Testing asynchronous systems is hard. Not only does it require handling threads, timeouts, and concurrency issues, but the intent of the test code can be obscured by all these details. Awaitility is a DSL that allows you to express expectations of an asynchronous system in a concise and easy-to-read manner. For example:
@Test
public void updatesCustomerStatus() {
// Publish an asynchronous message to a broker (e.g. RabbitMQ):
messageBroker.publishMessage(updateCustomerStatusMessage);
// Awaitility lets you wait until the asynchronous operation completes:
await().atMost(5, SECONDS).until(customerStatusIsUpdated());
...
}
- 2024-08-07: Awaitility
4.2.2
is released with support for "ea" JVM versions. See changelog for details. - 2024-03-15: Awaitility
4.2.1
is released. It allows for easier use of logging and some bug fixes and improvements. See changelog for details. - 2022-03-04: Awaitility
4.2.0
is released. It allows the use of assertion libraries such as Hamcrest or Assertj in fail-fast conditions as well as various improvements and bug fixes. See changelog for details.
- Change log
- Awaitility on Open Hub
- Mailing list for questions and support