Keine Beschreibung

Nikita Chursin a70b78ef62 added a link to the blog post vor 4 Jahren
app 418567f310 response headers vor 4 Jahren
config a43fe96908 initial commit + trigger framework WIP vor 4 Jahren
scripts a43fe96908 initial commit + trigger framework WIP vor 4 Jahren
.forceignore 72d2143e8f forceignore profiles vor 4 Jahren
.gitignore f494ee8618 .certificates to gitignore vor 4 Jahren
.prettierignore a43fe96908 initial commit + trigger framework WIP vor 4 Jahren
.prettierrc a43fe96908 initial commit + trigger framework WIP vor 4 Jahren
LICENSE 3933be1f30 updated license and readme vor 4 Jahren
README.md a70b78ef62 added a link to the blog post vor 4 Jahren
sfdx-project.json 92b719acc3 expected code by both method and endpoint vor 4 Jahren

README.md

SalesforceCraft Http Mock Server

<img alt="Deploy to Salesforce"

   src="https://raw.githubusercontent.com/afawcett/githubsfdeploy/master/deploy.png">

Mock server is an implementation of HttpCalloutMock which can help you make your mocks more organized. I wrote a post to compare the MockServer approach with HttpCalloutMock implementation. You can take a look at it to get the idea of how to use it or you can follow the docs below.

How to use it

Creating server

Server constructor takes no params. Also, you can set it as a mock right away:

// Instantiating a server
sfcraft_MockServer server = new sfcraft_MockServer();
// Setting server as mock
server.setAsMock();

Then you need to add resources to endpoints (see below on how to create resources):

server.addEndpoint('http://example.com', rootResource);
server.addEndpoint('http://example.com/users', usersResource);

By default they all will respond with provided 200 responses. You need explicitly ask server to respond differently:

server.getServerResource('http://example.com').respondWith(400);

Resource attached to the endpoint must have the asked for status code. Otherwise you'll get a MockServerException.

You can also chain response codes:

server.getServerResource('http://example.com')
    .respondOnceWith(400)
    .respondOnceWith(500)
    .respondWith(200);

You can omit .respondWith(200). The resource will fallback to code 200 in case it runs out of overrides.

Creating a resource

First instantiate a new API resource

sfcraft_MockAPIResource resource = new sfcraft_MockAPIResource();

Then you can add responses to it. To add a response you need to provide method, code, and response body.

// Successful POST response
resource.setResponse(
            'POST',
            200,
            successResponseObject
        );

// Failed GET response
resource.setResponse(
            'POST',
            405,
            failResponseObject
        );

You can provide either response objects to set response:

    public class DemoResponse implements sfcraft_MockableHttpResponse {
        public String toResponseBody() {
            return JSON.serialize(this);
        }
    }

    ...

    resource.setResponse(
        'POST',
        200,
        new DemoResponse()
    );

or plain strings

resource.setResponse(
        'POST',
        200,
        'status: ok'
    );

You can also specify headers for responses if you have any logic based on those:

resource.setResponse(
        'POST',
        200,
        'status: ok',
        new Map<String, String> {
            'Content-Type' => 'plain/text'
        }
    );

Asserting requests

You can validate that request is built correctly. This might be helpful to test headers, e.g. Authorization, Content-Type, etc. To preform assertiong on the request you need to implement a sfcraft_RequestAsserter interface. Here's a sample of an assertion that checks Content-Type header.

private class ContentTypeAssertion implements sfcraft_RequestAsserter {
    private String expectedContentType;
    public ContentTypeAssertion(String expectedContentType) {
        this.expectedContentType = expectedContentType;
    }

    public void assertRequest(HttpRequest req) {
        String contentType = req.getHeader('Content-Type');
        System.assert(String.isNotBlank(), 'Content-Type header is not set')
        System.assertEquals(this.expectedContentType, contentType, 'Content-Type is different from expected');
    }
}

Then you need to add these assertions to a resource:

sfcraft_MockAPIResource resource = new sfcraft_MockAPIResource();
resource.addAssertion(new ContentTypeJsonAssertion('application/json'));

You can add as many assertions as you want. They are executed in the order you add them.

sfcraft_MockAPIResource resource = new sfcraft_MockAPIResource();
resource.addAssertion(new AuthorizationAssertion());
resource.addAssertion(new ContentTypeJsonAssertion('application/json'));
resource.addAssertion(new BodyParamsAssertion());
resource.addAssertion(new SomeOtherAssertion());

Simple 200 response test

@isTest
private class BasicUsage {
    @isTest
    private static void howToUseMockServer() {
        // Create resourse. Resource is basically an endpoint on your real server
        sfcraft_MockAPIResource resource = new sfcraft_MockAPIResource();
        // Setting up a success response.
        DemoResponse responseObject = new DemoResponse();
        resource.setResponse(
            'POST',
            200,
            responseObject
        );
        
        // Instantiating a server
        sfcraft_MockServer server = new sfcraft_MockServer();
        // Setting server as mock
        server.setAsMock();
        // Adding resource to server
        server.addEndpoint('http://example.com', resource);

        Test.startTest();
            HttpRequest req = new HttpRequest();
            req.setEndpoint('http://example.com?id=1234');
            req.setMethod('GET');
            HttpResponse response = new Http().send(req);
        Test.stopTest();

        // By default server always returns 200
        System.assertEquals(200, response.getStatusCode());
        System.assertEquals(responseObject.toResponseBody(), response.getBody());
    }

    public class DemoResponse implements sfcraft_MockableHttpResponse {
        public String status;
        public DemoResponse(String status) {
            this.status = status;
        }

        public String toResponseBody() {
            return JSON.serialize(this);
        }
    }
}

For more usage examples take a look at the test classes. The lib is developed via TDD, which makes tests behave as specs.

What's inside

The mock server framework consists of the following main parts:

  1. sfcraft_MockServer class - the actual mock server.
  2. sfcraft_MockAPIResource class - a class which actually represents a single resource that has handles responses. Not attached to a specific endpoint.
  3. sfcraft_ServerEndpointResource class - a class which actually represents a connection between API resource and endpoint. Dictates which code should a resource respond with. So you can have a single resource with the same responses, but different behavoiur in terms of endpoint and response codes.
  4. sfcraft_RequestAsserter interface - implement it and add to a resource to run assertion "on server side".
  5. sfcraft_MockableHttpResponse interface - implement it by class that represents you server response. E.g. you parse body into a class ServerResponseBody. Then you need to implement the sfcraft_MockableHttpResponse by it to be teach the sfcraft_MockServer to respond with it.
  6. sfcraft_MockServerException - exception that is thrown by sfcraft_MockServer in case something went wrong, e.g. misconfiguration.

All classes except Exception are marked as isTest. It is only used once actually to allow MockServer construct sfcraft_ServerEndpointResource without exposing its constructor. Just not to encourage peopl to construct those themselves. They are of no use outside the server as far as I'm concerned