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Easy way to mock a WCF service?

I've got an app which is using a WCF service. Now I'd like to add unit tests to the app.

For some cases I need to mock the WCF service, since getting the desired behaviour from the service sometimes is tough (e.g. service throws special exceptions).

I could add yet another interface to the wcf client, but this seems a bit silly, since the client calls already are using an interface.

Is there an easy way to mock a WCF service? Easier than creating another interface layer and redirecting every single WCF call inside it?

Edit: Most of the answers seem not to know much about WCF service using, so some clarification:
To use a WCF service from a ViewModel, I have to manage the connection something like this:

ChannelFactory<IMyWcfService> channelFactory = new ChannelFactory<IMyWcfService>("");
IMyWcfService proxy = channelFactory.CreateChannel();
proxy.CallMyStuff();
proxy.Close();

I can't just pass the ViewModel the proxy to the WCF, since the connection needs to be opened and closed for every transaction. For this reason using RhinoMock/NMock would not work, since they need a ViewModel which gets the proxy as a parameter, which can't be done like this if you use WCF.

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Sam Avatar asked Jan 02 '09 14:01

Sam


2 Answers

Why can't you use something like NMock2 to mock the IMyWcfService interfaces directly?

If you need to be able to create new instances on the fly, use the Factory to hide the ChannelFactory<IMyWcfService> from the client. This way you can replace the factory, providing the client one which creates mocks instead of real proxies.

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David Schmitt Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 08:11

David Schmitt


You can use any mocking framework like RhinoMocks or NMock, to mock out the interface contract, so if your service implemented IMyService then you could use a mocking framework to set expectations on the method calls on that interface. If you are not familiar with this concept then you can simply create a stand-in object that implements IMyService but pretends to be the real service during your testing. This way when the methods are called they are called on your stand-in object and you can have your stand-in return whatever you want it to.

like image 20
Michael Mann Avatar answered Nov 11 '22 09:11

Michael Mann