I'm new to frameworks (just passed the class) and this is my first time using Spring Boot.
I'm trying to run a simple Junit test to see if my CrudRepositories are indeed working.
The error I keep getting is:
Unable to find a @SpringBootConfiguration, you need to use @ContextConfiguration or @SpringBootTest(classes=...) with your test java.lang.IllegalStateException
Doesn't Spring Boot configure itself?
My Test Class:
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@DataJpaTest
@SpringBootTest(webEnvironment = WebEnvironment.RANDOM_PORT)
public class JpaTest {
@Autowired
private AccountRepository repository;
@After
public void clearDb(){
repository.deleteAll();
}
@Test
public void createAccount(){
long id = 12;
Account u = new Account(id,"Tim Viz");
repository.save(u);
assertEquals(repository.findOne(id),u);
}
@Test
public void findAccountByUsername(){
long id = 12;
String username = "Tim Viz";
Account u = new Account(id,username);
repository.save(u);
assertEquals(repository.findByUsername(username),u);
}
My Spring Boot application starter:
@SpringBootApplication
@EnableJpaRepositories(basePackages = {"domain.repositories"})
@ComponentScan(basePackages = {"controllers","domain"})
@EnableWebMvc
@PropertySources(value {@PropertySource("classpath:application.properties")})
@EntityScan(basePackages={"domain"})
public class Application extends SpringBootServletInitializer {
public static void main(String[] args) {
ApplicationContext ctx = SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
}
}
My Repository:
public interface AccountRepository extends CrudRepository<Account,Long> {
public Account findByUsername(String username);
}
}
Indeed, Spring Boot does set itself up for the most part. You can probably already get rid of a lot of the code you posted, especially in Application
.
I wish you had included the package names of all your classes, or at least the ones for Application
and JpaTest
. The thing about @DataJpaTest
and a few other annotations is that they look for a @SpringBootConfiguration
annotation in the current package, and if they cannot find it there, they traverse the package hierarchy until they find it.
For example, if the fully qualified name for your test class was com.example.test.JpaTest
and the one for your application was com.example.Application
, then your test class would be able to find the @SpringBootApplication
(and therein, the @SpringBootConfiguration
).
If the application resided in a different branch of the package hierarchy, however, like com.example.application.Application
, it would not find it.
Example
Consider the following Maven project:
my-test-project
+--pom.xml
+--src
+--main
+--com
+--example
+--Application.java
+--test
+--com
+--example
+--test
+--JpaTest.java
And then the following content in Application.java
:
package com.example;
@SpringBootApplication
public class Application {
public static void main(String[] args) {
SpringApplication.run(Application.class, args);
}
}
Followed by the contents of JpaTest.java
:
package com.example.test;
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@DataJpaTest
public class JpaTest {
@Test
public void testDummy() {
}
}
Everything should be working. If you create a new folder inside src/main/com/example
called app
, and then put your Application.java
inside it (and update the package
declaration inside the file), running the test will give you the following error:
java.lang.IllegalStateException: Unable to find a @SpringBootConfiguration, you need to use @ContextConfiguration or @SpringBootTest(classes=...) with your test
Configuration is attached to the application class, so the following will set up everything correctly:
@SpringBootTest(classes = Application.class)
Example from the JHipster project here.
It is worth to check if you have refactored package name of your main class annotated with @SpringBootApplication
. In that case the testcase should be in an appropriate package otherwise it will be looking for it in the older package . this was the case for me.
In addition to what Thomas Kåsene said, you can also add
@SpringBootTest(classes=com.package.path.class)
to the test annotation to specify where it should look for the other class if you didn't want to refactor your file hierarchy. This is what the error message hints at by saying:
Unable to find a @SpringBootConfiguration, you need to use @ContextConfiguration or @SpringBootTest(classes=...) ...
It work fo me
the package name of the above test class is changed to the same as the package name of the normal class.
https://static.oschina.net/uploads/space/2018/0111/102730_tlKv_2885163.png
change to this
https://static.oschina.net/uploads/space/2018/0111/103001_vJoi_2885163.png
In my case the packages were different between the Application and Test classes
package com.example.abc;
...
@SpringBootApplication
public class ProducerApplication {
and
package com.example.abc_etc;
...
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@SpringBootTest
public class ProducerApplicationTest {
After making them agree the tests ran correctly.
I had the same issue and I solved by adding an empty class annotated with SpringBootApplication
in the root package of the folder src/test/java
package org.enricogiurin.core;
import org.springframework.boot.autoconfigure.SpringBootApplication;
@SpringBootApplication
public class CoreTestConfiguration {}
The test slice provided in Spring Boot 1.4 brought feature oriented test capabilities.
