JSPM

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  • License Apache

a lightweight server for stubbing external systems and endpoints

Package Exports

  • stubby

This package does not declare an exports field, so the exports above have been automatically detected and optimized by JSPM instead. If any package subpath is missing, it is recommended to post an issue to the original package (stubby) to support the "exports" field. If that is not possible, create a JSPM override to customize the exports field for this package.

Readme

Build Status

stubby4node

Table of Contents

Installation

via npm

npm install -g stubby

This will install stubby as a command in your PATH. Leave off the -g flag if you'd like to use stubby as an embedded module in your project.

via source

You need to have coffee-script installed on your system.

git clone git://github.com/Afmrak/stubby4node.git
cd stubby4node
coffee -o lib -c src
export PATH=$PATH:<pwd>/bin/stubby

Requirements

Development is on Mac OS X Mountain Lion.

Packaged

Optional (for development)

Starting the Server(s)

Some systems require you to sudo before running services on port certain ports (like 80)

[sudo] stubby

Command-line Switches

stubby [-a <port>] [-c <file>] [-d <file>] [-h] [-k <file>] [-l <hostname>] [-m] [-p <file>]
       [-s <port>] [-t <port>] [-v] [-w]

-a, --admin <port>          Port for admin portal. Defaults to 8889.
-c, --cert <file>           Certificate file. Use with --key.
-d, --data <file>           Data file to pre-load endoints. YAML or JSON format.
-h, --help                  This help text.
-k, --key <file>            Private key file. Use with --cert.
-l, --location <hostname>   Hostname at which to bind stubby.
-m, --mute                  Prevent stubby from printing to the console.
-p, --pfx <file>            PFX file. Ignored if used with --key/--cert
-s, --stubs <port>          Port for stubs portal. Defaults to 8882.
-t, --tls <port>            Port for https stubs portal. Defaults to 7443.
-v, --version               Prints stubby's version number.
-w, --watch                 Auto-reload data file when edits are made.

Endpoint Configuration

This section explains the usage, intent and behavior of each property on the request and response objects.

Here is a fully-populated, unrealistic endpoint:

-  request:
      url: /your/awesome/endpoint
      method: POST
      query:
         exclamation: post requests can have query strings!
      headers:
         content-type: application/xml
      post: >
         <!xml blah="blah blah blah">
         <envelope>
            <unaryTag/>
         </envelope>
      file: tryMyFirst.xml
   response:
      status: 200
      latency: 5000
      headers:
         content-type: application/xml
         server: stubbedServer/4.2
      body: >
         <!xml blah="blah blah blah">
         <responseXML>
            <content></content>
         </responseXML>
      file: responseData.xml

request

This object is used to match an incoming request to stubby against the available endpoints that have been configured.

url (required)

  • This is the only required property of an endpoint.
  • signify the url after the base host and port (i.e. after localhost:8882).
  • must begin with /.
  • any query paramters are stripped (so don't include them, that's what query is for).
    • /url?some=value&another=value becomes /url
  • no checking is done for URI-encoding compliance.
    • If it's invalid, it won't ever trigger a match.

This is the simplest you can get:

-  request:
      url: /

method

  • defaults to GET.
  • case-insensitive.
  • can be any of the following:
    • HEAD
    • GET
    • POST
    • PUT
    • POST
    • DELETE
    • etc.
-  request:
      url: /anything
      method: GET
  • it can also be an array of values.
-  request:
      url: /anything
      method: [GET, HEAD]

-  request:
      url: /yonder
      method:
         -  GET
         -  HEAD
         -  POST

query

  • if ommitted, stubby ignores query parameters for the given url.

  • a yaml hashmap of variable/value pairs.

  • allows the query parameters to appear in any order in a uri

  • The following will match either of these:

    • /with/parameters?search=search+terms&filter=month
    • /with/parameters?filter=month&search=search+terms
-  request:
      url: /with/parameters
      query:
         search: search terms
         filter: month

post

  • if ommitted, any post data is ignored.
  • the body contents of the server request, such as form data.
-  request:
      url: /post/form/data
      post: name=John&email=john@example.com

file

  • if supplied, replaces post with the contents of the locally given file.
    • paths are relative from where stubby was executed.
  • if the file is not found when the request is made, falls back to post for matching.
  • allows you to split up stubby data across multiple files
-  request:
      url: /match/against/file
      file: postedData.json
      post: '{"fallback":"data"}'

postedData.json

{"fileContents":"match against this if the file is here"}
  • if postedData.json doesn't exist on the filesystem when /match/against/file is requested, stubby will match post contents against {"fallback":"data"} (from post) instead.

headers

  • if ommitted, stubby ignores headers for the given url.
  • case-insensitive matching of header names.
  • a hashmap of header/value pairs similar to query.

