JUnit 5 support for Pact consumer tests
The library is available on maven central using:
- group-id =
au.com.dius.pact.consumer
- artifact-id =
junit5
- version-id =
4.1.0
To write Pact consumer tests with JUnit 5, you need to add @ExtendWith(PactConsumerTestExt)
to your test class. This
replaces the PactRunner
used for JUnit 4 tests. The rest of the test follows a similar pattern as for JUnit 4 tests.
@ExtendWith(PactConsumerTestExt.class)
class ExampleJavaConsumerPactTest {
For each test (as with JUnit 4), you need to define a method annotated with the @Pact
annotation that returns the
interactions for the test.
@Pact(provider="ArticlesProvider", consumer="test_consumer")
public RequestResponsePact createPact(PactDslWithProvider builder) {
return builder
.given("test state")
.uponReceiving("ExampleJavaConsumerPactTest test interaction")
.path("/articles.json")
.method("GET")
.willRespondWith()
.status(200)
.body("{\"responsetest\": true}")
.toPact();
}
Then the final step is to use the @PactTestFor
annotation to tell the Pact extension how to setup the Pact test. You
can either put this annotation on the test class, or on the test method. For examples see
ArticlesTest and
MultiTest.
The @PactTestFor
annotation allows you to control the mock server in the same way as the JUnit 4 PactProviderRule
. It
allows you to set the hostname to bind to (default is localhost
) and the port (default is to use a random port). You
can also set the Pact specification version to use (default is V3).
@ExtendWith(PactConsumerTestExt.class)
@PactTestFor(providerName = "ArticlesProvider")
public class ExampleJavaConsumerPactTest {
NOTE on the hostname: The mock server runs in the same JVM as the test, so the only valid values for hostname are:
hostname | result |
---|---|
localhost |
binds to the address that localhost points to (normally the loopback adapter) |
127.0.0.1 or ::1 |
binds to the loopback adapter |
host name | binds to the default interface that the host machines DNS name resolves to |
0.0.0.0 or :: |
binds to the all interfaces on the host machine |
If you set the providerName
on the @PactTestFor
annotation, then the first method with a @Pact
annotation with the
same provider name will be used. See ArticlesTest for
an example.
If you set the pactMethod
on the @PactTestFor
annotation, then the method with the provided name will be used (it still
needs a @Pact
annotation). See MultiTest for an example.
You can get the mock server injected into the test method by adding a MockServer
parameter to the test method.
@Test
void test(MockServer mockServer) throws IOException {
HttpResponse httpResponse = Request.Get(mockServer.getUrl() + "/articles.json").execute().returnResponse();
assertThat(httpResponse.getStatusLine().getStatusCode(), is(equalTo(200)));
}
This helps with getting the base URL of the mock server, especially when a random port is used.
By default, pact files are written to target/pacts
(or build/pacts
if you use Gradle), but this can be overwritten with the pact.rootDir
system property.
This property needs to be set on the test JVM as most build tools will fork a new JVM to run the tests.
For Gradle, add this to your build.gradle:
test {
systemProperties['pact.rootDir'] = "$buildDir/custom-pacts-directory"
}
For maven, use the systemPropertyVariables configuration:
<project>
[...]
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-surefire-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.18</version>
<configuration>
<systemPropertyVariables>
<pact.rootDir>some/other/directory</pact.rootDir>
<buildDirectory>${project.build.directory}</buildDirectory>
[...]
</systemPropertyVariables>
</configuration>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
[...]
</project>
For SBT:
fork in Test := true,
javaOptions in Test := Seq("-Dpact.rootDir=some/other/directory")
You can override the directory the pacts are written in a test by adding the @PactDirectory
annotation to the test
class.
By default, when the pact file is written, it will be merged with any existing pact file. To force the file to be
overwritten, set the Java system property pact.writer.overwrite
to true
.
The current implementation does not support tests with multiple providers. This will be added in a later release.
You can have values from the provider state callbacks be injected into most places (paths, query parameters, headers, bodies, etc.). This works by using the V3 spec generators with provider state callbacks that return values. One example of where this would be useful is API calls that require an ID which would be auto-generated by the database on the provider side, so there is no way to know what the ID would be beforehand.
The following DSL methods all you to set an expression that will be parsed with the values returned from the provider states:
For JSON bodies, use valueFromProviderState
.
For headers, use headerFromProviderState
.
For query parameters, use queryParameterFromProviderState
.
For paths, use pathFromProviderState
.
For example, assume that an API call is made to get the details of a user by ID. A provider state can be defined that specifies that the user must be exist, but the ID will be created when the user is created. So we can then define an expression for the path where the ID will be replaced with the value returned from the provider state callback.
.pathFromProviderState("/api/users/${id}", "/api/users/100")
You can also just use the key instead of an expression:
.valueFromProviderState('userId', 'userId', 100) // will look value using userId as the key
You can enable a HTTPS mock server by setting https=true
on the @PactTestFor
annotation. Note that this mock
server will use a self-signed certificate, so any client code will need to accept self-signed certificates.
It is advisable to focus on a single interaction with each test, but you can enable multiple providers in a single test. In this case, a separate mock server will be started for each configured provider.
To enable this:
- Create a method to create the Pact for each provider annotated with the
@Pact(provider = "....")
annotation. The provider name must be set on the annotation. You can create as many of these as required, but each must have a unique provider name. - In the test method, use the
pactMethods
attribute on the@PactTestFor
annotation with the names of all the methods defined in step 1. - Add a MockServer parameter to the test method for each provider configured in step 1 with a
@ForProvider
annotation with the name of the provider. - In your test method, interact with each of the mock servers passed in step 3. Note that if any mock server does not get the requests it expects, it will fail the test.
For an example, see MultiProviderTest.