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Tools for creating and verifying consumer driven contracts using the Pact framework.

Project description

pactman

Python version of Pact, including mocking, generation and verification of Pacts. Enables consumer driven contract testing, providing a mock service and DSL for the consumer project, and interaction playback and verification for the service provider project. Currently supports versions 1.1, 2 and 3 of the Pact specification.

For more information about what Pact is, and how it can help you test your code more efficiently, check out the Pact documentation.

Contains code originally from the pact-python project.

How to use pactman

Installation

pip install pactman

Writing a Pact

Creating a complete contract is a two step process:

  1. Create a test on the consumer side that declares the expectations it has of the provider
  2. Create a provider state that allows the contract to pass when replayed against the provider

Writing the Consumer Test

If we have a method that communicates with one of our external services, which we'll call Provider, and our product, Consumer is hitting an endpoint on Provider at /users/<user> to get information about a particular user.

If the code to fetch a user looked like this:

import requests

def get_user(user_name):
    response = requests.get(f'http://service.example/users/{user_name}')
    return response.json()

Then Consumer's contract test might look something like this:

import atexit
import unittest

from pactman import Consumer, Provider


pact = Consumer('Consumer').has_pact_with(Provider('Provider'))
pact.start_mocking()
atexit.register(pact.stop_mocking)


class GetUserInfoContract(unittest.TestCase):
  def test_get_user(self):
    expected = {
      'username': 'UserA',
      'id': 123,
      'groups': ['Editors']
    }

    pact.given(
        'UserA exists and is not an administrator'
    ).upon_receiving(
        'a request for UserA'
    ).with_request(
        'GET', '/users/UserA'
    ) .will_respond_with(200, body=expected)

    with pact:
      result = get_user('UserA')

    self.assertEqual(result, expected)

This does a few important things:

  • Defines the Consumer and Provider objects that describe our product and our service under test
  • Uses given to define the setup criteria for the Provider UserA exists and is not an administrator
  • Defines what the request that is expected to be made by the consumer will contain
  • Defines how the server is expected to respond

Using the Pact object as a context manager, we call our method under test which will then communicate with the Pact mock service. The mock service will respond with the items we defined, allowing us to assert that the method processed the response and returned the expected value. If you want more control over when the mock service is configured and the interactions verified, use the setup and verify methods, respectively:

    pact.given(
        'UserA exists and is not an administrator'
    ).upon_receiving(
        'a request for UserA'
    ).with_request(
        'GET', '/users/UserA'
    ) .will_respond_with(200, body=expected)

    pact.setup()
    try:
        # Some additional steps before running the code under test
        result = get_user('UserA')
        # Some additional steps before verifying all interactions have occurred
    finally:
        pact.verify()

Requests

When defining the expected HTTP request that your code is expected to make you can specify the method, path, body, headers, and query:

pact.with_request(
    method='GET',
    path='/api/v1/my-resources/',
    query={'search': 'example'}
)

query is used to specify URL query parameters, so the above example expects a request made to /api/v1/my-resources/?search=example.

pact.with_request(
    method='POST',
    path='/api/v1/my-resources/123',
    body={'user_ids': [1, 2, 3]},
    headers={'Content-Type': 'application/json'},
)

You can define exact values for your expected request like the examples above, or you can use the matchers defined later to assist in handling values that are variable.

Some important has_pact_with options

The has_pact_with(provider...) call has quite a few options documented in its API, but a couple are worth mentioning in particular:

version declares the pact specification version that the provider supports. This defaults to "2.0.0", but "3.0.0" is also acceptable if your provider supports Pact specification version 3:

from pactman import Consumer, Provider
pact = Consumer('Consumer').has_pact_with(Provider('Provider'), version='3.0.0')

use_mocking_server defaults to False and controls the mocking method used by pactman. The default is to patch urllib3, which is the library underpinning requests and is also used by some other projects. If you are using a different library to make your HTTP requests which does not use urllib3 underneath then you will need to set the use_mocking_server argument to True. This causes pactman to run an actual HTTP server to mock the requests (the server is listening on pact.uri - use that to redirect your HTTP requests to the mock server.) You may also set the USE_MOCKING_SERVER environment variable to "yes" to force your entire suite to use the server approach.

from pactman import Consumer, Provider
pact = Consumer('Consumer').has_pact_with(Provider('Provider'), use_mocking_server=True)