The following endpoint only accepts requests with application/json post values:

-  request:
      url: /post/json
      method: post
      headers:
         content-type: application/json

response

Assuming a match has been made against the given request object, data from response is used to build the stubbed response back to the client.

status

  • the HTTP status code of the response.
  • integer or integer-like string.
  • defaults to 200.
-  request:
      url: /im/a/teapot
      method: POST
   response:
      status: 420

body

  • contents of the response body
  • defaults to an empty content body
-  request:
      url: /give/me/a/smile
   response:
      body: ':)'

file

  • similar to request.file, but the contents of the file are used as the body.
-  request:
      url: /
   response:
      file: extremelyLongJsonFile.json

headers

  • similar to request.headers except that these are sent back to the client.
-  request:
      url: /give/me/some/json
   response:
      headers:
         content-type: application/json
      body: >
         [{
            "name":"John",
            "email":"john@example.com"
         },{
            "name":"Jane",
            "email":"jane@example.com"
         }]

latency

  • time to wait, in milliseconds, before sending back the response
  • good for testing timeouts, or slow connections
-  request:
      url: /hello/to/jupiter
   response:
      latency: 800000
      body: Hello, World!

The Admin Portal

The admin portal is a RESTful(ish) endpoint running on localhost:8889. Or wherever you described through stubby's options.

Supplying Endpoints to Stubby

Submit POST requests to localhost:8889 or load a data-file (-d) with the following structure for each endpoint:

  • request: describes the client's call to the server
    • method: GET/POST/PUT/DELETE/etc.
    • url: the URI string. GET parameters should also be included inline here
    • query: a key/value map of query string parameters included with the request
    • headers: a key/value map of headers the server should respond to
    • post: a string matching the textual body of the response.
    • file: if specified, returns the contents of the given file as the request post. If the file cannot be found at request time, post is used instead
  • response: describes the server's response to the client
    • headers: a key/value map of headers the server should use in it's response
    • latency: the time in milliseconds the server should wait before responding. Useful for testing timeouts and latency
    • file: if specified, returns the contents of the given file as the response body. If the file cannot be found at request time, body is used instead
    • body: the textual body of the server's response to the client
    • status: the numerical HTTP status code (200 for OK, 404 for NOT FOUND, etc.)

YAML (file only)

-  request:
      url: /path/to/something
      method: POST
      headers:
         authorization: "Basic usernamez:passwordinBase64"
      post: this is some post data in textual format
   response:
      headers:
         Content-Type: application/json
      latency: 1000
      status: 200
      body: You're request was successfully processed!

-  request:
      url: /path/to/anotherThing
      query:
         a: anything
         b: more
      method: GET
      headers:
         Content-Type: application/json
      post:
   response:
      headers:
         Content-Type: application/json
         Access-Control-Allow-Origin: "*"
      status: 204
      file: path/to/page.html

-  request:
      url: /path/to/thing
      method: POST
      headers:
         Content-Type: application/json
      post: this is some post data in textual format
   response:
      headers:
         Content-Type: application/json
      status: 304

JSON (file or POST/PUT)

[
  {
    "request": {
      "url": "/path/to/something", 
      "post": "this is some post data in textual format", 
      "headers": {
         "authorization": "Basic usernamez:passwordinBase64"
      },
      "method": "POST"
    }, 
    "response": {
      "status": 200, 
      "headers": {
        "Content-Type": "application/json"
      },
      "latency": 1000,
      "body": "You're request was successfully processed!"
    }
  }, 
  {
    "request": {
      "url": "/path/to/anotherThing", 
      "query": {
         "a": "anything",
         "b": "more"
      },
      "headers": {
        "Content-Type": "application/json"
      },
      "post": null, 
      "method": "GET"
    }, 
    "response": {
      "status": 204, 
      "headers": {
        "Content-Type": "application/json",
        "Access-Control-Allow-Origin": "*"
      }, 
      "file": "path/to/page.html"
    }
  }, 
  {
    "request": {
      "url": "/path/to/thing", 
      "headers": {
        "Content-Type": "application/json"
      },
      "post": "this is some post data in textual format", 
      "method": "POST"
    }, 
    "response": {
      "status": 304, 
      "headers": {
        "Content-Type": "application/json"
      } 
    }
  }
]

If you want to load more than one endpoint via file, use either a JSON array or YAML list (-) syntax. On success, the response will contain Location in the header with the newly created resources' location

Getting the Current List of Stubbed Endpoints

Performing a GET request on localhost:8889 will return a JSON array of all currently saved responses. It will reply with 204 : No Content if there are none saved.

