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fake-http-request
Advanced tools
Utility class to fake HTTP/HTTPS requests for unit testing Node.js projects. It captures arguments for outgoing requests and allows you to simulate network errors and responses easily.
Utility class to fake a HTTP/HTTPS request for unit testing Node.js projects. It captures arguments for outgoing requests and allows you to simulate network errors and responses easily. It can also pipe outgoing HTTP/S requests to custom functions, so you can asynchronously wait for them.
npm install fake-http-request
Before the relevant HTTP/S requests, install the fake request:
var fake = require('fake-http-request');
fake.install('https');
To clean up and restore the original HTTP/S requests, after testing, use:
fake.uninstall('https');
This will replace the system https.request
with a test method that captures calls instead of sending them out to the network, so it will work with any client code that uses the system http/https libraries.
Both install
and uninstall
can take an argument -- the module name where to install the fake requests. By default, they will use https
.
You can then use https.request.calls
to inspect individual calls. Each call object will have the following structure:
args
: array
-- arguments passed to the requestbody
: array
-- chunks written to the request bodynetworkError
: function (error)
-- use this to simulate a network error for the call.respond
: function(httpCode, statusMessage, body)
-- use this to simulate a successful network response.You can also use https.request.pipe
to pass in a function that will receive a call every time a network request is initiated.
var fakeRequest = require('fake-http-request'),
https = require('https'),
request = require('request');
fakeRequest.install();
// simulate a response
request('https://www.google.com', function (error, response, body) {
console.log('got response', response.statusCode, response.statusMessage, body)
}).on('request', function () {
console.log('number of calls', https.request.calls.length);
console.log('first call',
https.request.calls[0].args[0].host,
https.request.calls[0].args[0].port,
https.request.calls[0].args[0].path
);
https.request.calls[0].respond(404, 'Not found', 'some html here');
});
// simulate errors
call = request('https://www.google.com', function (error, response, body) {
console.log('got error', error);
}).on('request', function () {
var mostRecent = https.request.calls.length - 1;
console.log('number of calls', https.request.calls.length);
console.log('second call',
https.request.calls[mostRecent].args[0].host,
https.request.calls[mostRecent].args[0].port,
https.request.calls[mostRecent].args[0].path
);
https.request.calls[mostRecent].networkError('BOOM!');
});
// pipe calls for async processing
https.request.pipe(function (options) {
console.log('Received call',
https.request.calls[0].args[0].host,
https.request.calls[0].args[0].port,
https.request.calls[0].args[0].path
);
});
request('https://www.google.com');
FAQs
Utility class to fake HTTP/HTTPS requests for unit testing Node.js projects. It captures arguments for outgoing requests and allows you to simulate network errors and responses easily.
We found that fake-http-request demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 1 open source maintainer collaborating on the project.
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