Fakes to write unit tests for Cloud Firestore. Instantiate a
FakeFirebaseFirestore
, then pass it around your project as if it were a
FirebaseFirestore
. This Fake acts like Firestore except that will only keep
the data in memory. To help debug, you can use FakeFirebaseFirestore.dump()
to see what's in the
fake database. This is useful to set up the state of your database, then check that your UI
behaves the way you expect.
This project works well with firebase_auth_mocks. If you use them together, you can even test your app with security rules. See below.
import 'package:fake_cloud_firestore/fake_cloud_firestore.dart';
void main() {
final instance = FakeFirebaseFirestore();
await instance.collection('users').add({
'username': 'Bob',
});
final snapshot = await instance.collection('users').get();
print(snapshot.docs.length); // 1
print(snapshot.docs.first.get('username')); // 'Bob'
print(instance.dump());
}
// Prints out:
// {
// "users": {
// "z": {
// "name": "Bob"
// }
// }
// }
See more examples at fake_cloud_firestore/test/fake_cloud_firestore_test.dart.
import 'package:cloud_firestore/cloud_firestore.dart';
import 'package:fake_cloud_firestore/fake_cloud_firestore.dart';
import 'package:firestore_example/main.dart';
import 'package:flutter/material.dart';
import 'package:flutter_test/flutter_test.dart';
const MessagesCollection = 'messages';
void main() {
testWidgets('shows messages', (WidgetTester tester) async {
// Populate the fake database.
final firestore = FakeFirebaseFirestore();
await firestore.collection(MessagesCollection).add({
'message': 'Hello world!',
'created_at': FieldValue.serverTimestamp(),
});
// Render the widget.
await tester.pumpWidget(MaterialApp(
title: 'Firestore Example', home: MyHomePage(firestore: firestore)));
// Let the snapshots stream fire a snapshot.
await tester.idle();
// Re-render.
await tester.pump();
// // Verify the output.
expect(find.text('Hello world!'), findsOneWidget);
expect(find.text('Message 1 of 1'), findsOneWidget);
});
}
See more examples at fake_cloud_firestore/example/test/widget_test.dart.
Most features automatically throw exceptions depending on the state, so you do not need to mock them. For example, calling DocumentSnapshot.get
on a missing field will throw a StateError
.
final firestore = FakeFirebaseFirestore();
final collection = firestore.collection('test');
final doc = collection.doc('test');
await doc.set({
'nested': {'field': 3}
});
final snapshot = await doc.get();
expect(() => snapshot.get('foo'), throwsA(isA<StateError>()));
expect(() => snapshot.get('nested.foo'), throwsA(isA<StateError>()));
Furthermore, some methods allow mocking exceptions manually, for example to simulate network errors. You can even set conditions on the parameters using the standard Dart matchers. Here are the methods which support mocking exceptions:
DocumentReference.get
,set
,update
,delete
.Query.get
.
final instance = FakeFirebaseFirestore();
final doc = instance.collection('users').doc(uid);
whenCalling(Invocation.method(#set, null))
.on(doc)
.thenThrow(FirebaseException(plugin: 'firestore'));
expect(() => doc.set({'name': 'Bob'}), throwsA(isA<FirebaseException>()));
For examples of how to set conditions on when to throw an exception, see firebase_auth_mocks#throwing-exceptions.
You can pass the security rules that you use in production in Firestore to [FakeFirebaseFirestore]. When operating on [DocumentReference] using get
, set
, update
, or delete
, [FakeFirebaseFirestore] will then check security rules and throw exceptions if access is restricted. In the example below, we restrict users/{userId}
documents to their respective owners. Before they sign in, they cannot access any document inside the users
collection. Once they sign in, they have access to only their own users/[uid]
document.
import 'package:fake_cloud_firestore/fake_cloud_firestore.dart';
import 'package:firebase_auth_mocks/firebase_auth_mocks.dart';
import 'package:test/test.dart';
// https://firebase.google.com/docs/rules/rules-and-auth#leverage_user_information_in_rules
final authUidDescription = '''
service cloud.firestore {
match /databases/{database}/documents {
// Make sure the uid of the requesting user matches name of the user
// document. The wildcard expression {userId} makes the userId variable
// available in rules.
