A down to earth tool for API test
Fact-checker is a test generator; it generates JSON input files to be sent to server and a testSuite file which can be run by mocha. This testSuite iteratively send JSON inputs from files to server and checks chunk of output retrieved by mean of deep equality using jsonpath expressions.
The easiest way to use fact-checker is to download its wrapper, which include peer dependecies and run the executable node script from there. To do so type:
$ npm install fact-checker-wrapper
$ cd node_modules/fact-checker-wrapper
$ npm install
$ npm test # after configuring test for your server or starting included echo-server (see below)
the wrapper includes an echo server (re-send everything sent to it) that can be used for experimenting. After installing try (on bash shell):
$ mini-echo &
$ npm test
npm test
execute fact-checker
and mocha
on generated tests. You can execute manually both commands, fact-checker supports the following options:
-V, --version output the version number
-v, --verbose Print more output
-r, --root <path> Test root folder
-d, --defaults Template with default values for messages to be sent
-s, --save Save responses from the server
-t, --tests Glob file pattern for test definition. Matches inside test root folder
-h, --help output usage information
A template is defined in test/default.json
. It includes a requestOption
field which contains options to be passed to request when sending data to server and a body
field which contains a shallow payload with defaults. From these defaults and a series of conf files located in test root folder (default test
) the testSuites are generated. Test definition files match the pattern /.*tests.json/i
. For each of these a corresponding .*testsSuite.js
file is generated. Test definition files are array of test definitions; each test definition includes a title (string containing at least one _
: the preceeding part is used to group tests), a requestOptions object to be merged with defaults, an inputs
array setting variables in the default tree and a checks
array of pairs jsonpath expression/expected result (note: just the first result wil be used for a deep equality comparison with expected result). Both test/default.json
and test definition files can use json5 extensions (such as comments). As a clean is performed before generation of new files commenting test definitions works as a way to avoid test/output files generation.
mocha is not visible in executable path in windows, unless you install it globally. To run it from from the wrapper you may use the full path (node_modules\.bin\mocha.cmd
)
- add XML/SOAP support too