Pactify is very simple contract testing tool for .NET Core. It was inspired by PACT.io.
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Install-Package Pactify -Version 1.1.0
dotnet add package Pactify --version 1.1.0
Start with creating a simple unit test on consumer side:
[Fact]
public async Task Consumer_Should_Create_A_Pact()
{
var options = new PactDefinitionOptions
{
IgnoreContractValues = true,
IgnoreCasing = true
};
await PactMaker
.Create(options)
.Between("orders", "parcels")
.WithHttpInteraction(cb => cb
.Given("There is a parcel with some id")
.UponReceiving("A GET Request to retrieve the parcel")
.With( request => request
.WithMethod(HttpMethod.Get)
.WithPath("api/parcels/1"))
.WillRespondWith(response => response
.WithHeader("Content-Type", "application/json")
.WithStatusCode(HttpStatusCode.OK)
.WithBody<ParcelReadModel>()))
.PublishedAsFile("../../../../../pacts")
.MakeAsync();
}
In the above example the result JSON file will be saved in the specified directory. Alternatively you can publish the JSON via HTTP as follows:
.PublishViaHttp("http://myapi.com/pacts", HttpMethod.Post, apiKey = "myApiKey");
The above unit test will create a PACT JSON between orders and parcels services:
{
"consumer": {
"name": "orders"
},
"provider": {
"name": "parcels"
},
"interactions": [
{
"provider_state": "There is a parcel with some id",
"description": "A GET Request to retrieve the parcel",
"request": {
"method": "GET",
"path": "api/parcels/1"
},
"response": {
"headers": {
"content-Type": "application/json"
},
"status": 200,
"body": {
"id": "00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000",
"name": null,
"price": 0.0
}
}
}
],
"options": {
"ignoreCasing": true,
"ignoreContractValues": true
}
}
Because the whole idea assumes that consumer is always right this part of the testing should always pass!
Having that, you can move to the verifying the pact on the provider's side:
[Fact]
public async Task Provider_Should_Meet_Consumers_Expectations()
{
await PactVerifier
.CreateFor<Startup>()
.Between("orders", "parcels")
.RetrieveFromFile("../../../../../pacts")
.VerifyAsync();
}
Notice that PactVerifier
was created using Startup
class. Thanks to that your provider's API will be ran in memory using Microsoft.AspNetCore.TestHost
package with proxy HttpClient
object. If for some reason this is not a right solution, you can simply pass your custom HttpClient
instance instead:
PactVerifier.Create(myHttpClient)
...
If the pacts verification passes the above test should pass. Otherwise proper error messages are going to be displayed to you.
Pactify integrates easily with PACT Broker which allows you to manage and read (via UI) your pacts on external HTTP server running inside Docker container. First, clone the broker's repository:
git clone https://github.com/DiUS/pact_broker-docker.git
Navigate to the repository and run the docker-compose.yml
file using the following command:
docker-compose up -d
This will run all the broker's necessary infrastructure in the detached mode. The UI should be available at localhost:9292
:
Change your code to publish and receive the pact from the broker:
[Fact]
public async Task Consumer_Should_Create_APact()
{
var options = new PactDefinitionOptions
{
IgnoreContractValues = true,
IgnoreCasing = true
};
await PactMaker
.Create(options)
.Between("orders", "parcels")
.WithHttpInteraction(cb => cb
.Given("There is a parcel with some id")
.UponReceiving("A GET Request to retrieve the parcel")
.With( request => request
.WithMethod(HttpMethod.Get)
.WithPath("api/parcels/1"))
.WillRespondWith(response => response
.WithHeader("Content-Type", "application/json")
.WithStatusCode(HttpStatusCode.OK)
.WithBody<ParcelReadModel>()))
.PublishedViaHttp("http://localhost:9292/pacts/provider/parcels/consumer/orders/version/1.2.104", HttpMethod.Put)
.MakeAsync();
}
[Fact]
public async Task Provider_Should_Meet_Consumers_Expectations()
{
await PactVerifier
.CreateFor<Startup>()
.Between("orders", "parcels")
.RetrievedViaHttp("http://localhost:9292/pacts/provider/parcels/consumer/orders/latest")
.VerifyAsync();
}
Both tests should be green. After refreshing the broker's UI, you should see the pact:
Once you click on it, you should be able to inspect your pact file:
Want to help developing Pactify? Awesome! Here you can find contributor guide ;)
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