Blast Off with Blazor: Isolate and test your service dependencies

In this post, we refactor our component to inject an API service wrapper, to abstract away a direct HttpClient dependency.

Dave Brock
Dave Brock

So far in our series, we’ve walked through the intro, wrote our first component, and dynamically updated the HTML head from a component.

I’ve made testing a crucial part of this project and not an afterthought—as discussed previously, we’re using the bUnit project to unit test our components. As I discussed last time, though, testing our Index component was a little cumbersome because of the HttpClient dependency. There are ways to mock and test it, but we should ask … why are we injecting it directly?

It was great to inject it easily to get up and running but what happens as we build more components and more APIs to call, each with different endpoints and request headers? How will we manage that? And if we want to unit test our components, will I have to mock an HttpClient every time? What a nightmare.

Instead, we’ll create an API wrapper and inject that in our components. Any service-level implementation details can be abstracted away from the component. Along the way, we’ll learn about working with separate C# classes, using a named IHttpClientFactory, and how to quickly mock and test a service in bUnit. Let’s get started.

This post contains the following content.

Does my code always have to reside in @code blocks?

To recap, here’s how our main component currently looks.

@page "/"
@inject HttpClient http

@if (image != null)
{
    <div class="p-4">
        <h1 class="text-6xl">@image.Title</h1>
        <p class="text-2xl">@FormatDate(image.Date)</p>
        @if (image.Copyright != null)
        {
            <p>Copyright: @image.Copyright</p>
        }
    </div>

     <div class="flex justify-center p-4">
        <img src="@image.Url" class="rounded-lg h-500 w-500 flex items-center justify-center"><br />
    </div>
}

@code {
    private Data.Image image;

    private string FormatDate(DateTime date) => date.ToLongDateString();

    protected override async Task OnInitializedAsync()
    {
        image = await http.GetFromJsonAsync<Data.Image>("api/image");
    }
}

While we don’t have a lot of lines of code in the @code block, there’s still a lot going on in this component. We’re directly injecting HttpClient to directly call our Azure Function. In the @code section I’ve written a helper method as well as OnInitializedAsync behavior. As we add more features and functionality, that @code block is only going to grow. We can definitely keep the C# coupled with our Razor syntax, as it makes it easy to see all that’s going on in one file—but we also can move all of this to a separate C# file for reuse and maintainability purposes.

This is a “code-behind” approach, as the code will sit behind the view logic in a partial class. To do this, we’ll create an Index.razor.cs file. If you’re using Visual Studio, you’ll see it’s nested “inside” the Blazor component.

Cut and paste everything inside the @code block to the new file. You’ll see some build errors and will need to resolve some dependencies. To resolve these:

  • Make the new file a partial class
  • Add a using statement for Microsoft.AspNetCore.Components
  • With the using added, inherit ComponentBase

What about injecting HttpClient, though? We can’t carry over that Razor syntax to our C# file. Instead, we’ll add it as a property with an Inject annotation above it.

Here’s how the class looks:

using Client.Services;
using Data;
using Microsoft.AspNetCore.Components;
using System;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

namespace Client.Pages
{
    partial class Index : ComponentBase
    {
        Image _image;

        [Inject]
        public HttpClient http { get; set; }

        private static string FormatDate(DateTime date) => date.ToLongDateString();

        protected override async Task OnInitializedAsync()
        {
            image = await http.GetFromJsonAsync<Data.Image>("api/image");
        }
    }
}

Now, when we remove the @code block and HttpClient injection, our component looks cleaner:


@page "/"

@if (_image is null)
{
    <p>Loading...</p>
}
else
{
    <div class="p-4">
        <h1 class="text-6xl">@_image.Title</h1>
        <p class="text-2xl">@FormatDate(_image.Date)</p>
        @if (_image.Copyright != null)
        {
            <p>Copyright: @_image.Copyright</p>
        }
    </div>

    <div class="flex justify-center p-4">
        <img src="@_image.Url" class="rounded-lg h-500 w-500 flex items-center justify-center"><br />
    </div>
}

If we run the project, it’ll work as it always has. Now, let’s build out an API wrapper.

Add an API service wrapper to our project

We’re now ready to build our service. In our Client project, create an ApiClientService.cs file inside a Services folder. We’ll stub it out for now with an interface to boot:

public interface IApiClientService
{
    public Task<Image> GetImageOfDay();
}

public class ApiClientService : IApiClientService
{
    public async Task<Image> GetImageOfDay()
    {
        throw new NotImplementedException();
    }
}

We’ll also want to add the new folder to bottom of our _Imports.razor file:

@using Services

How to call HttpClient from our app

We could still call HttpClient directly, but over the course of this project we’ll be connecting to various APIs with different endpoints, different headers, and so on. As we look forward, we should create an IHttpClientFactory. This allows us to work with named instances, allows us to delegate middleware handlers, and manages the lifetime of handler instances for us.

