PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac
2.0.0
Prefix Reserved
PosInformatique.Testing.Databases.SqlServer.Dac 2.0.0
Additional DetailsThis package has been renamed to PosInformatique.Testing.Databases.SqlServer.Dac
dotnet add package PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac --version 2.0.0
NuGet\Install-Package PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac -Version 2.0.0
<PackageReference Include="PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac" Version="2.0.0" />
paket add PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac --version 2.0.0
#r "nuget: PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac, 2.0.0"
// Install PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac&version=2.0.0 // Install PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac&version=2.0.0
PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases
PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases is a set of tools for unit testing databases. It simplifies writing and executing tests, helping ensure your database and data access code are reliable and bug-free. It is ideal for developers who want to validate data access based on SQL Server code during their development.
This set of tools supports unit testing of the persistence layer based on SQL Server. Any kind of data access framework can be used with these tools:
- Raw ADO .NET queries.
- Entity Framework.
- Dapper.
- ...
You can also use this tools to create and run integration tests with the Integration tests in ASP.NET Core approach.
Since the version 2.0.0 this tools provide a comparer to compare the schema of two SQL databases.
The approach of these tools
The main approach of these tools is to perform unit tests without using mocking or in-memory alternatives for ADO .NET code or Entity Framework DbContext
, instead using a real SQL Server database.
Also, these tools offer simple way to compare two SQL databases to test migration script (or Entity Framework migration) when upgrading a database.
Why is this approach recommended?
- Around 30% to 40% of the code in applications is located in the persistence layer or repository components. Because it is hard to unit test, developers often skip testing, resulting in lower code coverage.
- When using a mock or in-memory approach for a
DbContext
, you don't truly test the Entity Framework mapping to your database, especially additional SQL constraints like nullability, uniqueness, foreign key cascades, etc. You also miss technical behaviors like transactions, connection management, triggers, etc. - When inserting data, it is crucial to ensure that the data in the columns are stored correctly (null/not null values, enum values to numerical values, custom or JSON serialized data, etc.).
- If you use Entity Framework, you can detect warnings/errors raised by the
DbContext
during the development. - You perform unit test cases, meaning you write simple tests to validate small features instead of writing complex integration tests.
- When changing the schema of the database, it is important to test and have a safeguard to check that the migration script (or Entity Framework migration actions) will update the database to the expected schema.
How to unit test a persistence layer
To perform unit tests of a persistence layer, the approach is straightforward using the Arrange/Act/Assert pattern:
Before each unit test (TestMethod
or Fact
methods):
Create an empty database with the SQL schema of the application.
There are two ways to do this:
- Deploy a DACPAC file (built by a SQL Server Database project).
- Or create a database from a
DbContext
using Entity Framework.
Fill the tables with the sample data needed.
Execute the code (the method of the repository to be tested).
Assert the results of the executed code.
- If the tested method returns data (performs a SELECT query), assert the returned objects using your favorite assertion framework (e.g., FluentAssertions).
- If the method inserts, updates, or deletes data, assert the content of the tables to check that all data is stored correctly.
To write a unit test using this approach with the PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases tools, see the Write unit tests to test the Data Access Layer page.
How to unit test database migration
To perform unit tests of a database migration, the approach is straightforward and required only a unit test which perform the following actions:
Create an empty database (initial database).
Create a secondary database with the targeted schema (target database).
There are two ways to do this:
- Deploy a DACPAC file (built by a SQL Server Database project).
- Or create a database from a
DbContext
using Entity Framework.
Execute your database migration code on the initial database.
Your database migration code can be:
- A simple SQL script file.
- An Entity Framework migration sets executed with the
MigrateAsync()
method.
Compare the two databases schemas (initial and target).
If the database migration code works, the initial and target must have the same schema.
NB: The initial database is not necessarily empty. It can be at a specific schema version X if we want to test the migration from version X to Y.
This approach does not test the migration of the data within the database. We can modify this process to inject some data in the first step to test it, but writing the unit test can be time-consuming. By focusing on the schema migration of the database, you can verify at least 80-90% of your database migration code. It's better than nothing and very useful for detecting issues during development or in a CI process!
What do the PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases tools provide?
Using the previous approach, the PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases libraries allow you to:
Easily deploy a database before each unit test execution. Database and schema creation can take a lot of time (around 5 to 10 seconds). The PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases libraries physically create the database during the first unit test execution. For subsequent tests, all data is deleted in the database, which speeds up the unit test execution.
Provide a simple syntax to fill the tables with sample data.
Offer helpers to easily query and retrieve data from SQL tables (for assertions).
Contain a comparer tool to check schema differences between two databases.
NuGet packages
The PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases tools are provided in two NuGet packages:
PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer NuGet package which contains:
- Helpers to initialize SQL Server databases with sample data.
- Helpers to easily query SQL Server databases.
- Helpers to compare the schema of two SQL Server databases.
PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.Dac NuGet package which contains:
- Tools to deploy a SQL Server database using a DACPAC file before each unit test.
PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.EntityFramework NuGet package which contains:
- Tools to deploy a SQL Server database using a DbContext.
Samples / Demo
A complete sample solution is available in this repository inside the samples folder.
The solution contains the following sample projects:
- DemoApp.Domain: Represents the domain of the application with a set of sample business entities.
- DemoApp.DataAccessLayer: Represents a persistence layer with a set of repositories to unit test.
- DemoApp.DataAccessLayer.Tests: Unit test project to test the DemoApp.DataAccessLayer project using the PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.EntityFramework package.
Writing unit tests for a persistence layer
To write unit tests for a persistence layer, follow the Write unit tests to test the persistence layer documentation page, which explains the different steps to perform using the PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer.EntityFramework library:
- Create the SQL Server instance
- Create the unit tests project
- Add the NuGet packages
- Unit test class
- Write the unit tests for methods that retrieve data
- Write the unit tests for methods that update the data
- Execute the unit tests
- Check the database state after a unit test has failed
Writing unit test to check database migration
To write an unit test to check the migration of database, follow the Write unit tests to test database migration documentation page.
For Entity Framework migration:
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET | net8.0 is compatible. net8.0-android was computed. net8.0-browser was computed. net8.0-ios was computed. net8.0-maccatalyst was computed. net8.0-macos was computed. net8.0-tvos was computed. net8.0-windows was computed. |
-
net8.0
- Microsoft.SqlServer.DacFx (>= 161.6374.0)
- PosInformatique.UnitTests.Databases.SqlServer (>= 2.0.0)
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated | |
---|---|---|---|
2.0.0 | 125 | 9/26/2024 |
1.0.1
- Fix the documentation
1.0.0
- Initial version