xunit by leveraging Xunit's fixture.
First add the following nuget package to your Xunit project:
Install-Package Xunit.Microsoft.DependencyInjection
The abstract class of Xunit.Microsoft.DependencyInjection.Abstracts.TestBedFixture
contains the necessary functionalities to add services and configurations to Microsoft's dependency injection container. Your concrete test fixture class must derive from this abstract class and implement the following two abstract methods:
protected abstract IEnumerable<string> GetConfigurationFiles();
protected abstract void AddServices(IServiceCollection services, IConfiguration configuration);
GetConfigurationFiles(...)
method returns a collection of the configuration files in your Xunit test project to the framework. AddServices(...)
method must be used to wire up the implemented services.
Secret manage is a great tool to store credentials, api keys and other secret information for development purpose. This library has started supporting user secrets from version 8.2.0 onwards. To utilize user secrets in your tests, simply override the virtual
method below from TestBedFixture
class:
protected override void AddUserSecrets(IConfigurationBuilder configurationBuilder);
There are two method that you can use to access the wired up service depending on your context:
public T GetScopedService<T>(ITestOutputHelper testOutputHelper);
public T GetService<T>(ITestOutputHelper testOutputHelper);
To access async scopes simply call the following method in the abstract fixture class:
public AsyncServiceScope GetAsyncScope<T>(ITestOutputHelper testOutputHelper)
You can call the following method to access the keyed already-wired up services:
T? GetKeyedService<T>([DisallowNull] string key, ITestOutputHelper testOutputHelper);
Test developers can add their own desired logger provider by overriding AddLoggingProvider(...)
virtual method defined in TestBedFixture
class.
Your Xunit test class must be derived from Xunit.Microsoft.DependencyInjection.Abstracts.TestBed<T>
class where T
should be your fixture class derived from TestBedFixture
.
Also, the test class should be decorated by the following attribute:
[CollectionDefinition("Dependency Injection")]
To have managed resources cleaned up, simply override the virtual method of Clear()
. This is an optional step.
Simply override the virtual method of DisposeAsyncCore()
for this purpose. This is also an optional step.
The library also has a bonus feature that simplifies running tests in order. The test class does not have to be derived from TestBed<T>
class though and it can apply to all Xunit classes.
Decorate your Xunit test class with the following attribute and associate TestOrder(...)
with Fact
and Theory
:
[TestCaseOrderer("Xunit.Microsoft.DependencyInjection.TestsOrder.TestPriorityOrderer", "Xunit.Microsoft.DependencyInjection")]
This library's TestBedFixture
abstract class exposes an instance of IConfigurationBuilder
that can be used to support UserSecrets
when configuring the test projects:
public IConfigurationBuilder ConfigurationBuilder { get; private set; }
- Please follow this link to view a couple of examples on utilizing this library.
- Digital Silo's unit tests and integration tests are using this library.
Do not forget to include the following nuget packages to your Xunit project:
- Microsoft.Extensions.DependencyInjection
- Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration
- Microsoft.Extensions.Options
- Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.Binder
- Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.FileExtensions
- Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.Json
- Microsoft.Extensions.Logging
- Microsoft.Extensions.Configuration.EnvironmentVariables