match /users/{userId} {
allow read, write: if request.auth != null && request.auth.uid == userId;
}
}
}''';
main() async {
test('security rules' {
final auth = MockFirebaseAuth();
final firestore = FakeFirebaseFirestore(
// Pass security rules to restrict `/users/{user}` documents.
securityRules: authUidDescription,
// Make MockFirebaseAuth inform FakeFirebaseFirestore of sign-in
// changes.
authObject: auth.authForFakeFirestore);
// The user signs-in. FakeFirebaseFirestore knows about it thanks to
// `authObject`.
await auth.signInWithCustomToken('some token');
final uid = auth.currentUser!.uid;
// Now the user can access their user-specific document.
expect(
() => firestore.doc('users/$uid').set({'name': 'abc'}), returnsNormally);
// But not anyone else's.
expect(() => firestore.doc('users/abcdef').set({'name': 'abc'}),
throwsException);
});
}
See https://github.com/atn832/fake_cloud_firestore/blob/master/test/security_test.dart for more examples of security rules.
Right now we only support operations on DocumentReference
. Later we will implement security checks for batch requests, collections and queries. Furthermore, we do not support timestamps
and durations
yet. See Fake Firebase Rules for an exhaustive list of what is and is not supported.
You can also dynamically change the security rules. This is useful if you want to first set up data without any restriction, then apply security rules for the actual tests.
fake_cloud_firestore/test/security_test.dart
Lines 82 to 85 in 0bd0b64
- Dump the state of the fake firebase with
FakeFirebaseFirestore.dump()
. - Clear the fake firebase with
FakeFirebaseFirestore.clearPersistence()
. - Create documents and collections.
- Supports Converters.
- Create documents with
collection.add
ordocument.set
. - Batch writes and
runTransaction
. - Query documents with
collection.snapshots
orquery.get
. - Queries:
- Filter results with
query.where
. The library supportsequals
,isGreaterThan
,isGreaterThanOrEqualTo
,isLessThan
,isLessThanOrEqualTo
,isNull
,isNotEqualTo
,arrayContains
,arrayContainsAny
,whereIn
andwhereNotIn
. - Sort results with
query.orderBy
. - Limit results with
query.limit
,limitToLast
,startAfterDocument
,startAt
,startAtDocument
,endAt
,endAtDocument
,endBefore
,endBeforeDocument
. Note:startAnd
andendAt
work only on exact matches. - Filter with
Filter
, including composite filters likeFilter.and
andFilter.or
. - Aggregate with
query.count
,query.aggregate(sum(field1), average(field2)...)
.
- Filter results with
ValueField
:- set timestamps with
FieldValue.serverTimestamp()
. Optionally you can pass aClock
when instantiatingFakeFirebaseFirestore
to define what time gets set. - delete values with
FieldValue.delete()
. - update numerical values with
FieldValue.increment
. - update arrays with
FieldValue.arrayUnion
andFieldValue.arrayRemove
.
- set timestamps with
- Mock exceptions for
DocumentReference.set
. - Security rules:
- Initialize
FakeFirebaseFirestore
with custom security rules. FakeFirebaseFirestore
takes authentication state from firebase_auth_mocks into account.- Reset security rules.
DocumentReference.get
,set
,update
anddelete
are protected.
- Initialize
cloud_firestore | fake_cloud_firestore |
---|---|
5.0.0 | 3.0.0 |
4.17.0 | 2.5.0 |
4.4.0 | 2.4.0 |
4.0.0 | 2.0.0 |
3.4.0 | 1.3.0 |
3.0.0 | 1.2.1 |
2.2.0 | 1.1.0 |
2.1.0 | 1.0.2 |
1.0.0 | 0.8.4 |
0.16.0 | 0.6.0 |
0.14.0 | 0.5.0 |
0.13.1+1 | 0.4.1 |
0.13.0+1 | 0.2.5 |
^0.12.9+6 | 0.2.0 |
Please file feature requests and bugs at the issue tracker.