Snapshot-based stub/mocking of APIs
Small command line tool that allows you to take "snapshots" of any given API endpoint and store the response. Using the start
command will spawn a server that will serve all previously stored endpoints.
Heavily inspired by Jest Snapshot testing
npm install -g snapstub
Make sure you"re in the desired folder to host your api mock files.
⬇️ Creates a new api stub:
snapstub add http://example.com/api/foo/bar
...create as many snapshots as you want.
🚀 Starts your mock server:
snapstub start
✨ Your endpoint will be locally available at: http://localhost:8059/api/foo/bar
If you want to save one or many different http methods, use the --method
option:
snapstub add http://example.com/api/foo/bar --method=get,post,put
If you need to pass a custom header along with your request, let"s say one is needed for a auth token or any other reason, use the --header
option:
snapstub add http://example.com/api/user/42 --header "X-Token: 1234"
You can set as many custom headers as you need:
snapstub add http://example.com/api/login --header "X-User: foo" --header "X-Token: bar"
In order to save or add a html or plain text endpoint a --nojson
flag must be specified in order to bypass json encode/decode:
snapstub add http://example.com/html --nojson
Usually a POST/PUT method will also require data to be sent along with the request, you can do so by using the --data
option:
snapstub add http://example.com/api/user/new --data "name=Foo"
Content-Type headers will be set automatically but if you specify one (using --header
option) that will take precedence.
It also accepts json data (Content-Type will be set to application/json
automatically):
snapstub add http://example.com/api/user/new --data "{ "name": "Lorem" }"
If no method is defined it defaults to POST, if you want to use PUT instead just use the --method
option:
snapstub add http://example.com/api/user/update --data "name=Bar" --method=put
You can also point the --data
option to a file in order to use the contents of that file as a payload. This is a good way to maintain repeatable calls to POST/PUT routes. Given that there is a payload.json
file in the current working directory:
snapstub add http://example.com/api/user/add --data ./payload.json
Headers will be automatically added and the content will be exactly as read from the file.
This is a very useful workflow that allows you to combine Chrome"s Copy as cURL web dev tools option with the ability to store a snapstub route.
curl http://example.com/api/foo | snapstub save /api/foo
or you can just save any arbitrary data:
cat foo.json | snapstub save /api/foo # similar to $ cp foo.json __mocks__/api/foo
or even:
echo "{"data":true}" | snapstub save /api/foo
snapstub provides out of the box support to deterministic mocking by using query-string, headers, cookies thanks to request-hash. Deterministic results for those cases will create a file name suffixed by a unique hash which snapstub uses in order to serve the correct value when using the snapstub start
server.
Deterministic results for query strings in the urls is active by default, for headers or cookies however you"ll need to configure which values you"ll want to use in order to create the unique hash. It can be set using the --hashHeaders
or --hashCookies
options:
snapstub add http://example.com/api/user/42 --header "X-Token: 1234" --hashHeaders=x-token
✔ Successfully added: __mocks__/api/user/42/get-491db12454c89a51646710b06bc6c51f9d45.json
Both --hashHeaders
and --hashCookies
accepts a comma-separated list of keys.
The algorithm used to create the unique hash can also be customized using the --hashAlgorithm
option.
Using custom port and/or folder name:
export SNAPSTUB_FOLDER_NAME=my-mock-folder/
export SNAPSTUB_PORT=9000
snapstub start
By default snapshots will be saved in a __mocks__
folder that resolves from the current working directory, so make sure you run the commands from the correct project folder you desire.
A JavaScript programmatic api is available if you"re using node.js:
const snapstub = require("snapstub");
// starts the mock server
snapstub.start({
verbose: true,
mockFolderName: "__mocks__",
port: 8080
});
The following methods are available, please note all values used are just example values meant to ilustrate a common usage:
snapstub.add({
url: "http://example.com/api/v1/data",
addOptions: {
headers: {
"content-type": "application/json",
"Cookie": "FOO=bar;"
},
body: "lorem=ipsum",
method: "post"
},
mockFolderName: "__mocks__"
});
snapstub.save({
url: "/api/v1/data",
saveOptions: {
data: { foo: "bar" },
headers: { "X-Foo": "bar" },
hashAlgorithm: "sha256",
hashHeaders: ["x-foo"],
hashCookies: [],
method: "post",
nojson: false
},
mockFolderName: "__mocks__"
});
snapstub.start({
hashAlgorithm: "sha256",
hashHeaders: ["x-foo"],
hashCookies: [],
verbose: true,
mockFolderName: "__mocks__",
port: 8080
});
snapstub.stop();
- Logo: Camera by Simon Child from the Noun Project
- snapstub wouldn"t be possible without stubborn-server - it"s a very flexible mock server based on static files, if you have the need to handle more complex scenarios (handling route params, dynamic responses, etc) go take a look at it.
Please do! This is an open source project. If you would like a feature, open a pull request. If you have a bug or want to discuss something, open an issue.