axios-mock-adapter
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Axios adapter that allows to easily mock requests
Installation
Using npm:
$ npm install axios-mock-adapter --save-dev
It's also available as a UMD build:
axios-mock-adapter works on Node as well as in a browser, it works with axios v0.9.0 and above.
Example
Mocking a GET
request
var axios = require('axios');
var MockAdapter = require('axios-mock-adapter');
var mock = new MockAdapter(axios);
mock.onGet('/users').reply(200, {
users: [
{ id: 1, name: 'John Smith' }
]
});
axios.get('/users')
.then(function(response) {
console.log(response.data);
});
Mocking a GET
request with specific parameters
var axios = require('axios');
var MockAdapter = require('axios-mock-adapter');
var mock = new MockAdapter(axios);
mock.onGet('/users', { params: { searchText: 'John' } }).reply(200, {
users: [
{ id: 1, name: 'John Smith' }
]
});
axios.get('/users', { params: { searchText: 'John' } } )
.then(function(response) {
console.log(response.data);
});
To add a delay to responses, specify a delay amount (in milliseconds) when instantiating the adapter
var mock = new MockAdapter(axiosInstance, { delayResponse: 2000 });
You can restore the original adapter (which will remove the mocking behavior)
mock.restore();
You can also reset the registered mock handlers with reset
mock.reset();
reset
is different from restore
in that restore
removes the mocking from the axios instance completely,
whereas reset
only removes all mock handlers that were added with onGet, onPost, etc. but leaves the mocking in place.
Mock a low level network error
mock.onGet('/users').networkError();
Mock a network timeout
mock.onGet('/users').timeout();
Passing a function to reply
mock.onGet('/users').reply(function(config) {
return [200, {
users: [
{ id: 1, name: 'John Smith' }
]
}];
});
Using a regex
mock.onGet(/\/users\/\d+/).reply(function(config) {
return [200, {}];
});
Specify no path to match by verb alone
mock.onPost().reply(500);
Chaining is also supported
mock
.onGet('/users').reply(200, users)
.onGet('/posts').reply(200, posts);
.replyOnce()
can be used to let the mock only reply once
mock
.onGet('/users').replyOnce(200, users)
.onGet('/users').replyOnce(500);
Mocking any request to a given url
mock.onAny('/foo').reply(200);
.onAny
can be useful when you want to test for a specific order of requests
const responses = [
['GET', '/foo', 200, { foo: 'bar' }],
['POST', '/bar', 200],
['PUT', '/baz', 200]
];
mock.onAny().reply(config => {
const [method, url, ...response] = responses.shift();
if (config.url === url && config.method.toUpperCase() === method) return response;
return [500, {}];
});
Requests that do not map to a mock handler are rejected with a HTTP 404 response. Since
handlers are matched in order, a final onAny()
can be used to change the default
behaviour
mock
.onGet('/foo').reply(200)
.onAny().reply(500);
Mocking a request with a specific request body/data
mock.onPut('/product', { id: 4, name: 'foo' }).reply(204);
.passThrough()
forwards the matched request over network
mock
.onPost(/\/^api/).reply(201)
.onGet(/\/^api/).passThrough();
Recall that the order of handlers is significant
mock
.onGet('/foo').reply(200)
.onPut('/bar', { xyz: 'abc' }).reply(204)
.onAny().passThrough();
Note that passThrough
requests are not subject to delaying by delayResponse
.
As of 1.7.0, reply
function may return a Promise:
mock.onGet('/product').reply(function(config) {
return new Promise(function(resolve, reject) {
setTimeout(function() {
if (Math.random() > 0.1) {
resolve([200, { id: 4, name: 'foo' } ]);
} else {
resolve([500, { success: false } ]);
}
}, 1000);
});
});
Composing from multiple sources with Promises:
var normalAxios = axios.create();
var mockAxios = axios.create();
var mock = MockAdapter(mockAxios);
mock
.onGet('/orders')
.reply(() => Promise.all([
normalAxios
.get('/api/v1/orders')
.then(resp => resp.data),
normalAxios
.get('/api/v2/orders')
.then(resp => resp.data),
{ id: '-1', content: 'extra row 1' },
{ id: '-2', content: 'extra row 2' }
]).then(
sources => [200, sources.reduce((agg, source) => agg.concat(source))]
)
);