Interfake: Quick JSON APIs
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Interfake is a tool which allows developers of client-side applications of any platform to easily create dummy HTTP APIs to develop against. Let's get started with a simple example.
Get started
If you don't want to use the JavaScript method to create your Interfake API, go read up on all the methods. Otherwise, read on.
Install Interfake in your project.
npm install interfake --save
Let's write a simple fake API:
var Interfake = require('interfake');
var interfake = new Interfake();
interfake.get('/whats-next').body({ next : 'more stuff '});
interfake.listen(3000);
Now go to http://localhost:3000/whats-next in your browser (or curl
), and you will see the following:
{
"next":"more stuff"
}
You can also chain response properties:
var Interfake = require('interfake');
var interfake = new Interfake();
interfake.get('/whats-next').status(400).body({ error : 'such a bad request'});
interfake.listen(3000);
You can use different HTTP methods:
var Interfake = require('interfake');
var interfake = new Interfake();
interfake.post('/next-items').status(201).body({ created : true });
interfake.listen(3000);
You can specify endpoints which should only be created once other ones have been hit.
var Interfake = require('interfake');
var interfake = new Interfake();
var postResponse = interfake.post('/next-items').status(201).body({ created : true });
postResponse.creates.get('/items/1').status(200).body({ id: 1, name: 'Item 1' });
postResponse.creates.get('/next-items').status(200).body({ items: [ { id: 1, name: 'Item 1' } ] });
interfake.listen(3000);
You can even specify how endpoints should be extended once others have been hit.
var Interfake = require('interfake');
var interfake = new Interfake();
interfake.get('/items').status(200).body({ items: [ { id: 1, name: 'Item 1' } ] });
interfake.get('/items/1').status(200).body({ id: 1, name: 'Item 1' });
var postResponse = interfake.post('/items').status(201).body({ created : true });
postResponse.creates.get('/items/2').status(200).body({ id: 2, name: 'Item 2' });
postResponse.extends.get('/items').status(200).body({ items: [ { id: 2, name: 'Item 2' } ] });
interfake.listen(3000);
There's more options, though, including delays, custom response headers, and handling query string parameters.
API
The majority of Interfake users will probably be interested in the JavaScript API, which is covered below. However, there are in fact three ways to use Interfake: JavaScript, on the Command Line (using static JSON files), or using an HTTP meta-API. These are covered in detail in the Wiki.
JavaScript
new Interfake(options)
: creates an Interfake object. Options are:
debug
: If true
, outputs lots of annoying but helpful log messages. Default is false
.path
: Sets the API root path. E.g. if api
is used then the route at /users
will be accessible at /api/path
#createRoute(route)
: Takes a JSON object with the following:
request
response
afterResponse
(optional)
#listen(port, callback)
: Takes a port and starts the server, and a callback which executes when the server is running#stop()
: Stops the server if it's been started#serveStatic(path, directory)
: Serve static (usually a website) files from a certain path. This is useful for testing SPAs. (Example use.)
Fluent Interface
#get|post|put|patch|delete(url)
: Create an endpoint at the specified URL. Can then be followed by each of the following, which can follow each other too e.g. get().query().body().status().body().creates.get()
etc.
#query(queryParameters)
: An object containing query parameters to accept. Overwrites matching URL params. E.g. get('/a?b=1').query({b:2})
means /a?b=2
will work but /a?b=1
will not.#status(statusCode)
: Set the response status code for the endpoint#body(body)
: Set the JSON response body of the end point#delay(milliseconds)
: Set the number of milliseconds to delay the response by to mimic network of processing lag
- Also accepts a delay range in the format 'ms..ms' e.g. '50..100'
#responseHeaders(headers)
: An object containing response headers. The keys are header names.#creates#get|post|put|patch|delete(url)
: Specify an endpoint to create after the first execution of this one. API is the same as above.#extends#get|post|put|patch|delete(url)
: Specify an endpoint to modify after the first execution of this one. API is the same as above. The endpoints you extend are matched based on url
and query
. The status
, body
, delay
and responseHeaders
are the extendable bits. Keep in mind that keys will be replaced, and arrays will be added to.