Expecting Variable Content

The above test works great if that user information is always static, but what happens if the user has a last updated field that is set to the current time every time the object is modified? To handle variable data and make your tests more robust, there are 3 helpful matchers:

Term(matcher, generate)

Asserts the value should match the given regular expression. You could use this to expect a timestamp with a particular format in the request or response where you know you need a particular format, but are unconcerned about the exact date:

from pactman import Term
...
body = {
    'username': 'UserA',
    'last_modified': Term('\d+-\d+-\d+T\d+:\d+:\d+', '2016-12-15T20:16:01')
}

(pact
 .given('UserA exists and is not an administrator')
 .upon_receiving('a request for UserA')
 .with_request('get', '/users/UserA/info')
 .will_respond_with(200, body=body))

When you run the tests for the consumer, the mock service will return the value you provided as generate, in this case 2016-12-15T20:16:01. When the contract is verified on the provider, the regex will be used to search the response from the real provider service and the test will be considered successful if the regex finds a match in the response.

Like(matcher)

Asserts the element's type matches the matcher. For example:

from pactman import Like
Like(123)  # Matches if the value is an integer
Like('hello world')  # Matches if the value is a string
Like(3.14)  # Matches if the value is a float

The argument supplied to Like will be what the mock service responds with.

When a dictionary is used as an argument for Like, all the child objects (and their child objects etc.) will be matched according to their types, unless you use a more specific matcher like a Term.

from pactman import Like, Term
Like({
    'username': Term('[a-zA-Z]+', 'username'),
    'id': 123, # integer
    'confirmed': False, # boolean
    'address': { # dictionary
        'street': '200 Bourke St' # string
    }
})

EachLike(matcher, minimum=1)

Asserts the value is an array type that consists of elements like the one passed in. It can be used to assert simple arrays:

from pactman import EachLike
EachLike(1)  # All items are integers
EachLike('hello')  # All items are strings

Or other matchers can be nested inside to assert more complex objects:

from pactman import EachLike, Term
EachLike({
    'username': Term('[a-zA-Z]+', 'username'),
    'id': 123,
    'groups': EachLike('administrators')
})

Note, you do not need to specify everything that will be returned from the Provider in a JSON response, any extra data that is received will be ignored and the tests will still pass.

For more information see Matching

Verifying Pacts Against a Service

Run pact-verifier -h to see the options available. To run all pacts registered to a provider in a Pact Broker:

pact-verifier -b http://pact-broker.example/ <provider name> <provider url> <provider setup url>

You may also specify the broker URL in the environment variable PACT_BROKER_URL.

You can pass in a local pact file with -l, this will verify the service against the local file instead of the broker:

pact-verifier -l /tmp/localpact.json <provider name> <provider url> <provider setup url>

Provider States

In many cases, your contracts will need very specific data to exist on the provider to pass successfully. If you are fetching a user profile, that user needs to exist, if querying a list of records, one or more records needs to exist. To support decoupling the testing of the consumer and provider, Pact offers the idea of provider states to communicate from the consumer what data should exist on the provider.

When setting up the testing of a provider you will also need to setup the management of these provider states. The Pact verifier does this by making additional HTTP requests to the <provider setup url> you provide. This URL could be on the provider application or a separate one. Some strategies for managing state include:

  • Having endpoints in your application that are not active in production that create and delete your datastore state
  • A separate application that has access to the same datastore to create and delete, like a separate App Engine module or Docker container pointing to the same datastore
  • A standalone application that can start and stop the other server with different datastore states

For more information about provider states, refer to the Pact documentation on Provider States.

Development

Please read CONTRIBUTING.md

To setup a development environment:

  1. Clone the repository https://github.com/reecetech/pactman and invoke git submodule update --init
  2. Install Python 3.6 from source or using a tool like pyenv
  3. Its recommended to create a Python virtualenv for the project

To run tests, use: tox

To package the application, run: python setup.py sdist

This creates a dist/pactman-N.N.N.tar.gz file, where the Ns are the current version. From there you can use pip to install it: pip install ./dist/pactman-N.N.N.tar.gz

Release History

1.0.6

  • Corrected mis-named command-line option.

1.0.5

  • Corrected some packaging issues

1.0.4

  • Initial release of pactman, including ReeceTech's pact-verifier version 3.17 and pact-python version 0.17.0

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