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java - How to write Unit test for @KafkaListener?

Trying to figure out if I can write unit test for @KafkaListener using spring-kafka and spring-kafka-test.

My Listener class.

    public class MyKafkaListener {
    @Autowired
    private MyMessageProcessor myMessageProcessor;

    @KafkaListener(topics = "${kafka.topic.01}", groupId = "SF.CLIENT", clientIdPrefix = "SF.01", containerFactory = "myMessageListenerContainerFactory")
    public void myMessageListener(MyMessage message) {
        myMessageProcessor.process(message);
        log.info("MyMessage processed");
    }}

My Test class :

    @RunWith(SpringRunner.class)
    @DirtiesContext
    @EmbeddedKafka(partitions = 1, topics = {"I1.Topic.json.001"})
    @ContextConfiguration(classes = {TestKafkaConfig.class})
    public class MyMessageConsumersTest {

    @Autowired
    private MyMessageProcessor myMessageProcessor;

    @Value("${kafka.topic.01}")
    private String TOPIC_01;

    @Autowired
    private KafkaTemplate<String, MyMessage> messageProducer;

    @Test
    public void testSalesforceMessageListner() {
        MyMessageConsumers myMessageConsumers = new MyMessageConsumers(mockService);
        messageProducer.send(TOPIC_01, "MessageID", new MyMessage());
        verify(myMessageProcessor, times(1)).process(any(MyMessage.class));
    }}

My Test config class :

    @Configuration
    @EnableKafka
    public class TestKafkaConfig {
    @Bean
    public MyMessageProcessor myMessageProcessor() {
        return mock(MyMessageProcessor.class);
    }
    @Bean
    public KafkaEmbedded kafkaEmbedded() {
        return new KafkaEmbedded(1, true, 1, "I1.Topic.json.001");
    }

    //Consumer
    @Bean
    public ConsumerFactory<String, MyMessage> myMessageConsumerFactory() {
        Map<String, Object> props = new HashMap<>();
        props.put(ConsumerConfig.BOOTSTRAP_SERVERS_CONFIG, kafkaEmbedded().getBrokersAsString());
        props.put(ConsumerConfig.ENABLE_AUTO_COMMIT_CONFIG, false);
        props.put(ConsumerConfig.AUTO_OFFSET_RESET_CONFIG, "earliest");
        return new DefaultKafkaConsumerFactory<>(props, new StringDeserializer(), new JsonDeserializer<>(MyMessage.class));
    }
    @Bean
    public ConcurrentKafkaListenerContainerFactory<String, MyMessage> myMessageListenerContainerFactory() {
        ConcurrentKafkaListenerContainerFactory<String, MyMessage> factory = new ConcurrentKafkaListenerContainerFactory<>();
        factory.setConsumerFactory(myMessageConsumerFactory());
        return factory;
    }

    //Producer
    @Bean
    public ProducerFactory<String, MyMessage> producerFactory() {
        Map<String, Object> props = new HashMap<>();
        props.put(ProducerConfig.BOOTSTRAP_SERVERS_CONFIG, kafkaEmbedded().getBrokersAsString());
        props.put(ProducerConfig.RETRIES_CONFIG, 0);
        props.put(ProducerConfig.KEY_SERIALIZER_CLASS_CONFIG, StringSerializer.class);
        props.put(ProducerConfig.VALUE_SERIALIZER_CLASS_CONFIG, KafkaMessageSerializer.class);
        return new DefaultKafkaProducerFactory<>(props);
    }
    @Bean
    public KafkaTemplate<String, MyMessage> messageProducer() {
        return new KafkaTemplate<>(producerFactory());
    }
    }

Is there any simple way to make this work ?

Or should I do the testing of @KafkaListener in some other way ? In unit test, how do I ensure @KafkaListener is invoked when a new message is arrived in Kafka.

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1 Answer

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by (71.8m points)

how do I ensure @KafkaListener is invoked when a new message is arrived in Kafka.

Well, this is essentially a Framework responsibility to test such a functionality. In your case you need just concentrate on the business logic and unit test exactly your custom code, but not that one compiled in the Framework. In addition there is not goo point to test the @KafkaListener method which just logs incoming messages. It is definitely going to be too hard to find the hook for test-case verification.

On the other hand I really believe that business logic in your @KafkaListener method is much complicated than you show. So, it might be really better to verify your custom code (e.g. DB insert, some other service call etc.) called from that method rather than try to figure out the hook exactly for the myMessageListener().

What you do with the mock(MyMessageProcessor.class) is really a good way for business logic verification. Only what is wrong in your code is about that duplication for the EmbeddedKafka: you use an annotation and you also declare a @Bean in the config. You should think about removing one of them. Although it isn't clear where is your production code, which is really free from the embedded Kafka. Otherwise, if everything is in the test scope, I don't see any problems with your consumer and producer factories configuration. You definitely have a minimal possible config for the @KafkaListener and KafkaTemplate. Only what you need is to remove a @EmbeddedKafka do not start the broker twice.


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