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highwind

Mock API express server

  • 0.1.0
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  • npm
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Highwind

"There ain't no getting offa this train we on!"

Highwind provides a simple, fast, configurable Express server that makes it easy to simulate API responses from your production server.

Highwind will automatically pull down production data from the URL you specify and save it locally when it cannot find a fixture for the requested URL. This allows for painless feature testing, with immediately-generated response data that highly approximates your production API responses.

Highwind also comes with a bevy of configuration options that make it dead simple to specify unique response statuses and headers, dynamically mix fixture data with request body params, serve concurrently from multiple ports, and avoid redundant response caching.

Basic Usage

Highwind provides a slim API that makes it easy to drop into a test suite or task runner:

import highwind from 'highwind';

const options = {
  prodRootURL: 'http://www.refinery29.com/',
  fixturesPath: `${__dirname}/fixtures`
};

// booting your server
highwind.start(options);

// closing your server
highwind.close();

Highwind only needs to know your the root URL for your production API and the absolute path to your fixtures directory to get started.

By default, Highwind listens for requests on port 4567. You can change that in the config, however.

Configuration Options

These are dropped in to the options object passed to highwind.start() during instantiation.

  • prodRootURL (string, required):
    • The root production URL to serve from when the API response for a given route is not stored locally.
  • fixturesPath: (string, required):
    • The absolute path to the directory from which API responses are stored and served.
  • corsWhitelist (array of string):
    • An array of URLs dispatched to Express's CORS middleware.
  • overrides (object):
    • HTTP methods for which specific routes should be overridden. Each property of this object should have a key specifying an HTTP method known to Express's Application object (get, post, put, delete, all). Examples follow below.
  • queryStringIgnore (array of RegExp):
    • Default: []
    • Query string expressions to be ignored when writing/reading API responses.
    • For example, /\?analytics=[^\&]+/ would result in a query for /homepage and /homepage?analytics=true saving and searching for the same local response fixture.
  • ports (array of number):
    • Default: [4567]
    • Ports for Highwind to listen on. Each results in a separate Express server instance.
  • encoding (string):
    • Default: 'utf8'.
    • The default charset encoding passed to fs for reading/writing local responses.
  • quiet: (boolean)
    • Default: false.
    • Silences console output when an API response is being served locally. One possible use case is feature tests, in which you'll (ideally) be serving everything locally, to minimize spec pollution.

HTTP Route Overrides

Here are some examples of HTTP route overrides and their use cases.

Serving a JSON response

import loginFixture from './fixtures/login.json';

...

overrides: {
  post: [
    {
      route: '/api/login',
      response: loginFixture,
      status: 503
    }
  ]
}

This configures the mock API to respond to POST requests to '/api/login' with the fixture object assigned to response and a 503 status.

Mixing a JSON fixture response with POST params at runtime

import emailSignupFixture from './fixtures/email_signup.json';

...

overrides: {
  post: [
    {
      route: '/api/sign_up',
      response: emailSignupFixture,
      mergeParams(response, params) {
        return Object.assign({}, response, { result: params });
      }
    }
  ]
}

Just as in the previous example, this will result in POST requests to '/api/sign_up' being served the fixture assigned to response. The distinction here is the mergeParams callback. This intercepts the POST params bound to Express's res.body and assigns them to the result key of the response object (emailSignupFixture in this example).

Serving a non-JSON response

get: [
  {
    route: '/legacy_route',
    headers: {
      'Content-Type': 'text/html'
    }
  }
]

This configures the mock API to respond to get requests for /legacy_route with a non-JSON 'Content-Type' header. This also prevents the mock API from attempting to handle data served from the local legacy_route fixture as JSON. Since no response object is specified, our mock API will default to serving a fixture from ${fixturesPath}/legacy_route.json.

N.B.: Under the hood, the headers object is passed to Express's response.set() method. That means you can specify any HTTP header key/value pairs you'd like here, not just 'Content-Type'.

Serving a JSONP response

Highwind serves all routes with a callback specified in the query string as JSONP by default. This is easy to disable, though, either by specifying a non-JS 'Content-Type' header in an override for a specific route or by adding something like /callback\=([^\&]+)/ to your queryStringIgnore collection.

License

MIT License © Refinery29, Inc. 2016

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Package last updated on 14 Jan 2016

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