Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @sanperrier/mockttp
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @sanperrier/mockttp
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @sanperrier/mockttp
Gathering detailed insights and metrics for @sanperrier/mockttp
mockttp
Mock HTTP server for testing HTTP clients and stubbing webservices
@httptoolkit/subscriptions-transport-ws
A websocket transport for GraphQL subscriptions
@kronoslive/mockttp
Mock HTTP server for testing HTTP clients and stubbing webservices
@nosecurity/mockttp
Mock HTTP server for testing HTTP clients and stubbing webservices
npm install @sanperrier/mockttp
Module System
Min. Node Version
Typescript Support
Node Version
NPM Version
863 Commits
8 Branches
2 Contributors
Updated on 26 Nov 2021
TypeScript (99.21%)
JavaScript (0.79%)
Cumulative downloads
Total Downloads
Last day
0%
1
Compared to previous day
Last week
100%
6
Compared to previous week
Last month
6.3%
17
Compared to previous month
Last year
-77.6%
876
Compared to previous year
29
55
Part of HTTP Toolkit: powerful tools for building, testing & debugging HTTP(S)
Mockttp lets you intercept, transform or test HTTP requests & responses in JavaScript - quickly, reliably & anywhere.
You can use Mockttp for integration testing, by intercepting real requests as part of your test suite, or you can use Mockttp to build custom HTTP proxies that capture, inspect and/or rewrite HTTP in any other kind of way you like.
HTTP testing is the most common and well supported use case. There's a lot of tools to test HTTP, but typically by stubbing the HTTP functions in-process at the JS level. That ties you to a specific environment, doesn't truly test the real requests that you code would send, and only works for requests made in the same JS process. It's inflexible, limiting and inaccurate, and often unreliable & tricky to debug too.
Mockttp meanwhile allows you to do accurate true integration testing, writing one set of tests that works out of the box in node or browsers, with support for transparent proxying & HTTPS, strong typing & promises throughout, fast & safe parallel testing, and with debuggability built-in at every stage.
Mockttp is also battle-tested as a scriptable rewriting proxy, powering all the HTTP internals of HTTP Toolkit. Anything you can do with HTTP Toolkit, you can automate with Mockttp as a headless script.
Let's get specific. Mockttp lets you:
1npm install --save-dev mockttp
To run an HTTP integration test, you need to:
Here's a simple minimal example of all that using plain promises, Mocha, Chai & Superagent, which works out of the box in Node and modern browsers:
1const superagent = require("superagent"); 2const mockServer = require("mockttp").getLocal(); 3 4describe("Mockttp", () => { 5 // Start your mock server 6 beforeEach(() => mockServer.start(8080)); 7 afterEach(() => mockServer.stop()); 8 9 it("lets you mock requests, and assert on the results", async () => 10 // Mock your endpoints 11 await mockServer.get("/mocked-path").thenReply(200, "A mocked response"); 12 13 // Make a request 14 const response = await superagent.get("http://localhost:8080/mocked-path"); 15 16 // Assert on the results 17 expect(response.text).to.equal("A mocked response"); 18 ); 19});
(Want to play with this yourself? Try running a standalone version live on RunKit: https://npm.runkit.com/mockttp)
That is pretty easy, but we can make this simpler & more powerful. Let's take a look at some more fancy features:
1const superagent = require("superagent"); 2require('superagent-proxy')(superagent); 3const mockServer = require("mockttp").getLocal(); 4 5describe("Mockttp", () => { 6 // Note that there's no start port here, so we dynamically find a free one instead 7 beforeEach(() => mockServer.start()); 8 afterEach(() => mockServer.stop()); 9 10 it("lets you mock without specifying a port, allowing parallel testing", async () => { 11 await mockServer.get("/mocked-endpoint").thenReply(200, "Tip top testing") 12 13 // Try mockServer.url or .urlFor(path) to get a the dynamic URL for the server's port 14 let response = await superagent.get(mockServer.urlFor("/mocked-endpoint")); 15 16 expect(response.text).to.equal("Tip top testing"); 17 }); 18 19 it("lets you verify the request details the mockttp server receives", async () => { 20 const endpointMock = await mockServer.get("/mocked-endpoint").thenReply(200, "hmm?"); 21 22 await superagent.get(mockServer.urlFor("/mocked-endpoint")); 23 24 // Inspect the mock to get the requests it received and assert on their details 25 const requests = await endpointMock.getSeenRequests(); 26 expect(requests.length).to.equal(1); 27 expect(requests[0].url).to.equal(`http://localhost:${mockServer.port}/mocked-endpoint`); 28 }); 29 30 it("lets you proxy requests made to any other hosts", async () => { 31 // Match a full URL instead of just a path to mock proxied requests 32 await mockServer.get("http://google.com").thenReply(200, "I can't believe it's not google!"); 33 34 // One of the many ways to use a proxy - this assumes Node & superagent-proxy. 35 // In a browser, you can simply use the browser settings instead. 36 let response = await superagent.get("http://google.com").proxy(mockServer.url); 37 38 expect(response.text).to.equal("I can't believe it's not google!"); 39 }); 40});
These examples uses Mocha, Chai and Superagent, but none of those are required: Mockttp will work with any testing tools that can handle promises (and with minor tweaks, many that can't), and can mock requests from any library, tool or device you might care to use.
No vulnerabilities found.
No security vulnerabilities found.