MacLochlainns Weblog

Michael McLaughlin's Technical Blog

Site Admin

Oracle Unit Test

without comments

A unit test script may contain SQL or PL/SQL statements or it may call another script file that contains SQL or PL/SQL statements. Moreover, a script file is a way to bundle several activities into a single file because most unit test programs typically run two or more instructions as unit tests.

Unconditional Script File

You can write a simple unit test like the example program provided in the Lab 1 Help Section, which includes conditional logic. However, you can write a simpler script that is unconditional and raises exceptions when preconditions do not exist.

The following script file creates a one table and one_s sequence. The DROP TABLE and DROP SEQUENCE statements have the same precondition, which is that the table or sequence must previously exist.

-- Drop table one.
DROP TABLE one;
 
-- Crete table one.
CREATE TABLE one
( one_id    NUMBER
, one_text  VARCHAR2(10));
 
-- Drop sequence one_s.
DROP SEQUENCE one_s;
 
-- Create sequence one_s.
CREATE SEQUENCE one_s;

After writing the script file, you can save it in the lab2 subdirectory as the unconditional.sql file. After you login to the SQL*Plus environment from the lab2 subdirectory. You call the unconditional.sql script file from inside the SQL*Plus environment with the following syntax:

@unconditional.sql

It will display the following output, which raises an exception when the one table or one_s sequence does not already exist in the schema or database:

DROP TABLE one
           *
ERROR at line 1:
ORA-00942: table or view does not exist
 
Table created.
 
DROP SEQUENCE one_s
              *
ERROR at line 1:
ORA-02289: sequence does not exist
 
Sequence created.

An unconditional script raises exceptions when a precondition of the statement does not exist. The precondition is not limited to objects, like the table or sequence; and the precondition may be specific data in one or several rows of one or several tables. You can avoid raising conditional errors by writing conditional scripts.

Conditional Script File

A conditional script file contains statements that check for a precondition before running a statement, which effectively promotes their embedded statements to a lambda function. The following logic recreates the logic of the unconditional.sql script file as a conditional script file:

-- Conditionally drop a table and sequence.
BEGIN
  FOR i IN (SELECT   object_name
            ,        object_type
            FROM     user_objects
            WHERE    object_name IN ('ONE','ONE_S')
            ORDER BY object_type ) LOOP
    IF i.object_type = 'TABLE' THEN
      EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP TABLE '||i.object_name||' CASCADE CONSTRAINTS';
    ELSE
      EXECUTE IMMEDIATE 'DROP SEQUENCE '||i.object_name;
    END IF;
  END LOOP;
END;
/
 
-- Crete table one.
CREATE TABLE one
( one_id    NUMBER
, one_text  VARCHAR2(10));
 
-- Create sequence one_s.
CREATE SEQUENCE one_s;

You can save this script in the lab2 subdirectory as conditional.sql and then unit test it in SQL*Plus. You must manually drop the one table and one_s sequence before running the conditional.sql script to test the preconditions.

You will see that the conditional.sql script does not raise an exception because the one table or one_s sequence is missing. It should generate output to the console, like this:

PL/SQL procedure successfully completed.
 
Table created.
 
Sequence created.

As a rule, you should always write conditional script files. Unconditional script files throw meaningless errors, which may cause your good code to fail a deployment test that requires error free code.

Written by maclochlainn

April 5th, 2022 at 1:59 pm