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This library is a complete ADO.NET driver which is designed to aid you in unit testing.

It do however require that the library/code you are testing have been coded against the abstractions (either IDbCommand etc the base classes DbCommand etc). For more information about that approach read this blog post.

Getting started

You generally start by setting up a connection and configure which commands it return. But to allow you to understand how everything is setup. Let's start with the commands.

Commands

Commands can be used to both return data and to execute CRUD queries. Hence we need a way to both validate the execution and to return results from the commands.

Returning result

Let's take the easiest part first. We want our command to return a result from execute scalar:

var command = new FakeCommand();
command.Setup(new ScalarCommandResult() { Result = "Hello" });

That means that "Hello" will be return in:

command.CommandText = "Bla bla";
var result = command.ExecuteScalar();

For readers the syntax is slightly more complex. We use DataTables to simulate the recordsets from the database:

var table = new FakeTable(new[]
	{
		new object[] {1, "jonas"},
		new object[] {2, "arne"},
	});

The data types in the recordset are set as the same datatype as in the datatable.

So the actual command will look like:

var command = new FakeCommand(table);

or

var command = FakeCommand();
command.Setup(new ReaderCommandResult {Result = new FakeDataReader(readerResult)});

Validating execution

We can also validate everything which is executed. Here is an example on how we can validate a command:

var args = new ParameterCollection(new FakeParameter("status", 1));

var command = new FakeCommand();
command.Setup(new NonQueryResult("UPDATE User SET Status = @status", args));

What we did was to say that we expected the command to be executed with the specified SQL statement and one supplied parameter. Execution example:

using (var command = connection.CreateCommand())
{
	command.CommandText = "UPDATE User SET Status = @status";
	command.AddParameter("status", 2);
	command.ExecuteNonQuery(); //<-- will fail since status was set to two.
}

If the command would fail (such as being invoked with invalid arguments or incorrect command text) we get a detailed exception.

Example code:

command.CommandText = "UPDATE User SET Status = @status");
command.AddParameter("status", 1);
command.AddParameter("id", 22);

Exception message:

Parameter validation failed.
Parameter 'status': Correct.
Parameter 'id': Did not expect this parameter, got value: '22'

Enquing execution

A command can be used to invoke several queries with different results. You can therefore enqueue several command results:

var command = new FakeCommand();
command.Setup(new NonQueryResult("UPDATE User SET Status = @status", args));
command.Setup(new ScalarResult() { Result = 20});

Simply call Setup() once for every time the command will be executed.

Assertions

If you do not want to use the built in validations you can use traditional unit test assertions instead. Each command keeps track of it's executions in the CommandList property.

So to assert you can simply use:

Assert.Equal(command.CommandList[0].CommandText, "SELECT * FROM Users WHERE Id = @id");
Assert.Equal(command.CommandList[0].Parameters[0], 20);

Working with connections

The most typical usage of ADO.NET is through connections though. So we need a way to be able to control the commands through our connections.

As for commands we use a Setup() method for that:

var connection = new FakeConnection();
var cmdToReturn = new FakeCommand(new ScalarCommandResult("SELECT count(*) FROM users", null){Result = 201});
connection.Setup(cmdToReturn);

The method can be invoked several times:

var connection = new FakeConnection();
var cmdToReturn = new FakeCommand(new ScalarCommandResult("SELECT count(*) FROM users", null){Result = 201});
connection.Setup(cmdToReturn);

var table = new FakeTable(new[]
{
	new object[] {1, "jonas"},
	new object[] {2, "arne"},
});
connection.Setup(new FakeCommand(table));

You can also specify the column names:

var dataTable = new FakeTable(new[] {"conversation_handle", "message"}, new[]
	{
		new object[] {Guid.NewGuid(), "Hello world"}
	});
var connection = new FakeConnection();
connection.Setup(new FakeCommand(dataTable));

You can also now setup FakeTables using a Type to populate the column names and types:

var dataTable = FakeTable.From<MyType>();
dataTable.AddRow(new MyType() { Id = 1, Name = "Bob" });

var connection = new FakeConnection();
connection.Setup(new FakeCommand(dataTable));

If you need more customizations than that simply use a regular DataTable.

Docs

(my build server is currently down, the DOCS have not been updated for a while). The XmlDoc in the source code is updated though..

Either read the unit tests for a guide or checkout the MSDN Style docs

Installation (nuget)

PM> Install-Package Griffin.AdoNetFakes

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