RSpec driven API testing framework
Install Airborne:
gem install airborne
Or add it to your Gemfile:
gem 'airborne'
##Creating Tests
require 'airborne'
describe 'sample spec' do
it 'should validate types' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_get' #json api that returns { "name" : "John Doe" }
expect_json_types({name: :string})
end
it 'should validate values' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_get' #json api that returns { "name" : "John Doe" }
expect_json({:name => "John Doe"})
end
endWhen calling expect_json_types, these are the valid types that can be tested against:
:intor:integer:float:boolor:boolean:string:date:object:array:array_of_integersor:array_of_ints:array_of_floats:array_of_strings:array_of_booleansor:array_of_bools:array_of_objects:array_of_arrays
If the properties are optional and may not appear in the response, you can append _or_null to the types above.
describe 'sample spec' do
it 'should validate types' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_get' #json api that returns { "name" : "John Doe" } or { "name" : "John Doe", "age" : 45 }
expect_json_types({name: :string, age: :int_or_null})
end
endAdditionally, if an entire object could be null, but you'd still want to test the types if it does exist, you can wrap the expectations in a call to optional:
it 'should allow optional nested hash' do
get '/simple_path_get' #may or may not return coordinates
expect_json_types("address.coordinates", optional({latitude: :float, longitude: :float}))
endAdditionally, when calling expect_json, you can provide a regex pattern in a call to regex:
describe 'sample spec' do
it 'should validate types' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_get' #json api that returns { "name" : "John Doe" }
expect_json({name: regex("^John")})
end
endWhen calling expect_json or expect_json_types, you can optionally provide a block and run your own rspec expectations:
describe 'sample spec' do
it 'should validate types' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_get' #json api that returns { "name" : "John Doe" }
expect_json({name: -> (name){expect(name.length).to eq(8)}})
end
endCalling expect_json_sizes actually make use of the above feature and call expect_json under the hood:
describe 'sample spec' do
it 'should validate types' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_get_collection' #json api that returns { "ids" : [1, 2, 3, 4] }
expect_json_sizes({ids: 4})
end
end##Making requests
Airborne uses rest_client to make the HTTP request, and supports all HTTP verbs. When creating a test, you can call any of the following methods: get, post, put, patch, delete, head, options. This will then give you access the following properties:
response- The HTTP response returned from the requestheaders- A symbolized hash of the response headers returned by the requestbody- The raw HTTP body returned from the requestjson_body- A symbolized hash representation of the JSON returned by the request
For example:
it 'should validate types' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_get' #json api that returns { "name" : "John Doe" }
name = json_body[:name] #name will equal "John Doe"
body_as_string = body
endWhen calling any of the methods above, you can pass request headers to be used.
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/my_api', {'x-auth-token' => 'my_token'}For requests that require a body (post, put, patch) you can pass the body as a hash as well:
post 'http://example.com/api/v1/my_api', {:name => 'John Doe'}, {'x-auth-token' => 'my_token'}##Testing Rack Applications
If you have an existing Rack application like sinatra or grape you can run Airborne against your application and test without actually having a server running. To do that, just specify your rack application in your Airborne configuration:
Airborne.configure do |config|
config.rack_app = MySinatraApp
endUnder the covers, Airborne uses rack-test to make the requests.
##Rails Applications
If you're testing an API you've written in Rails, Airborne plays along with rspec-rails:
require 'rails_helper'
RSpec.describe HomeController, :type => :controller do
describe "GET index" do
it "returns correct types" do
get :index, :format => 'json' #if your route responds to both html and json
expect_json_types({foo: :string})
end
end
end##API
expect_json_types- Tests the types of the JSON property values returnedexpect_json- Tests the values of the JSON property values returnedexpect_json_keys- Tests the existence of the specified keys in the JSON objectexpect_json_sizes- Tests the sizes of the JSON property values returned, also test if the values are arraysexpect_status- Tests the HTTP status code returnedexpect_header- Tests for a specified header in the responseexpect_header_contains- Partial match test on a specified header
##Path Matching
When calling expect_json_types, expect_json, expect_json_keys or expect_json_sizes you can optionally specify a path as a first parameter.
