http://github.com/appendto/jquery-mockjax/
jQuery Mockjax provides request/response mocking for ajax requests with jQuery and provides all standard behaviors in the request/response flow.
You may report any issues [https://github.com/appendto/jquery-mockjax/issues](in the github issue tracking).
The current version of Mockjax has been tested with jQuery 1.3.2 through 1.7.0 with QUnit unit tests residing in /test.
Internet Explorer 6-9, Firefox 3.6 and stable, Safari 5.x, Chrome stable, Opera 9.6-latest.
Copyright (c) 2010 appendTo LLC. Dual licensed under the MIT or GPL licenses. http://appendto.com/open-source-licenses
Most backend developers are familiar with the concepts of mocking objects or stubbing in methods for unit testing. For those not familiar with mocking, it’s the simulation of an interface or API for testing or integration development purposes. Mocking with front-end development though is still quite new.
Much of the development that appendTo does focuses on front-end development tied to RESTFUL web services. As such we’re able to spec out the service contract and data format at the beginning of a project and develop the front-end interface against mock data while the back end team builds the production services.
The plugin was originally developed this plugin for appendTo back in March 2010 and the team has been using it in all of its projects since.
Mockjax consists of two methods, one to set up mocks, one to remove them. You'll find plenty examples below. If you're looking for a specific option, check this list:
$.mockjax(options)
- Sets up a mockjax handler.
options
: An object literal which defines the settings to use for the mocked request.url
: A string or regular expression specifying the url of the request that the data should be mocked for. If the url is a string and contains an asterisk ( * ), it is treated as a wildcard, by translating to a regular expression, replacing the asterisk with.+
.data
: In addition to the URL, match parameters.type
: Specify what HTTP method to match, usually GET or POST. Case-insensitive, soget
andpost
also work.headers
: An object literal whos keys will be simulated as additional headers returned from the server for the request.status
: An integer that specifies a valid server response code. This simulates a server response code.responseTime
: An integer that specifies a simulated network and server latency (in milliseconds).isTimeout
: A boolean value that determines whether or not the mock will force a timeout on the request.contentType
: A string which specifies the content type for the response.response
:function(settings) {}
, A function that allows for the dynamic setting of responseText/responseXML upon each request.responseText
: A string specifying the mocked text, or a mocked object literal, for the request.responseXML
: A string specifying the mocked XML for the request.proxy
: A string specifying a path to a file, from which the contents will be returned for the request.lastModified
: A date string specifying the mocked last-modified time for the request. This is used by$.ajax
to determine if the requested data is new since the last request.etag
: A string specifying a unique identifier referencing a specific version of the requested data. This is used by$.ajax
to determine if the requested data is new since the last request. (see HTTP_ETag)
$.mockjaxClear()
- Removes all mockjax handlers.
$.mockjaxClear(id)
- Remove a single mockjax handler.
id
is the string returned from$.mockjax
.
Our first example will be for a simple REST service for a fortune app
with the REST endpoint being /restful/fortune
which returns the
following JSON message:
{
"status": "success",
"fortune" : "Are you a turtle?"
}
To pull the fortune into our page, we’d use the following HTML & jQuery code:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<head>
<title>Fortune App</title>
<script src="http://code.jquery.com/jquery-1.4.2.min.js"></script>
</head>
<body>
<div id="fortune"></div>
</body>
</html>
$.getJSON('/restful/fortune', function(response) {
if ( response.status == 'success') {
$('#fortune').html( 'Your fortune is: ' + response.fortune );
} else {
$('#fortune').html( 'Things do not look good, no fortune was told' );
}
});
At this point if we were to run this code it would fail since the REST service has yet to be implemented. This is where the benefit of the Mockjax Plugin starts to pay off. The first step in using Mockjax is to include the Plugin, just add a regular script tag.
Once you have that included, you can start intercepting Ajax requests and mocking the responses. So let’s mock out the service by including the following code:
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/fortune',
responseTime: 750,
responseText: {
status: 'success',
fortune: 'Are you a turtle?'
}
});
Defining a JOSN string inline requires a JSON.stringify
method to be
available. For some browsers you may need to include
json2.js, which is included in the lib
folder
If you plan on mocking xml responses, you may also have to include
jquery.xmldom.js
, also in the lib
folder.
What the plugin does at this point is replace the $.ajax
method with a
wrapper that transparently checks the URL being requested. If the URL
matches one defined by $.mockjax()
, the plugin intercepts the request
and sets up a mock XMLHttpRequest
object before executing the
jQuery.ajax
handler. Otherwise, the request is handed back to the
native $.ajax
method for normal execution. One benefit in this
implementation detail is by simulating the XMLHttpRequest
object, the
plugin continues to make use of jQuery’s native ajax handling.
As you write code to mock responses, there’s great value in there are no modifications required to production code. The mocks can be transparently inserted. This provides easy integration into most frameworks by including the plugin and mock definitions through your build framework. It’s also possible to include it at run time by listening for a flag query string flag and injecting the plugin and definitions.
