0.1.2 • Published 8 years ago

theon-expect v0.1.2

Weekly downloads
2
License
MIT
Repository
github
Last release
8 years ago

theon-expect Build Status npm version js-standard-style

HTTP assertions made easy for theon based API clients. Inspired by supertest.

Motivation

The motivation with this module is to provide a high-level abstraction for testing HTTP layers, while still allowing you to drop down to the lower-level API provided by theon.

Features

  • Easy to use from any theon based API client
  • Dead simple declarative API
  • HTTP status code expectation
  • HTTP headers expections
  • RegExp based matching for body and headers
  • Response bodies comparison supporting deep assertions
  • Custom function expectations

Installation

npm install theon-expect --save-dev

Once installed it can now be referenced by simply calling: require('theon-expect')(require('theon'))

Example

const expect = require('theon-expect')
const theon = expect(require('theon'))

// Declare your API
const api = theon('http://api.server.com')
  .collection('/users')
  .set('Version', '1.0')
  .resource('getById')
  .path('/:id')
  .render()

// Consume your API
api.users
  .getById()
  .param('id', '1234')
  .expect(200)
  .expect('Content-Type', /json/i)
  .expect({ id: 1234, username: 'foo' })
  .expect(res => {
    if (res.status > 300) {
      throw new Error('invalid status code')
    }
  })
  .end((err, res) => {
    if (err) {
      return console.error('Expect error:', err)
    }
  })

API

You may use any theon methods.

.expect(status, fn)

Assert response status code.

.expect(status, body, fn)

Assert response status code and body.

.expect(body, fn)

Assert response body text with a string, regular expression, or parsed body object.

.expect(field, value, fn)

Assert header field value with a string or regular expression.

.expect(function(res) {})

Pass a custom assertion function. It'll be given the response object to check. If the response is ok, it should return falsy, most commonly by not returning anything. If the check fails, throw an error or return a truthy value like a string that'll be turned into an error.

Here the string or error throwing options are both demonstrated:

myApi.users
  .getById('/')
  .expect(hasPreviousAndNextKeys)
  .end(done)

function hasPreviousAndNextKeys (res) {
  if (!('next' in res.body)) return "missing next key"
  if (!('prev' in res.body)) throw new Error("missing prev key")
}

.end(fn)

Perform the request and invoke fn(err, res).

License

MIT