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If you are implementing a local Service as a component of your app, you
can create instrumented tests to verify that its behavior is correct.
AndroidX Test provides an API for testing your Service objects in
isolation. The ServiceTestRule class is a JUnit 4 rule that starts your
service before your unit test methods run, and shuts down the service after
tests complete. To learn more about JUnit 4 rules, see the JUnit
documentation.
Set up your testing environment
Before building your integration test for the service, make sure to configure
your project for instrumented tests, as described in Set up project for
AndroidX Test.
Create an integration test for services
Your integration test should be written as a JUnit 4 test class. To learn more
about creating JUnit 4 test classes and using JUnit 4 assertion methods, see
Create an instrumented test class.
Create a ServiceTestRule instance in your test by using the @Rule
annotation.
The following example shows how you might implement an integration test for a
service. The test method testWithBoundService() verifies that the app binds
successfully to a local service and that the service interface behaves
correctly.
Kotlin
@Test@Throws(TimeoutException::class)funtestWithBoundService(){// Create the service Intent.valserviceIntent=Intent(ApplicationProvider.getApplicationContext<Context>(),LocalService::class.java).apply{// Data can be passed to the service via the Intent.putExtra(SEED_KEY,42L)}// Bind the service and grab a reference to the binder.valbinder:IBinder=serviceRule.bindService(serviceIntent)// Get the reference to the service, or you can call// public methods on the binder directly.valservice:LocalService=(binderasLocalService.LocalBinder).getService()// Verify that the service is working correctly.assertThat(service.getRandomInt(),`is`(any(Int::class.java)))}
Java
@TestpublicvoidtestWithBoundService()throwsTimeoutException{// Create the service Intent.IntentserviceIntent=newIntent(ApplicationProvider.getApplicationContext(),LocalService.class);// Data can be passed to the service via the Intent.serviceIntent.putExtra(LocalService.SEED_KEY,42L);// Bind the service and grab a reference to the binder.IBinderbinder=serviceRule.bindService(serviceIntent);// Get the reference to the service, or you can call// public methods on the binder directly.LocalServiceservice=((LocalService.LocalBinder)binder).getService();// Verify that the service is working correctly.assertThat(service.getRandomInt()).isAssignableTo(Integer.class);}
Additional resources
To learn more about this topic, consult the following additional resources.
Content and code samples on this page are subject to the licenses described in the Content License. Java and OpenJDK are trademarks or registered trademarks of Oracle and/or its affiliates.
Last updated 2025-02-10 UTC.
[null,null,["Last updated 2025-02-10 UTC."],[],[],null,["# Test your service\n\nIf you are implementing a local [`Service`](/reference/android/app/Service) as a component of your app, you\ncan create [instrumented tests](/training/testing/unit-testing/instrumented-unit-tests) to verify that its behavior is correct.\n\n[AndroidX Test](/training/testing) provides an API for testing your `Service` objects in\nisolation. The [`ServiceTestRule`](/reference/androidx/test/rule/ServiceTestRule) class is a JUnit 4 rule that starts your\nservice before your unit test methods run, and shuts down the service after\ntests complete. To learn more about JUnit 4 rules, see the [JUnit\ndocumentation](https://github.com/junit-team/junit/wiki/Rules).\n| **Note:** The `ServiceTestRule` class does not support testing of [`IntentService`](/reference/android/app/IntentService) objects. If you need to test an `IntentService` object, you should encapsulate the logic in a separate class and create a corresponding unit test instead.\n\nSet up your testing environment\n-------------------------------\n\nBefore building your integration test for the service, make sure to configure\nyour project for instrumented tests, as described in [Set up project for\nAndroidX Test](/training/testing/set-up-project).\n\nCreate an integration test for services\n---------------------------------------\n\nYour integration test should be written as a JUnit 4 test class. To learn more\nabout creating JUnit 4 test classes and using JUnit 4 assertion methods, see\n[Create an instrumented test class](/training/testing/unit-testing/instrumented-unit-tests#create-instrumented).\n\nCreate a `ServiceTestRule` instance in your test by using the `@Rule`\nannotation. \n\n### Kotlin\n\n```kotlin\n@get:Rule\nval serviceRule = ServiceTestRule()\n```\n\n### Java\n\n```java\n@Rule\npublic final ServiceTestRule serviceRule = new ServiceTestRule();\n```\n\nThe following example shows how you might implement an integration test for a\nservice. The test method `testWithBoundService()` verifies that the app binds\nsuccessfully to a local service and that the service interface behaves\ncorrectly. \n\n### Kotlin\n\n```kotlin\n@Test\n@Throws(TimeoutException::class)\nfun testWithBoundService() {\n // Create the service Intent.\n val serviceIntent = Intent(\n ApplicationProvider.getApplicationContext\u003cContext\u003e(),\n LocalService::class.java\n ).apply {\n // Data can be passed to the service via the Intent.\n putExtra(SEED_KEY, 42L)\n }\n\n // Bind the service and grab a reference to the binder.\n val binder: IBinder = serviceRule.bindService(serviceIntent)\n\n // Get the reference to the service, or you can call\n // public methods on the binder directly.\n val service: LocalService = (binder as LocalService.LocalBinder).getService()\n\n // Verify that the service is working correctly.\n assertThat(service.getRandomInt(), `is`(any(Int::class.java)))\n}\n```\n\n### Java\n\n```java\n@Test\npublic void testWithBoundService() throws TimeoutException {\n // Create the service Intent.\n Intent serviceIntent =\n new Intent(ApplicationProvider.getApplicationContext(),\n LocalService.class);\n\n // Data can be passed to the service via the Intent.\n serviceIntent.putExtra(LocalService.SEED_KEY, 42L);\n\n // Bind the service and grab a reference to the binder.\n IBinder binder = serviceRule.bindService(serviceIntent);\n\n // Get the reference to the service, or you can call\n // public methods on the binder directly.\n LocalService service =\n ((LocalService.LocalBinder) binder).getService();\n\n // Verify that the service is working correctly.\n assertThat(service.getRandomInt()).isAssignableTo(Integer.class);\n}\n```\n\nAdditional resources\n--------------------\n\nTo learn more about this topic, consult the following additional resources.\n\n### Samples\n\n- [Service Test Code Samples](https://github.com/android/testing-samples/tree/main/integration/ServiceTestRuleSample)"]]