For example, if our API returns the following JSON:
{
"name": "Alex",
"address": {
"street": "Area 51",
"city": "Roswell",
"state": "NM",
"coordinates": {
"latitude": 33.3872,
"longitude": 104.5281
}
}
}This test would only test the address object:
describe 'path spec' do
it 'should allow simple path and verify only that path' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_path_get'
expect_json_types('address', {street: :string, city: :string, state: :string, coordinates: :object })
#or this
expect_json_types('address', {street: :string, city: :string, state: :string, coordinates: { latitude: :float, longitude: :float } })
end
endOr, to test the existence of specific keys:
it 'should allow nested paths' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_path_get'
expect_json_keys('address', [:street, :city, :state, :coordinates])
endAlternativley, if we only want to test coordinates we can dot into just the coordinates:
it 'should allow nested paths' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/simple_path_get'
expect_json('address.coordinates', {latitude: 33.3872, longitude: 104.5281} )
endWhen dealing with arrays, we can optionally test all (*) or a single (? - any, 0 - index) element of the array:
Given the following JSON:
{
"cars": [
{
"make": "Tesla",
"model": "Model S"
},
{
"make": "Lamborghini",
"model": "Aventador"
}
]
}We can test against just the first car like this:
it 'should index into array and test against specific element' do
get '/array_api'
expect_json('cars.0', {make: "Tesla", model: "Model S"})
endTo test the types of all elements in the array:
it 'should test all elements of the array' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/array_api'
expect_json('cars.?', {make: "Tesla", model: "Model S"}) # tests that one car in array matches the tesla
expect_json_types('cars.*', {make: :string, model: :string}) # tests all cars in array for make and model of type string
end* and ? work for nested arrays as well. Given the following JSON:
{
"cars": [
{
"make": "Tesla",
"model": "Model S",
"owners": [
{
"name": "Bart Simpson"
}
]
},
{
"make": "Lamborghini",
"model": "Aventador",
"owners": [
{
"name": "Peter Griffin"
}
]
}
]
}===
it 'should check all nested arrays for specified elements' do
get 'http://example.com/api/v1/array_with_nested'
expect_json_types('cars.*.owners.*', {name: :string})
end##Dates
JSON has no support for dates, however airborne gives you the ability to check for dates using the following. For expect_json_types you would use it as you would for any of the other types:
it 'should verify date type' do
get '/get_date' #api that returns {createdAt: "Mon Oct 20 2014 16:10:42 GMT-0400 (EDT)"}
expect_json_types({createdAt: :date})
endHowever if you want to check the actual date data with expect_json, you need to call the date function:
it 'should verify correct date value' do
get '/get_date' #api that returns {createdAt: "Mon Oct 20 2014 16:10:42 GMT-0400 (EDT)"}
prev_day = DateTime.new(2014,10,19)
next_day = DateTime.new(2014,10,21)
#within the date callback, you can use regular RSpec expectations that work with dates
expect_json({createdAt: date {|value| expect(value).to be_between(prev_day, next_day)}})
end##Configuration
When setting up Airborne, you can call configure just like you would with rspec:
#config is the RSpec configuration and can be used just like it
Airborne.configure do |config|
config.include MyModule
endAdditionally, you can specify a base_url and default headers to be used on every request (unless overridden in the actual request):
Airborne.configure do |config|
config.base_url = 'http://example.com/api/v1'
config.headers = {'x-auth-token' => 'my_token'}
end
describe 'spec' do
it 'now we no longer need the full url' do
get '/simple_get'
expect_json_types({name: :string})
end
end$ cd your/project
$ rspec spec
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Inspired by frisby.js
The MIT License
Copyright (c) 2014 brooklyndev, sethpollack
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