JSONP
Interfake supports JSONP. Just put ?callback
on the end of the URLs being called.
$ curl http://localhost:3000/whattimeisit?callback=handleSomeJson
Use Cases
Backend/API Prototype for a Single-Page Application (SPA)
By using Interfake's .serveStatic()
method, you can serve some front-end HTML, JavaScript and CSS which uses the API you've created as the backend. Not only does this massively speed up development time by not having to have a real API, it serves as a great prototype for the real API, and avoids having to mock requests. This is my most common use for Interfake.
Backend for a Mobile Application
If you'd like to develop an API-driven mobile application you might not yet have a finished API available. This is a perfect example of where Interfake is useful. You can quickly mock up some dummy APIs and work on the mobile application. In parallel, perhaps another developer will be creating the real API, or you could create it later.
Automated Testing
You can use Interfake to create dummy APIs which use data from your test setup with the HTTP method above, or by using a static set of test data. If you're writing your test suite using a NodeJS library, you can use the JavaScript API.
The HTTP API is particularly useful for developing iOS Applications which uses Automated tests written in JavaScript, or developing Node.js applications which rely on external APIs.
For an example of how to do this, please see the web page test example.
Creating a static API
If you have a website or mobile application which only needs static data, deploy Interfake to a server somewhere with a JSON file serving up the data, and point your application at it.
Compatibility
I tested this on my Mac. If you have trouble on Windows or any other platform, raise an issue.
Version History
- 1.9.2: Updated deepmerge dependency, since it included a bug
- 1.9.1: Updated dependencies, and fixed a bug where
.serveStatic
was not working on Windows because of the directory being wrong. - 1.9.0: Created the
.extends
methods to extend existing endpoints - 1.8.2: Bug fix for Windows - paths were screwed up
- 1.8.1: Bug fix for responseheaders
- 1.8.0: Querystring parameter values can now be regular expressions
- 1.7.2: Fixed a bug where
.delay()
was not allowing chaining - 1.7.1: Added ability to set a root path for the API only (skipped 1.7.0 which was a bit broken)
- 1.6.2: Can add a callback to
listen
so that you know when the server has started (by bruce-one) - 1.6.1: Upgraded to Express 4.0.0 (thanks to Sebastian Schürmann).
- 1.6.0: Custom response headers (thanks to Sebastian Schürmann).
- 1.5.0: Can now use querystring params (thanks to rajit). Massive.
- 1.4.0: Can specify delay range using
delay(10..50)
(by bruce-one) - 1.3.0: Can mimic slow responses using
delay()
(by bruce-one) - 1.2.0: Added ability to do static files
- 1.1.1: Fixed the response to
POST /_request
to be a 201, and POST /_requests
is now the path used - 1.1.0: Added the fluent interface for easier creation of endpoints
- 1.0.0: Backwards-incompatible changes for JavaScript API, now creating an
Interfake
instance - 0.2.0: Added JSONP support
- 0.1.0: Support for creating mocked JSON APIs using HTTP, JavaScript or command line
Contribute
Interfake is a labour of love, created for front-end and mobile developers to increase their prototyping and development speeds. If you can contribute by getting through some issues, I would be very grateful. Please read more about how to contribute in the CONTRIBUTING.md document.
It's important that the tests all pass so we can keep this little badge green:
<3 Open Source!
Dependencies
Works well with
- Mocha - the test framework
- Zombie.js - the Node.js-powered headless web browser
Thank yous
Alun for reading this readme.
Author & Contributors
Future work
- Create a guide/some examples for how to integrate this with existing test frameworks, whether written in JavaScript or not
- Improve the templating, so that a response might include a repeated structure with an incrementing counter or randomized data