Your own web server for happy HTTP testing
Lightweight fake web apps for testing. Built using the civetweb embedded web server.
- Complete web app framework, define handlers for HTTP requests in R.
- Write your own app for your custom test cases; our use app similar to
the
https://httpbin.org
API, so often you don’t need to write your own web app (e.g. if you are writing an HTTP client (httr, curl, crul). - Run one web app per test suite, per test file or per test case.
- Flexible path matching, with parameters and regular expressions.
- Built in templating system using glue or bring your own template engine.
- Middleware to parse JSON, multipart and URL encoded request bodies.
- A web app is just an R object. It can be saved to disk, copied to another R process, etc.
- A web app is extensible, by adding new routes and middleware to it.
- Helper functions for sending JSON, files from disk, etc.
- App-specific environment to store any data including data from requests to the fake app.
- After a web app is launched from R, you can interact with it from R but also from the command line, your browser, etc. Nice for debugging.
- The web server runs in the R process, so it has no problems with local firewalls.
- Multi-threaded web server supports concurrent HTTP requests.
- Limit download speed to simulate low bandwidth.
- The jsonlite package is needed for the
mw_json()
middleware, theresponse$send_json()
method and thehttpbin_app()
app. - The glue package is needed for the
tmpl_glue()
template engine. - The callr package is needed for
new_app_process()
andlocal_app_process
to work. - The
/brotli
endpoint ofhttpbin_app()
needs the brotli package. - The
/deflate
endpoint ofhttpbin_app()
needs the zip package. - The
/digest-auth
endpoint ofhttpbin_app()
needs the digest package. git_app()
requires the processx package.
Install the release version from CRAN:
install.packages("webfakes")
If you need the development version of the package, install it from GitHub:
pak::pak("r-lib/webfakes")
Start a web app at the beginning of your tests or test file, and stop it
after. Here is an example with the testthat package. Suppose you want to
test that your get_hello()
function can query an API:
local_app_process()
helps you clean up the web server process after
the test block, or test file. It is similar to the withr::local_*
functions.
app <- webfakes::new_app()
app$get("/hello/:user", function(req, res) {
res$send(paste0("Hello ", req$params$user, "!"))
})
web <- webfakes::local_app_process(app)
test_that("can use hello API", {
url <- web$url("/hello/Gabor")
expect_equal(get_hello(url), "Hello Gabor!")
})
When testing HTTP clients you can often use the built in
httpbin_app()
:
httpbin <- webfakes::local_app_process(webfakes::httpbin_app())
test_that("HTTP errors are caught", {
url <- httpbin$url("/status/404")
resp <- httr::GET(url)
expect_error(httr::stop_for_status(resp), class = "http_404")
})
#> Test passed 😸
See https://webfakes.r-lib.org
webfakes focuses on testing, these packages are for writing real web apps:
Please note that the fs project is released with a Contributor Code of Conduct. By contributing to this project, you agree to abide by its terms.
MIT © RStudio