To add a factory to our project, we’ll add a named client to our Program.cs file. While we’re here, we’ll inject our new IApiClientService as well.

public static async Task Main(string[] args)
{
    // important stuff removed for brevity
    builder.Services.AddHttpClient("imageofday", iod =>
    {
        iod.BaseAddress = new Uri(builder.Configuration["API_Prefix"] ?? builder.HostEnvironment.BaseAddress);
    });
    builder.Services.AddScoped<IApiClientService, ApiClientService>();
}

In AddHttpClient, I’m specifying a URI, and referencing my API as imageofday. With that in place, I can scoot over to ApiClientService and make it work.

First, let’s inject our ILogger and IHttpClientFactory in the constructor.

public class ApiClientService : IApiClientService
{
    readonly IHttpClientFactory _clientFactory;
    readonly ILogger<ApiClientService> _logger;

    public ApiClientService(ILogger<ApiClientService> logger, IHttpClientFactory clientFactory)
    {
        _clientFactory = clientFactory;
        _logger = logger;
    }
}

In our GetImageOfDay logic, we’ll create our named client and use it to call to our Azure Function at the api/image endpoint. Of course, we’ll catch any exceptions and log them appropriately.

public async Task<Image> GetImageOfDay()
{
    try
    {
        var client = _clientFactory.CreateClient("imageofday");
        var image = await client.GetFromJsonAsync<Image>("api/image");
        return image;
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        _logger.LogError(ex.Message, ex);
    }

    return null;
}

Inject our new service from our component

With the service wrapper now complete, we can inject our new service instead of direct dependency on HttpClient. Change the HttpClient injection in Index.razor.cs to our new service instead:

[Inject]
public IApiClientService ApiClientService { get; set; }

// stuff

protected override async Task OnInitializedAsync()
{
    _image = await ApiClientService.GetImageOfDay();
}

If you run the app, you should see no changes—we didn’t have to modify the markup at all—but we’ve made our lives a lot easier and now testing should be a snap as we add to our project).

Test our component

With our API wrapper in place, testing is a whole lot easier. I’ve created an ImageOfDayTest class in our Test library.

I’ll be adding a reference to Moq, a popular mocking library, to mimic the response back from our service. You can download the package from NuGet Package Manager or just drop this in Test.csproj:

<ItemGroup>
    <PackageReference Include="Moq" Version="4.15.1" />
</ItemGroup>

I’ll build out a sample Image to return from the service. I’ll create a private helper method for that:

private static Image GetImage()
{
    return new Image
    {
        Date = new DateTime(2020, 01, 01),
        Title = "My Sample Image",
        Url = "https://nasa.gov"
    };
}

In my test case, I’ll mock my client, return an image, and inject it into my bUnit’s TestContext:

var mockClient = new Mock<IApiClientService>();
mockClient.Setup(i => i.GetImageOfDay()).ReturnsAsync(GetImage());

using var ctx = new TestContext();
ctx.Services.AddSingleton(mockClient.Object);

Note: The integration test vs. mocking in a unit test is a hot topic, especially when testing dependencies. My intent here is to unit test rendering behavior and not my services, but calling the endpoint from the test is also an option if you’re up for it.

With that in place, I can render my component, and assert against expected output with the following code:

var cut = ctx.RenderComponent<Client.Pages.Index>();
var h1Element = cut.Find("h1").TextContent;
var imgElement = cut.Find("img");
var pElement = cut.Find("p");

h1Element.MarkupMatches("My Sample Image");
imgElement.MarkupMatches(@"<img src=""https://nasa.gov"" 
    class=""rounded-lg h-500 w-500 flex items-center justify-center"">");
pElement.MarkupMatches(@"<p class=""text-2xl"">Wednesday, January 1, 2020</p>");

My tests pass—ship it!

Wrap up

In this post, we learned how to isolate HttpClient dependencies in our Blazor code. To do this, we moved our component’s C# code to a partial “code-behind class” and built a service that uses the IHttpClientFactory. Then, we were able to use bUnit to test our component quite easily.

Are refactorings sexy? No. Are they fun? Also no. Are they important? Yes. Is this the last question I’ll ask myself in this post? Also yes. In the next post, we’ll get back to updating the UI.

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