EasyMock / Arrays.asList(…) with only one varagrs parameter












1















We recently switched from Oracle JDK 8 to OpenJDK 11 and I've encountered a strange behavior in the following case:



final List<Interface> foo = Arrays.asList(EasyMock.mock(Interface.class))


I'm getting the following exception when run in a unit test via JUnit:



class com.sun.proxy.$Proxy225 cannot be cast to class [Lorg.example.Interface; (com.sun.proxy.$Proxy225 and [Lorg.example.Interface; are in unnamed module of loader 'app')



EasyMock version is the newest (4.0.1).



For sure I should have used Collections.singletonList(...) and this is also what compiles and runs or now since Java9!? List.of(...), but yeah.



I don't really get the problem, but I think it's related to EasyMock with Java 11.










share|improve this question



























    1















    We recently switched from Oracle JDK 8 to OpenJDK 11 and I've encountered a strange behavior in the following case:



    final List<Interface> foo = Arrays.asList(EasyMock.mock(Interface.class))


    I'm getting the following exception when run in a unit test via JUnit:



    class com.sun.proxy.$Proxy225 cannot be cast to class [Lorg.example.Interface; (com.sun.proxy.$Proxy225 and [Lorg.example.Interface; are in unnamed module of loader 'app')



    EasyMock version is the newest (4.0.1).



    For sure I should have used Collections.singletonList(...) and this is also what compiles and runs or now since Java9!? List.of(...), but yeah.



    I don't really get the problem, but I think it's related to EasyMock with Java 11.










    share|improve this question

























      1












      1








      1








      We recently switched from Oracle JDK 8 to OpenJDK 11 and I've encountered a strange behavior in the following case:



      final List<Interface> foo = Arrays.asList(EasyMock.mock(Interface.class))


      I'm getting the following exception when run in a unit test via JUnit:



      class com.sun.proxy.$Proxy225 cannot be cast to class [Lorg.example.Interface; (com.sun.proxy.$Proxy225 and [Lorg.example.Interface; are in unnamed module of loader 'app')



      EasyMock version is the newest (4.0.1).



      For sure I should have used Collections.singletonList(...) and this is also what compiles and runs or now since Java9!? List.of(...), but yeah.



      I don't really get the problem, but I think it's related to EasyMock with Java 11.










      share|improve this question














      We recently switched from Oracle JDK 8 to OpenJDK 11 and I've encountered a strange behavior in the following case:



      final List<Interface> foo = Arrays.asList(EasyMock.mock(Interface.class))


      I'm getting the following exception when run in a unit test via JUnit:



      class com.sun.proxy.$Proxy225 cannot be cast to class [Lorg.example.Interface; (com.sun.proxy.$Proxy225 and [Lorg.example.Interface; are in unnamed module of loader 'app')



      EasyMock version is the newest (4.0.1).



      For sure I should have used Collections.singletonList(...) and this is also what compiles and runs or now since Java9!? List.of(...), but yeah.



      I don't really get the problem, but I think it's related to EasyMock with Java 11.







      java easymock






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Nov 21 '18 at 13:27









      JohannesJohannes

      99611435




      99611435
























          1 Answer
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          This is a type inference issue. It's caused by the new way EasyMock does type inference. It helps tremendously in many cases but here is an example where it won't be able to cast to the right type.



          The solution is to use a type witness. This will work: List<Interface> foo = Arrays.asList(EasyMock.<Interface, Interface>mock(Interface.class));






          share|improve this answer
























          • Another one seems to be generic classes.

            – Johannes
            Nov 29 '18 at 19:15











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          1 Answer
          1






          active

          oldest

          votes









          active

          oldest

          votes






          active

          oldest

          votes









          1














          This is a type inference issue. It's caused by the new way EasyMock does type inference. It helps tremendously in many cases but here is an example where it won't be able to cast to the right type.



          The solution is to use a type witness. This will work: List<Interface> foo = Arrays.asList(EasyMock.<Interface, Interface>mock(Interface.class));






          share|improve this answer
























          • Another one seems to be generic classes.

            – Johannes
            Nov 29 '18 at 19:15
















          1














          This is a type inference issue. It's caused by the new way EasyMock does type inference. It helps tremendously in many cases but here is an example where it won't be able to cast to the right type.



          The solution is to use a type witness. This will work: List<Interface> foo = Arrays.asList(EasyMock.<Interface, Interface>mock(Interface.class));






          share|improve this answer
























          • Another one seems to be generic classes.

            – Johannes
            Nov 29 '18 at 19:15














          1












          1








          1







          This is a type inference issue. It's caused by the new way EasyMock does type inference. It helps tremendously in many cases but here is an example where it won't be able to cast to the right type.



          The solution is to use a type witness. This will work: List<Interface> foo = Arrays.asList(EasyMock.<Interface, Interface>mock(Interface.class));






          share|improve this answer













          This is a type inference issue. It's caused by the new way EasyMock does type inference. It helps tremendously in many cases but here is an example where it won't be able to cast to the right type.



          The solution is to use a type witness. This will work: List<Interface> foo = Arrays.asList(EasyMock.<Interface, Interface>mock(Interface.class));







          share|improve this answer












          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer










          answered Nov 25 '18 at 0:58









          HenriHenri

          3,65411323




          3,65411323













          • Another one seems to be generic classes.

            – Johannes
            Nov 29 '18 at 19:15



















          • Another one seems to be generic classes.

            – Johannes
            Nov 29 '18 at 19:15

















          Another one seems to be generic classes.

          – Johannes
          Nov 29 '18 at 19:15





          Another one seems to be generic classes.

          – Johannes
          Nov 29 '18 at 19:15




















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