Now let’s look at the various approaches to defining mocks as offered by the plugin. The sections below feature an extensive overview of the flexibility in Mockjax and creating responses.
jQuery is able to handle and parse Text
, HTML
, JSON
, JSONP
,
Script
and XML
data formats and Mockjax is able to mock any of those
formats. Two things to note, depending upon how you Mock out JSON
and
JSONP
you may need to include json2.js for
the JSON.stringify()
method. Additionally if you mock XML inline,
you’ll need to include the
xmlDOM
plugin that
transforms a string of XML into a DOM object. If you use the proxy
approach outlined below, there’s no need to include either the JSON or
XMLDOM plugins.
The first thing you need to do when mocking a request is define the URL end-point to intercept and mock. As with our example above this can be a simple string:
$.mockjax({
url: '/url/to/rest-service'
});
or contain a *
as a wildcard:
$.mockjax({
// Matches /data/quote, /data/tweet etc.
url: '/data/*'
});
or a full regular expression:
$.mockjax({
// Matches /data/quote, /data/tweet but not /data/quotes
url: /^\/data\/(quote|tweet)$/i
});
You can also use the data option to match against in addition to url:
$.mockjax({
url: '/rest',
data: { action: "foo" },
responseText: { bar: "hello world" }
});
$.mockjax({
url: '/rest',
data: { action: "bar" },
responseText: { bar: "hello world 2" }
});
The second step is to define the type of response. The two main
properties you’ll be dealing with are either responseText
or
responseXML
. These properties mirror the native XMLHttpRequest
object properties that are set during a live response. There are three
different patterns for specifying the responses: Inline, Proxy, and
Callback.
A simple text response would be:
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/api',
responseText: 'A text response from the server'
});
A simple XML response would be:
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/api',
// Need to include the xmlDOM plugin to have this translated into a DOM
responseXML: '<document><quote>Hello world!</quote></document>'
});
As you can quickly see, if you have a significant amount of data being mocked this becomes unwieldy. So that brings us to the next pattern of proxying.
In this example below, the Mockjax plugin will intercept requests for
/restful/api
and redirect them to /mocks/data.json
.
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/api',
proxy: '/mocks/data.json'
});
In the final response pattern, we can define a callback on the
response
property and have it set responseText
or responseXML
as
needed.
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/api',
response: function() {
this.responseText = 'Hello world!';
}
});
At this point we’ve looked at a series of basic mocking techniques with Mockjax and will now unpack some of the additional functionality contained in the plugin.
Simulating network and server latency for a mock is as simple as adding
a responseTime
property to your mock definition:
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/api',
// Simulate a network latency of 750ms
responseTime: 750,
responseText: 'A text response from the server'
});
It’s also possible to simulate response statuses other than 200 (default
for Mockjax) by simply adding a status
property.
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/api',
// Server 500 error occurred
status: 500,
responseTime: 750,
responseText: 'A text response from the server'
});
You can set the content type to associate with the mock response, in the example below, we’re setting a json content type.
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/api',
contentType: 'text/json',
responseText: {
hello: 'World!'
}
});
Additional HTTP Response Headers may be provided by setting a key in the headers object literal:
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/api',
contentType: 'text/json',
responseText: {
hello: 'World!'
},
headers: {
etag: 'xyz123'
}
});
Because of the way Mockjax was implemented, it takes advantage of
jQuery’s internal timeout handling for requests. But if you’d like to
force a timeout for a request you can do so by setting the isTimeout
property to true:
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/api',
isTimeout: true
});
In some situations, all of your REST calls are based upon a URL schema.
Mockjax has the ability for you to specify a callback function that is
handed the $.ajax
request settings. The callback function may then
either return false to allow the request to be handled natively, or
return an object literal with relevant Mockjax parameters set. Below is
an example that rewrites all Ajax requests to proxy to static mocks:
$.mockjax(function(settings) {
// settings.url == '/restful/<service>'
var service = settings.url.match(/\/restful\/(.*)$/);
if ( service ) {
return {
proxy: '/mocks/' + service[1] + '.json'
};
}
return;
});
It’s also possible to dynamically generate the response text upon each
request by implementing a callback function on the response
parameter:
$.mockjax({
url: '/restful/webservice',
dataType: 'json',
response: function(settings) {
this.responseText = { say: 'random ' + Math.random() };
}
});
The example above mocks a json
response. You can also mock xml
:
$.mockjax({
url: '/some/xml',
dataType: 'xml',
responseXML: '<document><say>Hello world XML</say></document>'
});
And html
:
$.mockjax({
url: '/some/webservice',
dataType: 'html',
responseText: '<div>Hello there</div>'
});
It’s also possible to define the global defaults for all Mockjax
requests by overwriting the $.mockjaxSettings
object. By default the
settings are as follows:
$.mockjaxSettings = {
status: 200,
responseTime: 500,
isTimeout: false,
contentType: 'text/plain',
response: '',
responseText: '',
responseXML: '',
proxy: '',
lastModified: null,
etag: ''
};
To overwrite a particular settings such as the default content-type, you would do the following:
$.mockjaxSettings.contentType = 'text/json';
Remove all mockjax handlers:
$.mockjaxClear();
var id = $.mockjax({
...
});
$.mockjaxClear(id);