Performing a GET request on localhost:8889/<id> will return the JSON object representing the response with the supplied id.

The Status Page

You can also view the currently configured endpoints by going to localhost:8889/status

Changing Existing Endpoints

Perform PUT requests in the same format as using POST, only this time supply the id in the path. For instance, to update the response with id 4 you would PUT to localhost:8889/4.

Deleting Endpoints

Send a DELETE request to localhost:8889/<id>

The Stubs Portal

Requests sent to any url at localhost:8882 (or wherever you told stubby to run) will search through the available endpoints and, if a match is found, respond with that endpoint's response data

How Endpoints Are Matched

For a given endpoint, stubby only cares about matching the properties of the request that have been defined in the YAML. The exception to this rule is method; if it is omitted it is defaulted to GET.

For instance, the following will match any POST request to the root url:

-  request:
      url: /
      method: POST
   response: {}

The request could have any headers and any post body it wants. It will match the above.

Pseudocode:

for each <endpoint> of stored endpoints {

   for each <property> of <endpoint> {
      if <endpoint>.<property> != <incoming request>.<property>
         next endpoint
   }

   return <endpoint>
}

Programmatic API

The Stubby module

Add stubby as a module within your project's directory:

    npm install stubby

Then within your project files you can do something like:

    var Stubby = require('stubby').Stubby;
    var mockExternalService = new Stubby();

    mockService.start();

What can I do with it, you ask? Read on!

start(options, [callback])

  • options: an object containing parameters with which to start this stubby. Parameters go along with the full-name flags used from the command line.
    • stubs: port number to run the stubs portal
    • admin: port number to run the admin portal
    • tls: port number to run the stubs portal over https
    • data: JavaScript Object/Array containing endpoint data
    • location: address/hostname at which to run stubby
    • key: keyfile contents (in PEM format)
    • cert: certificate file contents (in PEM format)
    • pfx: pfx file contents (mutually exclusive with key/cert options)
    • watch: filename to monitor and load as stubby's data when changes occur
    • mute: defaults to true. Pass in false to have console output (if available)
  • callback: takes one parameter: the error message (if there is one), undefined otherwise

start([callback])

Identical to previous signature, only all options are assumed to be defaults.

stop([callback])

closes the connections and ports being used by stubby's stubs and admin portals. Executes callback afterward.

get(id, callback)

Simulates a GET request to the admin portal, with the callback receiving the resultant data.

  • id: the id of the endpoint to retrieve. If ommitted, an array of all registered endpoints is passed the callback.
  • callback(err, endpoint): err is defined if no endpoint exists with the given id. Else, endpoint is populated.

get(callback)

Simulates a GET request to the admin portal, with the callback receiving the resultant data.

  • id: the id of the endpoint to retrieve. If ommitted, an array of all registered endpoints is passed the callback.
  • callback(endpoints): takes a single parameter containing an array of returned results. Empty if no endpoints are registered

post(data, [callback])

  • data: an endpoint object to store in stubby
  • callback(err, endpoint): if all goes well, gets executed with the created endpoint. If there is an error, gets called with the error message.

put(id, data, [callback])

  • id: id of the endpoint to update.
  • data: data with which to replace the endpoint.
  • callback(err): executed with no passed parameters if successful. Else, passed the error message.

delete([id], callback)

  • id: id of the endpoint to destroy. If ommitted, all endoints are cleared from stubby.
  • callback(): called after the endpoint has been removed

Example (coffeescript)

Stubby = require('stubby').Stubby

stubby1 = new Stubby()
stubby2 = new Stubby()

stubby1.start
   stubs: 80
   admin: 81
   location: 'localhost'
   data: [
      request:
         url: "/anywhere"
   ,
      request:
         url: "/but/here"
   ]

stubby2.start
   stubs: 82
   admin: 83
   location: '127.0.0.2'

Running Tests

If you don't have jasmine-node already, install it:

npm install -g jasmine-node

From the root directory run:

jasmine-node --coffee spec

If you want to see more informative output:

jasmine-node --verbose --coffee spec

See Also

stubby4j: A java implementation of stubby

TODO

  • Auto-Base64 encode username:password if authorization is given as a request header.
  • post parameter as a hashmap under request for easy form-submission value matching

Wishful Thinkings

  • SOAP request/response compliance
  • Randomized responses based on supplied pattern (exploratory QA abuse)
  • Minify js in npm module?

NOTES

  • Copyright 2012 Eric Mrak, Alexander Zagniotov, Isa Goksu
  • License Apache v2.0