RSpec API Expectations
RSpecApi::Expectations lets you express expectations on the response of web APIs:
expect_response response, status: :ok, type: :json, collection: true
More documentation and examples about RSpecApi are available at http://rspec-api.github.io
Basic example
# 1. Make a request to the GitHub API:
require 'faraday'
conn = Faraday.new 'https://api.github.com/' do |c|
c.use Faraday::Adapter::NetHttp
end
conn.headers[:user_agent] = 'RSpec API'
conn.authorization :token, ENV['RSPEC_API_GITHUB_TOKEN']
response = conn.get '/repositories'
# 2. Expect the response to be successful and to return a JSON collection,
# where each object has an ID key/value (number), a name key/value
# (string) and a url key/value (string in URL format)
require 'rspec-api/expectations'
describe 'List all public repositories', rspec_api: true do
expect_response response, status: :ok, type: :json, collection: true,
attributes: {id: {type: :number}, name: {type: :string},
url: {type: {string: :url}}}
Running the example above returns the following successful output:
GET https://api.github.com/repositories
responds with a status code that
should be 200
responds with headers that
should include 'Content-Type': 'application/json; charset=utf-8'
responds with a body that
should be a collection
should have attributes {:id=>{:type=>:number}, :name=>{:type=>:string}, :url=>{:type=>{:string=>:url}}}
Finished in 0.13086 seconds
4 examples, 0 failures
Note that, in order run the example, above, you need to get a GitHub Personal Access Token:
- Browse to your GitHub settings
- Click on 'Create new token' under 'Personal Access Token' (name it as you want)
- Copy the generated token and store it on your machine as the environment variable called
RSPEC_API_GITHUB_TOKEN
: - On OSX and bash, accomplish this by running the command
export RSPEC_API_GITHUB_TOKEN=
followed by your pasted key (no spaces after =
)
Available expectations
The purpose of RSpecApi::Expectations is to give developers a tool to quickly
test that API endpoints respect some best practices
that are common to RESTful resourceful web APIs.
Status
expect_response response, status: :ok
Expects a specific HTTP status code in the response.
The status can be specified either as a number (200) or as a symbol (:ok).
Content Type
expect_response response, type: :json
Expects a specific 'Content-Type' header in the response.
The status can be specified either as a string or as a symbol.
The expectation always passes when the response does not have a content
(e.g. if the status is '204 No Content').
Page Links
expect_response response, page_links: true
Expects a 'Link' header in the response to denote pagination, in accordance to RFC 5988.
The expectation passes if a link with rel="prev" is found.
Collection
expect_response response, collection: true
Expects a collection of JSON objects in the response body.
For example, the expectation above passes if the body is
[{"name":"foo"},{"name":"bar"}]
.
JSONP Callback
expect_response response, callback: 'alert'
Expects a response body with a JSON wrapped in the given JSONP callback.
For example, the expectation above passes if the body is
alert({"name": "foo"})
.
Sort
expect_response response, sort: {by: :id, verse: :desc}
Expects a response body with a JSON collection sorted by the given option.
For example, the expectation above passes if the body is
[{"id": 2, "foo"},{"id": 1, "bar"}]
.
Filter
expect_response response, filter: {by: :name, value: "foo"}
Expects a response body with a JSON collection filtered by the given option.
For example, the expectation above passes if the body is
[{"id": 1, "foo"},{"id": 2, "foo"}]
.
Filter
expect_response response, attributes: [:id, name: {type: :string}]
Expects a response body that includes the given attributes.
For example, the expectation above passes if the body is
[{"id": 1, "foo"},{"id": 2, "bar"}]
.
How to install
To install on your system, run gem install rspec-api-expectations
.
To use inside a bundled Ruby project, add this line to the Gemfile:
gem 'rspec-api-expectations', '~> 0.6.0'
The rspec-api-expectations gem follows Semantic Versioning.
Any new release that is fully backward-compatible bumps the patch version (0.0.x).
Any new version that breaks compatibility bumps the minor version (0.x.0)
Indicating the full version in your Gemfile (major.minor.patch) guarantees
that your project won’t occur in any error when you bundle update
and a new
version of RSpecApi::Expectations is released.
How to contribute
Don’t hesitate to send me code comments, issues or pull requests through GitHub!
All feedback is appreciated. Thanks :)