Pact is the de-facto API contract testing tool. Replace expensive and brittle end-to-end integration tests with fast, reliable and easy to debug unit tests.
Why use Pact? Contract testing with Pact lets you:
Watch our series on the problems with end-to-end integrated tests, and how contract testing can help. |
This readme offers an basic introduction to the library. The full documentation for Pact JS and the rest of the framework is available at https://docs.pact.io/.
- Installation
- Consumer Testing
- Provider Testing
- Event Driven Systems
- GraphQL
- XML
- Examples
- Migration guide
- Troubleshooting
Learn the key Pact JS features in 60 minutes: https://github.com/pact-foundation/pact-workshop-js
- Join our community slack workspace.
- Stack Overflow: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/pact
- Say π on Twitter: @pact_up
npm i -S @pact-foundation/pact@latest
# π now write some tests!
Looking for the previous stable 9.x.x release?
NOTE: Make sure the ignore-scripts
option is disabled, pact uses npm scripts to compile native dependencies and won't function without it.
In order to get better statistics as to who is using Pact, we have an anonymous tracking event that triggers when Pact installs for the first time. The only things we track are your type of OS, and the version information for the package being installed. No PII data is sent as part of this request. You can disable tracking by setting the environment variable PACT_DO_NOT_TRACK=1
:
The main consumer interface are the PactV3
class and MatchersV3
exports of the @pact-foundation/pact
package.
Pact is a consumer-driven contract testing tool, which is a fancy way of saying that the API Consumer
writes a test to set out its assumptions and needs of its API Provider
(s). By unit testing our API client with Pact, it will produce a contract
that we can share to our Provider
to confirm these assumptions and prevent breaking changes.
In this example, we are going to be testing our User API client, responsible for communicating with the UserAPI
over HTTP. It currently has a single method GetUser(id)
that will return a *User
.
Pact tests have a few key properties. We'll demonstrate a common example using the 3A Arrange/Act/Assert
pattern.
import { PactV3, MatchersV3 } from '@pact-foundation/pact';
// Create a 'pact' between the two applications in the integration we are testing
const provider = new PactV3({
dir: path.resolve(process.cwd(), 'pacts'),
consumer: 'MyConsumer',
provider: 'MyProvider',
});
// API Client that will fetch dogs from the Dog API
// This is the target of our Pact test
public getMeDogs = (from: string): AxiosPromise => {
return axios.request({
baseURL: this.url,
params: { from },
headers: { Accept: 'application/json' },
method: 'GET',
url: '/dogs',
});
};
const dogExample = { dog: 1 };
const EXPECTED_BODY = MatchersV3.eachLike(dogExample);
describe('GET /dogs', () => {
it('returns an HTTP 200 and a list of docs', () => {
// Arrange: Setup our expected interactions
//
// We use Pact to mock out the backend API
provider
.given('I have a list of dogs')
.uponReceiving('a request for all dogs with the builder pattern')
.withRequest({
method: 'GET',
path: '/dogs',
query: { from: 'today' },
headers: { Accept: 'application/json' },
})
.willRespondWith({
status: 200,
headers: { 'Content-Type': 'application/json' },
body: EXPECTED_BODY,
});
return provider.executeTest((mockserver) => {
// Act: test our API client behaves correctly
//
// Note we configure the DogService API client dynamically to
// point to the mock service Pact created for us, instead of
// the real one
dogService = new DogService(mockserver.url);
const response = await dogService.getMeDogs('today')
// Assert: check the result
expect(response.data[0]).to.deep.eq(dogExample);
});
});
});
You can see (and run) the full version of this in ./examples/v3/typescript
, as well as other examples in the parent folder.
The main provider interface is the Verifier
class of the @pact-foundation/pact
package.
A provider test takes one or more pact files (contracts) as input, and Pact verifies that your provider adheres to the contract. In the simplest case, you can verify a provider as per below using a local pact file, although in practice you would usually use a Pact Broker to manage your contracts and CI/CD workflow.
const { Verifier } = require('@pact-foundation/pact');
// (1) Start provider locally. Be sure to stub out any external dependencies
server.listen(8081, () => {
importData();
console.log('Animal Profile Service listening on http://localhost:8081');
});
// (2) Verify that the provider meets all consumer expectations
describe('Pact Verification', () => {
it('validates the expectations of Matching Service', () => {
let token = 'INVALID TOKEN';
return new Verifier({
providerBaseUrl: 'http://localhost:8081', // <- location of your running provider
pactUrls: [ path.resolve(process.cwd(), "./pacts/SomeConsumer-SomeProvider.json") ],
})
.verifyProvider()
.then(() => {
console.log('Pact Verification Complete!');
});
});
});
It's best to run Pact verification tests as part of your unit testing suite, so you can readily access stubbing, IaC and other helpful tools.
Specification Compatibility
Version | Stable | Spec Compatibility | Install |
---|---|---|---|
10.x.x | Release Candidate | 2, 3 | See installation |
9.x.x | Yes | 2, 3* | 9xx |
* v3 support is limited to the subset of functionality required to enable language inter-operable Message support.
The roadmap for Pact and Pact JS is outlined on our main website.
See CONTRIBUTING.