Wabbit - Go AMQP Mocking Library
Elmer Fudd: Shhh. Be vewy vewy quiet, I'm hunting wabbits
AMQP is a verbose protocol that makes it difficult to implement proper
unit-testing on your application. The first goal of this package is
provide a sane interface for an AMQP client implementation based on
the specification AMQP-0-9-1 (no extension) and then an implementation
of this interface using the well established package streadway/amqp (a
wrapper).
What are the advantages of this?
Usage
How to use ?
Testing
This package have an AMQP interface and two possible implementations:
In the same way you can use the http package in your software and use
the httptest for testing, when using wabbit is recommended to use the
wabbit/amqp package on your software and wabbit/amqptest in your
tests. Simple test example:
package main
import (
"testing"
"github.com/NeowayLabs/wabbit/amqptest"
"github.com/NeowayLabs/wabbit/amqptest/server"
"github.com/NeowayLabs/wabbit/amqp"
)
func TestChannelCreation(t *testing.T) {
mockConn, err := amqptest.Dial("amqp://localhost:5672/%2f")
if err == nil {
t.Error("This shall fail, because no fake amqp server is running...")
}
fakeServer := server.NewServer("amqp://localhost:5672/%2f")
fakeServer.Start()
mockConn, err = amqptest.Dial("amqp://localhost:5672/%2f")
if err != nil {
t.Error(err)
}
channel, err := mockConn.Channel()
}
The package amqptest/server implements a mock AMQP server and it
can be used to simulate network partitions or broker crashs. To
create a new server instance use server.NewServer passing any
amqpuri. You can create more than one server, but they need to
have different amqpuris. Example below:
broker1 := server.NewServer("amqp://localhost:5672/%2f")
broker2 := server.NewServer("amqp://192.168.10.165:5672/%2f")
broker3 := server.NewServer("amqp://192.168.10.169:5672/%2f")
broker1.Start()
broker2.Start()
broker3.Start()
Calling NewServer with same amqpuri will return the same server
instance.
Use broker.Stop() to abruptly stop the amqp server.
There's no fake clustering support yet (maybe never)
It's a very straightforward implementation that need a lot of
improvements yet. Take careful when using it.
[]'s