/* * Copyright (C) 2007 The Guava Authors * * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. * You may obtain a copy of the License at * * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 * * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and * limitations under the License. */ package com.google.common.testing; import com.google.common.annotations.Beta; import com.google.common.annotations.GwtCompatible; import junit.framework.Assert; import junit.framework.AssertionFailedError; /** * Tests serialization and deserialization of an object, optionally asserting * that the resulting object is equal to the original. * * <p><b>GWT warning:</b> Under GWT, both methods simply returns their input, * as proper GWT serialization tests require more setup. This no-op behavior * allows test authors to intersperse {@code SerializableTester} calls with * other, GWT-compatible tests. * * * @author Mike Bostock * @since 10.0 */ @Beta @GwtCompatible // but no-op! public final class SerializableTester { private SerializableTester() {} /** * Serializes and deserializes the specified object. * * <p><b>GWT warning:</b> Under GWT, this method simply returns its input, as * proper GWT serialization tests require more setup. This no-op behavior * allows test authors to intersperse {@code SerializableTester} calls with * other, GWT-compatible tests. * * <p>Note that the specified object may not be known by the compiler to be a * {@link java.io.Serializable} instance, and is thus declared an * {@code Object}. For example, it might be declared as a {@code List}. * * @return the re-serialized object * @throws RuntimeException if the specified object was not successfully * serialized or deserialized */ @SuppressWarnings("unchecked") public static <T> T reserialize(T object) { return Platform.reserialize(object); } /** * Serializes and deserializes the specified object and verifies that the * re-serialized object is equal to the provided object, that the hashcodes * are identical, and that the class of the re-serialized object is identical * to that of the original. * * <p><b>GWT warning:</b> Under GWT, this method simply returns its input, as * proper GWT serialization tests require more setup. This no-op behavior * allows test authors to intersperse {@code SerializableTester} calls with * other, GWT-compatible tests. * * <p>Note that the specified object may not be known by the compiler to be a * {@link java.io.Serializable} instance, and is thus declared an * {@code Object}. For example, it might be declared as a {@code List}. * * <p>Note also that serialization is not in general required to return an * object that is {@linkplain Object#equals equal} to the original, nor is it * required to return even an object of the same class. For example, if * sublists of {@code MyList} instances were serializable, those sublists * might implement a private {@code MySubList} type but serialize as a plain * {@code MyList} to save space. So long as {@code MyList} has all the public * supertypes of {@code MySubList}, this is safe. For these cases, for which * {@code reserializeAndAssert} is too strict, use {@link #reserialize}. * * @return the re-serialized object * @throws RuntimeException if the specified object was not successfully * serialized or deserialized * @throws AssertionFailedError if the re-serialized object is not equal to * the original object, or if the hashcodes are different. */ public static <T> T reserializeAndAssert(T object) { T copy = reserialize(object); new EqualsTester() .addEqualityGroup(object, copy) .testEquals(); Assert.assertEquals(object.getClass(), copy.getClass()); return copy; } }