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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.
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.
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'
}
);
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());
@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.
The mock server framework consists of the following main parts:
sfcraft_MockServer
class - the actual mock server.sfcraft_MockAPIResource
class - a class which actually represents a single resource that has handles responses. Not attached to a specific endpoint.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.sfcraft_RequestAsserter
interface - implement it and add to a resource to run assertion "on server side".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.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