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Test Domain-Based Applications

MUnit 2.x enables you to write MUnit test suites for your Mule applications that share their resources with a Mule domain, without you performing any additional configuration. To understand how this works, it is helpful to consider a specific scenario populated with actual values, and then use those values in steps that illustrate how to write such a test.

Example Domain-Based Mule Application to Be Tested

Consider a Mule domain called domain-config that defines a global configuration for the HTTP listeners of all the Mule applications within it:

Studio Visual Editor
domain munit example
XML Editor
Mule domain
<domain:mule-domain ...>

<http:listener-config name="HTTP_Listener_config_domain" basePath="/" >
  <http:listener-connection host="0.0.0.0" port="8081" />
</http:listener-config>


</domain:mule-domain>
Mule domain pom.xml file
<groupId>com.mycompany</groupId>
<artifactId>domain-config</artifactId>
<version>1.0.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
<packaging>mule-domain</packaging>
<name>domain-config</name>

Consider also a basic Mule application that returns the path being pinged:

Studio Visual Editor
mule app domain listener

Note that this application does not define a HTTP listener global configuration because it inherits it from its Mule domain (HTTP_Listener_config_domain).

mule app domain set payload
XML Editor
<mule ...>

  <flow name="application-aFlow">
        <http:listener  config-ref="HTTP_Listener_config_domain" path="/api"/>
        <set-payload value='#["You reached " ++ message.attributes.listenerPath]'/>
  </flow>

</mule>

Note that this application does not define an http:listener-config global element because it inherits it from its Mule domain (HTTP_Listener_config_domain). The application declares the domain dependency in its pom.xml file:

<dependencies>
...
  <dependency>
    <groupId>com.mycompany</groupId>
    <artifactId>domain-config</artifactId>
    <version>1.0.0</version>
    <classifier>mule-domain</classifier>
    <scope>provided</scope>
  </dependency>
...
</dependencies>

Writing an MUnit Test of the Example Domain-Based Application

Because the Mule domain is a dependency of the Mule application, MUnit can start the Mule domain to retrieve the necessary global elements configuration for the application that it’s testing.

Assume an MUnit test to validate that the path being pinged is indeed the expected /api path:

Studio Visual Editor
munit domain sample
  1. Inside the execution scope, an HTTP requester sends a GET request to your application’s endpoint.

  2. Inside the validation scope, set up an Assert Equals` processor to assert the response from the execution scope against your expected response.

  3. To compare the response against the expected text, you must convert the payload to plain text.

XML Editor
<mule ...>

  <munit:config name="application-a-test-suite.xml" />

  <http:request-config name="HTTP_Request_configuration" basePath="/api">
    <http:request-connection host="0.0.0.0" port="8081" />
  </http:request-config>

  <munit:test name="application-a-test-suite-application-aFlowTest" description="Test to validate the path being called">

  <munit:enable-flow-sources >
    <munit:enable-flow-source value="application-aFlow" />
  </munit:enable-flow-sources>

  <munit:execution>
    <http:request config-ref="HTTP_Request_configuration" method="GET"/> (1)
  </munit:execution>

  <munit:validation>
    <munit-tools:assert-equals (2)
        actual="#[output text/plain --- payload]" (3)
        expected='#["You reached /api"]'/>
  </munit:validation>

</munit:test>
  1. Inside the execution scope, an HTTP requester sends a GET request to your application’s endpoint.

  2. Inside the validation scope, you decide to set up an assert-equals processor to assert the response from the execution scope against your expected response.

  3. To compare the response against the expected text, you must convert the payload to plain text.