Mock Yeah
"An invaluable service mocking platform built on Express."
Testing is difficult when you don't have control of your data. This project puts you in complete control, enabling you to implement real mock web services with ease. Real mock services means you have control of response payloads, HTTP Status Codes, response latency, and more.
Have a requirement to implement specific behavior when a service is slow to respond or a server returns an unexpected status code? No problem! This platform makes developing for such requirements easy.
Install
$ npm install mockyeah --save-dev
Usage
Introductory tutorial
- Create an example project and initialized with NPM
$ mkdir example-app && cd example-app
$ npm init
- Install
mockyeah
$ npm install mockyeah --save-dev
- Create script file and add the source below
$ touch index.js
const mockyeah = require('mockyeah');
mockyeah.get('/hello-world', { text: 'Hello World' });
- Run the script file with Node
$ node index.js
-
Open http://localhost:4001/hello-world
-
Profit. You should see "Hello World" returned from your mock server.
Testing example
const request = require('supertest')('http://localhost:4041');
const mockyeah = require('mockyeah');
describe('Wondrous service', () => {
afterEach(() => mockyeah.reset());
it('should create a mock service that returns an internal error', (done) => {
mockyeah.get('/wondrous', { status: 500 });
request
.get('/wondrous')
.expect(500, done);
});
it('should create a mock service that returns JSON', (done) => {
mockyeah.get('/wondrous', { json: { foo: 'bar' } });
request
.get('/wondrous')
.expect(200, { foo: 'bar' }, done);
});
});
Package Dependencies
- Mock Yeah was built and tested with Node v4.2.3
- Mocha
API
Mock Service Creation API
mockyeah.get(path, options)
mockyeah.put(path, options)
mockyeah.post(path, options)
mockyeah.delete(path, options
Each of the methods above create a mock service with a HTTP verb matching its
respective method name.
Arguments
Path
Path to which to respond. Fully supports all Express path matching
options.
Options
Response options informing Mock Yeah how to respond to matching requests. Supported options:
- filePath (String; optional) - File with contents to include in response body. Assumes response Content-Type of file type.
- fixture (String; optional) - Fixture file with contents to include in response body. Assumes response Content-Type of file type. Default fixture file location is
./mockyeah/fixtures
in your project. - headers (Object; optional) - Header key value pairs to include in response.
- html (String; optional) - HTML to include in response body. Assumes response Content-Type of
text/html
. - json (Object; optional) - JSON to include in response body. Assumes response Content-Type of
application/json
. - latency (Number/Milliseconds; optional) - Used to control the response timing of a response.
- text (String; optional) - Text to include in response body. Assumes response Content-Type of
text/plain
. - type (String; optional) - Content-Type HTTP header to return with response. Proxies option to Express response method
res.type(type)
; more info here: http://expressjs.com/en/4x/api.html#res.type - status (String; optional; default: 200) - HTTP response status code.
Note, only one of the following is permitted per service: filePath, fixture, html, json, or text.
Mock Service Sets API
mockyeah.loadSet(setName)
Creates a set of mock services. Sets support the full Mock Service Creation API documented above.
A set is a Node module that returns an array of service parameter objects, each being the definition for
a single mock service. The default set file location is ./mockyeah/sets
.
Example of usage:
Invoking:
mockyeah.loadSet('example')
Creates mock services from definitions defined in ./mockyeah/sets/example.js
module.exports = [
{
method: 'get',
path: '/say-hello',
options: {
text: 'Well, hello there.'
}
},
{
method: 'get',
path: '/say-your-lost',
options: {
text: 'I\'m lost.',
status: 404
}
},
{
method: 'get',
path: '/say-oh-noes',
options: {
text: 'Oh noes!',
status: 500
}
},
{
method: 'get',
path: '/respond-with-a-file',
options: {
filePath: './test/fixtures/some-data.json'
}
},
{
method: 'get',
path: '/respond-with-a-fixture',
options: {
fixture: 'some-data.json'
}
},
{
method: 'get',
path: '/wait-to-respond',
options: {
text: 'Oh, hey there.',
latency: 1000
}
},
{
method: 'get',
path: '/say-anything-you-want',
options: (req, res) => {
res.status(200);
res.send('Inversion of service control enables you to respond with whatever you want.');
}
}
];
Mock Service Management Methods
mockyeah.reset()
Resets all existing mock services. Useful on test teardown.
mockyeah.close()
Shuts down the Mock Yeah Express server. Useful if running Mock Yeah with a file
watcher. Mock Yeah attempts to start a new instance of Express each test
iteration. After all tests run, mockyeah.close()
should be called to shutdown
Mock Yeah's Express server. Failing to do so will result in EADDRINUSE
exceptions. This is due to Mock Yeah attempting to start a server on a port
occupied by a server it started previously.
Contributing
Getting started
Installing project and dependencies
# download project
$ git clone git@github.com:ryanricard/mockyeah.git
$ cd mockyeah
# install proper Node version
$ nvm install v4.2.3
$ nvm use
# install mocha
$ npm install -g mocha
# if tests pass, you're good to go
$ npm test