For example,
@JsonTest provides a simple Jackson environment to test the json serialization and deserialization.
@WebMvcTest provides a mock web environment, it can specify the controller class for test and inject the MockMvc in the test.
@WebMvcTest(PostController.class)
public class PostControllerMvcTest{
@Inject MockMvc mockMvc;
}
@DataJpaTest will prepare an embedded database and provides basic JPA environment for the test.
@RestClientTest provides REST client environment for the test, esp the RestTemplateBuilder etc.
These annotations are not composed with SpringBootTest, they are combined with a series of AutoconfigureXXX
and a @TypeExcludesFilter
annotations.
Have a look at @DataJpaTest
.
@Target(ElementType.TYPE)
@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
@Documented
@Inherited
@BootstrapWith(SpringBootTestContextBootstrapper.class)
@OverrideAutoConfiguration(enabled = false)
@TypeExcludeFilters(DataJpaTypeExcludeFilter.class)
@Transactional
@AutoConfigureCache
@AutoConfigureDataJpa
@AutoConfigureTestDatabase
@AutoConfigureTestEntityManager
@ImportAutoConfiguration
public @interface DataJpaTest {}
You can add your @AutoconfigureXXX annotation to override the default config.
@AutoConfigureTestDatabase(replace=NONE)
@DataJpaTest
public class TestClass{
}
Let's have a look at your problem,
Do not mix @DataJpaTest and @SpringBootTest, as said above @DataJpaTest will build the configuration in its own way(eg. by default, it will try to prepare an embedded H2 instead) from the application configuration inheritance. @DataJpaTest is designated for test slice. If you want to customize the configuration of @DataJpaTest, please read this official blog entry from Spring.io for this topic,(a little tedious). Split the configurations in Application into smaller configurations by features, such as WebConfig, DataJpaConfig etc. A full featured configuration(mixed web, data, security etc) also caused your test slice based tests to be failed. Check the test samples in my sample.
When all the classes were in same package, test classes were working. As soon as I moved all the java classes to different package to maintain proper project structure I was getting the same error.
I solved it by providing my main class name in the test class like below.
@SpringBootTest(classes=JunitBasicsApplication.class)
In my case
Make sure your (test package
name) of YourApplicationTests
is equivalent to the (main package
name).
I think that the best solution for this issue is to align your tests folders structure with the application folder structure.
I had the same issue which was caused by duplicating my project from a different folder structure project.
if your test project and your application project will have the same structure you will not be required to add any special annotations to your tests classes and everything will work as is.
This is more the the error itself, not answering the original question:
We were migrating from java 8 to java 11. Application compiled successfully, but the errors Unable to find a @SpringBootConfiguration
started to appear in the integration tests when ran from command line using maven (from IntelliJ it worked).
It appeared that maven-failsafe-plugin
stopped seeing the classes on classpath, we fixed that by telling failsafe plugin to include the classes manually:
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-failsafe-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<additionalClasspathElements>
<additionalClasspathElement>${basedir}/target/classes</additionalClasspathElement>
</additionalClasspathElements>
</configuration>
...
</plugin>
In my case I was using the Test class from wrong package. when I replaced import org.junit.Test;
with import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
it worked.
Make sure the test class is in a sub-package of your main spring boot class
import org.junit.Test;
import org.junit.runner.RunWith;
import org.springframework.beans.factory.annotation.Autowired;
import org.springframework.boot.test.autoconfigure.orm.jpa.DataJpaTest;
import org.springframework.boot.test.autoconfigure.web.servlet.AutoConfigureWebMvc;
import org.springframework.boot.test.context.SpringBootTest;
import org.springframework.test.context.junit4.SpringRunner;
@RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
@DataJpaTest
@SpringBootTest
@AutoConfigureWebMvc
public class RepoTest {
@Autowired
private ThingShiftDetailsRepository thingShiftDetailsRepo;
@Test
public void findThingShiftDetails() {
ShiftDetails details = new ShiftDetails();
details.setThingId(1);
thingShiftDetailsRepo.save(details);
ShiftDetails dbDetails = thingShiftDetailsRepo.findByThingId(1);
System.out.println(dbDetails);
}
}
Above annotations worked well for me. I am using spring boot with JPA.
Success story sharing
Application
is in. If, however, you meansrc/main
andsrc/test
, then those folders are not part of the package hierarchy. Perhaps you are better off just updating your question with a screenshot or an explanation of what your project structure is like.src/main/java
andsrc/test/java