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Home/ Questions/Q 93581
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T23:22:00+00:00 2026-05-10T23:22:00+00:00

I’m interested to know what approach people are taking in developing automated unit tests

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I’m interested to know what approach people are taking in developing automated unit tests that exercise the database

Do you Install a QA database (known-starting point) before the test suite is run.

OR

Do you build database stub that stand-in whenever a database call occurs?

EDIT: Related question, but not a duplicate, though quite important for the matter at hand: How do I unit-test persistence?

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  1. 2026-05-10T23:22:01+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 11:22 pm

    The ‘database stub’ that stands in is usually referred to as a ‘fake repository’ or ‘mock repository’. They are a good idea. You can code them by hand (not hard for simple cases) or use a framework like Rhino Mocks to generate them. You don’t mention what language you are working in. Rhino mocks is for .Net .

    If you use mock repositories then you can run tests against code that works with data, without actually using a database for the data. This makes the tests run very fast, which is a good thing.

    Of course, you still have to test the real repository at some stage, and this is more of an issue. These tests will run slower, because they use a real database. Some would classify then as ‘integration tests’ not unit tests because of the speed and dependency issues.

    I don’t mind what you call them so much, but it’s a good idea to keep these tests separate.

    A good idea here for data consistency is to begin a db transaction before your test, and roll it back afterwards. That way the database state is reverted to what it was before the test.

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