# Mock Tests A web crawler is, by its very nature, dependent on the external service which it is crawling. In order to have a reliable CI pipeline, this external dependency needs to be removed. For this, there is a system in place to automatically save the requests made to a service, as well as the responses received. These can then be used in the CI pipeline to reliably test changes made to the Extractor, and avoid test failures due to API changes on the side of the service. ## Multiple downloader implementations There are multiple implementations of the abstract class `Downloader` 1. `DownloaderTestImpl` is used for running the test against the actual service. 2. `RecordingDownloader` is used to save the request and response to a file, thus creating the mock. 3. `MockDownloader` is used to answer requests using the saved mocks. ### Usage There are 2 ways to specify which downloader should be used. First one is passing the `-Ddownloader=` argument from the command line, where `value` can be one of [DownloaderType](https://github.com/TeamNewPipe/NewPipeExtractor/blob/dev/extractor/src/test/java/org/schabi/newpipe/downloader/DownloaderType.java) . The main use case is in the CI pipeline, like this: `./gradlew check --stacktrace -Ddownloader=MOCK`. Other than that it can also be used to mass generate mocks by specifying which package should be tested. For example, if one wanted to update all YouTube mocks: `gradle clean test --tests 'org.schabi.newpipe.extractor.services.youtube.*' -Ddownloader=RECORDING` The second way is changing the field `DownloaderFactory.DEFAULT_DOWNLOADER`. The default value is `DownloaderType.REAL` which should be changed on the master branch. Locally one can change this to `DownloaderType.RECORDING`, run the tests and commit the generated mocks. This is the main use case for when developing locally. ### Mock only tests There are some things which cannot ever be tested reliably against an actual service. For example, tests for an upcoming livestream would fail after the livestream starts. For this, there is a marker interface `MockOnly`, and a custom TestRule `MockOnlyRule`. It skips the tests in the CI pipeline if they are not run with mocks. See `MockOnlyRule` for further details. Example usage: ``` java public static class TestClass { @Rule public MockOnlyRule rule = new MockOnlyRule(); @MockOnly @Test public void myTest() throws Exception { //assertions } } ```