One of your @Configuration classes is obviously annotated with @EnableWebMvc. That’s how DelegatingWebMvcConfiguration ends up in your stack trace, since it is imported by @EnableWebMvc.
So although you think you don’t need a WebApplicationContext (and hence a ServletContext), you in fact do need it simply because you are loading an application context with @EnableWebMvc.
You have two options:
- Compose the configuration classes for your integration test so that you are not including the web-related configuration (i.e., the
@Configurationclass(es) annotated with@EnableWebMvc). - Annotate your test class with
@WebAppConfigurationas suggested in other comments above.
Regards,
Sam (author of the Spring TestContext Framework)