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Last updated: May 11, 2024
In this tutorial, we’ll learn how to migrate from JUnit 4 to the latest JUnit 5 release, with an overview of the differences between the two versions of the library.
For the general guidelines on using JUnit 5, see our article here.
Let’s start with the previous version, JUnit 4 , which has some clear limitations:
The idea behind JUnit 5 was to completely rewrite JUnit 4 in order to negate most of these drawbacks.
JUnit 4 was divided into the modules that comprise JUnit 5:
JUnit 5 comes with important changes to its annotations. Instead of @org.junit.Test we now need to use @org.junit.jupiter.api.Test.
The most important one is that we can no longer use the @Test annotation for specifying expectations.
The expected parameter in JUnit 4:
@Test(expected = Exception.class)
public void shouldRaiseAnException() throws Exception {
// ...
}
Now we can use the method assertThrows:
void shouldRaiseAnException() throws Exception {
Assertions.assertThrows(Exception.class, () -> {
//...
});
}
The timeout attribute in JUnit 4:
@Test(timeout = 1)
public void shouldFailBecauseTimeout() throws InterruptedException {
Thread.sleep(10);
}
Now the assertTimeout method in JUnit 5:
@Test
void shouldFailBecauseTimeout() throws InterruptedException {
Assertions.assertTimeout(Duration.ofMillis(1), () -> Thread.sleep(10));
}
Here are some other annotations that were changed within JUnit 5:
We can also write assertion messages in a lambda in JUnit 5, allowing the lazy evaluation to skip complex message construction until needed:
@Test
void shouldFailBecauseTheNumbersAreNotEqual_lazyEvaluation() {
Assertions.assertTrue(
2 == 3,
() -> "Numbers " + 2 + " and " + 3 + " are not equal!");
}
Furthermore, we can group assertions in JUnit 5:
@Test
void shouldAssertAllTheGroup() {
List<Integer> list = Arrays.asList(1, 2, 4);
Assertions.assertAll("List is not incremental",
() -> Assertions.assertEquals(list.get(0).intValue(), 1),
() -> Assertions.assertEquals(list.get(1).intValue(), 2),
() -> Assertions.assertEquals(list.get(2).intValue(), 3));
}
The new Assumptions class is now in org.junit.jupiter.api.Assumptions. JUnit 5 fully supports the existing assumptions methods in JUnit 4, and also adds a new set of methods allowing us to run some assertions under specific scenarios only:
@Test
void whenEnvironmentIsWeb_thenUrlsShouldStartWithHttp() {
assumingThat("WEB".equals(System.getenv("ENV")),
() -> assertTrue("http".startsWith(address)));
}
In JUnit 4, we could group tests by using the @Category annotation. In JUnit 5, the @Category annotation is replaced by the @Tag annotation:
@Tag("annotations")
@Tag("junit5")
class AnnotationTestExampleUnitTest {
/*...*/
}
We can include/exclude particular tags using the maven-surefire-plugin:
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
<configuration>
<properties>
<includeTags>junit5</includeTags>
</properties>
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
In JUnit 4, we used the @RunWith annotation to integrate the test context with other frameworks or to change the overall execution flow in the test cases.
With JUnit 5, we can now use the @ExtendWith annotation to provide similar functionality.
As an example, to use the Spring features in JUnit 4:
@RunWith(SpringJUnit4ClassRunner.class)
@ContextConfiguration(
{"/app-config.xml", "/test-data-access-config.xml"})
public class SpringExtensionTest {
/*...*/
}
In JUnit 5, it’s a simple extension:
@ExtendWith(SpringExtension.class)
@ContextConfiguration(
{ "/app-config.xml", "/test-data-access-config.xml" })
class SpringExtensionTest {
/*...*/
}
In JUnit 4, we used the @Rule and @ClassRule annotations to add special functionality to tests.
In JUnit 5. we can reproduce the same logic using the @ExtendWith annotation.
For example, say we have a custom rule in JUnit 4 to write log traces before and after a test:
public class TraceUnitTestRule implements TestRule {
@Override
public Statement apply(Statement base, Description description) {
return new Statement() {
@Override
public void evaluate() throws Throwable {
// Before and after an evaluation tracing here
...
}
};
}
}
And we implement it in a test suite:
@Rule
public TraceUnitTestRule traceRuleTests = new TraceUnitTestRule();
In JUnit 5, we can write the same in a much more intuitive manner:
public class TraceUnitExtension implements AfterEachCallback, BeforeEachCallback {
@Override
public void beforeEach(TestExtensionContext context) throws Exception {
// ...
}
@Override
public void afterEach(TestExtensionContext context) throws Exception {
// ...
}
}
Using JUnit 5’s AfterEachCallback and BeforeEachCallback interfaces, available in the org.junit.jupiter.api.extension package, we can easily implement this rule in the test suite:
@ExtendWith(TraceUnitExtension.class)
class RuleExampleUnitTest {
@Test
void whenTracingTests() {
/*...*/
}
}
JUnit Vintage aids in the migration of JUnit tests by running JUnit 3 or JUnit 4 tests within the JUnit 5 context.
We can use it by importing the JUnit Vintage Engine:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.junit.vintage</groupId>
<artifactId>junit-vintage-engine</artifactId>
<version>${junit5.vintage.version}</version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
JUnit 5 is a modular and modern take on the JUnit 4 framework. In this article, we introduced the major differences between these two versions and hinted at how to migrate from one to another.