Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

stubborn-ws

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Versions
53
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

stubborn-ws

Web server to mock external HTTP APIs in tests

  • 5.3.13
  • Source
  • npm
  • Socket score

Version published
Weekly downloads
1.4K
increased by4.34%
Maintainers
1
Weekly downloads
 
Created
Source

Stubborn

Build Status Coverage Status code style: prettier node

Stubborn web server to mock external api responses. It is basically nock meets Dyson. Stubborn will strictly match the requests based on the definition like nock but in a separate web server like Dyson.



Installation

npm install --save-dev stubborn-ws
yarn add -D stubborn-ws

Usage

Stubborn is a testing tool that let you hot load and unload routes into a webserver. Requests are strictly matched against routes definitions based on Method, Path, Query parameters, Headers and Body. If the request does not exactly match one route definition (ex: extra parameter, missing parameter, value does not match, etc), Stubborn will respond with a 501.

The very fact that Stubborn responds to the request validates that the parameters sent are the expected one, any change in the code that send the request will break the test. Any breaking change will be picked up by your test.

Stubborn response headers and body can be hardcoded or defined using a template.

You can find a complete working test suite of the following examples here.

import got from 'got';
import { Stubborn, STATUS_CODES, WILDCARD } from 'stubborn-ws';

describe('Test', () => {
  const sb = new Stubborn();

  beforeAll(async () => await sb.start());
  afterAll(async () => await sb.stop());

  // Clean up all routes after a test if needed
  afterEach(() => sb.clear());

  it('should respond to query', async () => {
    const body = { some: 'body' };
    sb.get('/').setResponseBody({ some: 'body' });

    const res = await request(`/`);

    expect(res.statusCode).toBe(STATUS_CODES.SUCCESS);
    expect(res.body).toEqual(body);
  });

  function request(path = '/', options = {}) {
    return got(`${sb.getOrigin()}${path}`, {
      method: 'GET',
      responseType: 'json',
      throwHttpErrors: false,
      ...options,
    });
  }
});

Stubborn strictly matches the request against the route definition.

If a query parameter or a header is missing, stubborn will return a 501 (not implemented)

it('should respond 501 if a parameter is missing', async () => {
  sb.get('/').setQueryParameters({ page: '1' });

  const res = await request(`/`);

  expect(res.statusCode).toEqual(STATUS_CODES.NOT_IMPLEMENTED);
});

If a query parameter or a header is added, stubborn will return a 501 (not implemented)

it('should respond 501 if a parameter is added', async () => {
  sb.get('/').setQueryParameters({ page: '1' });

  const res = await request(`/?page=1&limit=10`);

  expect(res.statusCode).toEqual(STATUS_CODES.NOT_IMPLEMENTED);
});

If a query parameter or a header does not match the route definition, stubborn will return a 501 (not implemented)

it('should respond 501 if a parameter does not match the definition', async () => {
  sb.get('/').setQueryParameters({ page: '1' });

  const res = await request(`/?page=2`);

  expect(res.statusCode).toEqual(STATUS_CODES.NOT_IMPLEMENTED);
});

You can use regex to match a parameter, header or body

it('should match using a regexp', async () => {
  sb.post('/', {
    slug: /^[a-z\-]*$/,
  });

  const res = await request(`/?page=2`, {
    method: 'POST',
    json: { slug: 'stubborn-ws' },
  });

  expect(res.statusCode).toEqual(200);
});

You can use a function to match a parameter, header or body

import { STATUS_CODES } from 'stubborn-ws';
it('should match using a function', async () => {
  sb.get('/').setQueryParameters({
    page: value => parseInt(value as string) > 0,
  });

  const res = await request(`/?page=2`);

  expect(res.statusCode).toBe(STATUS_CODES.SUCCESS);
});

Although this is not advised, you can use the WILDCARD constant to match any values:

import { WILDCARD } from 'stubborn-ws';
it('should match using wildcard', async () => {
  sb.get('/').setQueryParameters({ page: WILDCARD }).setHeaders(WILDCARD);

  const res = await request(`/?page=2`, {
    headers: { 'x-api-key': 'api key', 'any-other-header': 'stuff' },
  });

  expect(res.statusCode).toEqual(STATUS_CODES.SUCCESS);
});

Public API

See the API documentation

FAQ

Q: Stubborn is not matching my route definition and always return a 501

Stubborn is STUBBORN, therefore it will return a 501 if it does not exactly match the route definition you have set up. To help you find what missing in the route definition, you can compare it to the response body returned when receiving a 501 using the logDiff() method of a route:

const route = sb
  .get('/')
  // This header definition will miss additional header added by got, like user-agent, connexion, etc...
  .setHeaders({ 'X-Api-Key': 'test' })
  // Will log in console the diff between the route and any request throwing a 501
  .logDiffOn501();

const res = await request(sb.getOrigin(), {
  headers: { 'x-api-key': 'api key' },
});

expect(res.statusCode).toBe(501);
Q: How do I know if stubborn has been called and matched the route defined?

Stubborn will return a 501 (Not Implemented) if it received a request but cannot match any route. If the request matches the route it will respond according to the route response configuration and update the call property of the route

  async function call() {
    return request(sb.getOrigin());
  }

  // No route setup in Stubborn
  const res = await call();

  expect(res.statusCode).toBe(501);
  expect(res.body).toEqual({
    method: 'GET'
    path: '/',
    headers: {
      // ...
    }
    // ...
  });


  const route = sb.get('/')
    .setHeaders(null)
    .setResponseBody('content');


  const res = await call();
  expect(res.calls.length).toBe(1);
  expect(res.calls[0]).toEqual({
    method: 'GET'
    path: '/',
    headers: {
      // ...
    }
      // ...
    });

Keywords

FAQs

Package last updated on 30 Jul 2021

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc