I'm trying to Unit Test a class that has many internal functions. These obviously need testing too, but my Tests project is seperate, mainly because it covers many small, related projects. What I have so far is:
FieldInfo[] _fields =
typeof(ButtonedForm.TitleButton).GetFields(
BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance |
BindingFlags.DeclaredOnly);
Console.WriteLine("{0} fields:", _fields.Length);
foreach (FieldInfo fi in _fields)
{
Console.WriteLine(fi.Name);
}
This spits out all the private members nicely, but still doesn't display internals. I know this is possible, because when I was messing around with the autogenerated tests that Visual Studio can produce, it asked about something to do with displaying internals to the Test project. Well, now I'm using NUnit and really liking it, but how can I achieve the same thing with it?
It would be more appropriate to use the InternalsVisibleTo
attribute to grant access to the internal members of the assembly to your unit test assembly.
Here is a link with some helpful additional info and a walk through:
To actually answer your question... Internal and protected are not recognized in the .NET Reflection API. Here is a quotation from MSDN:
The C# keywords protected and internal have no meaning in IL and are not used in the Reflection APIs. The corresponding terms in IL are Family and Assembly. To identify an internal method using Reflection, use the IsAssembly property. To identify a protected internal method, use the IsFamilyOrAssembly.