Opinionated Python wrapper & utils for the Mountebank over the wire test double tool.
Includes pytest fixture and PyHamcrest matchers.
Install with pip:
pip install mbtest
(As usual, use of a venv or virtualenv is recommended.) Also requires Mountebank to have been installed:
npm install mountebank@2.2 --production
(Alternatively, you can attach to an instance of Mountebank running elsewhere, perhaps in docker.)
import requests
from hamcrest import assert_that
from brunns.matchers.response import is_response
from mbtest.matchers import had_request
from mbtest.imposters import Imposter, Predicate, Response, Stub
def test_request_to_mock_server(mock_server):
# Set up mock server with required behavior
imposter = Imposter(Stub(Predicate(path="/test"),
Response(body="sausages")))
with mock_server(imposter):
# Make request to mock server - exercise code under test here
response = requests.get("{}/test".format(imposter.url))
assert_that("We got the expected response",
response, is_response().with_status_code(200).and_body("sausages"))
assert_that("The mock server recorded the request",
imposter, had_request().with_path("/test").and_method("GET"))
Needs a pytest fixture, most easily defined in [conftest.py
]
(https://docs.pytest.org/en/latest/fixture.html#conftest-py-sharing-fixture-functions):
import pytest
from mbtest import server
@pytest.fixture(scope="session")
def mock_server(request):
return server.mock_server(request)
This will take care of starting and stopping the Mountebank server for you. Examples of more complex predicates can be found in the integration tests.
See the Dounumentation for more.
Requires make and tox. PyEnv may also come in handy so tests can be run against various Python versions.
Currently, the Makefile
targets use Python 3.5 and 3.8 via tox, so a quick-start setup could be:
pip install pyenv tox tox-pyenv
pyenv install 3.5.9
pyenv install 3.8.2
pyenv local 3.5.9 3.8.2
In order to run make test
, you'll also need to have Mountebank installed locally:
npm install mountebank@2.2 --production
After that, you should be ready to roll; running make test
will let you know if your setup is correct.
Running make precommit
tells you if you're OK to commit. For more options, run:
make help
Requires hub, setuptools and
twine. To release version n.n.n
, first update the version number in setup.py
, then:
version="n.n.n" # Needs to match new version number in setup.py.
git checkout -b "release-$version"
make precommit && git commit -am"Release $version" && git push --set-upstream origin "release-$version" # If not already all pushed, which it should be.
hub release create "V$version" -t"release-$version" -m"Version $version"
python setup.py sdist bdist_wheel
twine upload dist/*$version*