au.com.dius.pact.provider.HttpClientFactory.kt Maven / Gradle / Ivy
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Pact provider
=============
sub project of https://github.com/DiUS/pact-jvm
The pact provider is responsible for verifying that an API provider adheres to a number of pacts authored by its clients
This library provides the basic tools required to automate the process, and should be usable on its own in many instances.
Framework and build tool specific bindings will be provided in separate libraries that build on top of this core functionality.
### Provider State
Before each interaction is executed, the provider under test will have the opportunity to enter a state.
Generally the state maps to a set of fixture data for mocking out services that the provider is a consumer of (they will have their own pacts)
The pact framework will instruct the test server to enter that state by sending:
POST "${config.stateChangeUrl.url}/setup" { "state" : "${interaction.stateName}" }
### An example of running provider verification with junit
This example uses Groovy, JUnit 4 and Hamcrest matchers to run the provider verification.
As the provider service is a DropWizard application, it uses the DropwizardAppRule to startup the service before running any test.
**Warning:** It only grabs the first interaction from the pact file with the consumer, where there could be many. (This could possibly be solved with a parameterized test)
```groovy
class ReadmeExamplePactJVMProviderJUnitTest {
@ClassRule
public static final TestRule startServiceRule = new DropwizardAppRule<DropwizardConfiguration>(
TestDropwizardApplication, ResourceHelpers.resourceFilePath('dropwizard/test-config.yaml'))
private static ProviderInfo serviceProvider
private static Pact<RequestResponseInteraction> testConsumerPact
private static ConsumerInfo consumer
@BeforeClass
static void setupProvider() {
serviceProvider = new ProviderInfo('Dropwizard App')
serviceProvider.setProtocol('http')
serviceProvider.setHost('localhost')
serviceProvider.setPort(8080)
serviceProvider.setPath('/')
consumer = new ConsumerInfo()
consumer.setName('test_consumer')
consumer.setPactSource(new UrlSource(
ReadmeExamplePactJVMProviderJUnitTest.getResource('/pacts/zoo_app-animal_service.json').toString()))
testConsumerPact = DefaultPactReader.INSTANCE.loadPact(consumer.getPactSource()) as Pact<RequestResponseInteraction>
}
@Test
void runConsumerPacts() {
// grab the first interaction from the pact with consumer
Interaction interaction = testConsumerPact.interactions.get(0)
// setup the verifier
ProviderVerifier verifier = setupVerifier(interaction, serviceProvider, consumer)
// setup any provider state
// setup the client and interaction to fire against the provider
ProviderClient client = new ProviderClient(serviceProvider, new HttpClientFactory())
Map<String, Object> failures = new HashMap<>()
verifier.verifyResponseFromProvider(serviceProvider, interaction, interaction.getDescription(), failures, client)
// normally assert all good, but in this example it will fail
assertThat(failures, is(not(empty())))
verifier.displayFailures(failures)
}
private ProviderVerifier setupVerifier(Interaction interaction, ProviderInfo provider, ConsumerInfo consumer) {
ProviderVerifier verifier = new ProviderVerifier()
verifier.initialiseReporters(provider)
verifier.reportVerificationForConsumer(consumer, provider, new UrlSource('http://example.example'))
if (!interaction.getProviderStates().isEmpty()) {
for (ProviderState providerState: interaction.getProviderStates()) {
verifier.reportStateForInteraction(providerState.getName(), provider, consumer, true)
}
}
verifier.reportInteractionDescription(interaction)
return verifier
}
}
```
### An example of running provider verification with spock
This example uses groovy and spock to run the provider verification.
Again the provider service is a DropWizard application, and is using the DropwizardAppRule to startup the service.
This example runs all interactions using spocks Unroll feature
```groovy
class ReadmeExamplePactJVMProviderSpockSpec extends Specification {
@ClassRule @Shared
TestRule startServiceRule = new DropwizardAppRule<DropwizardConfiguration>(TestDropwizardApplication,
ResourceHelpers.resourceFilePath('dropwizard/test-config.yaml'))
@Shared
ProviderInfo serviceProvider
ProviderVerifier verifier
def setupSpec() {
serviceProvider = new ProviderInfo('Dropwizard App')
serviceProvider.protocol = 'http'
serviceProvider.host = 'localhost'
serviceProvider.port = 8080
serviceProvider.path = '/'
serviceProvider.hasPactWith('zoo_app') { consumer ->
consumer.pactSource = new FileSource(new File(ResourceHelpers.resourceFilePath('pacts/zoo_app-animal_service.json')))
}
}
def setup() {
verifier = new ProviderVerifier()
}
def cleanup() {
// cleanup provider state
// ie. db.truncateAllTables()
}
def cleanupSpec() {
// cleanup provider
}
@Unroll
def "Provider Pact - With Consumer #consumer"() {
expect:
!verifyConsumerPact(consumer).empty
where:
consumer << serviceProvider.consumers
}
private Map verifyConsumerPact(ConsumerInfo consumer) {
Map failures = [:]
verifier.initialiseReporters(serviceProvider)
verifier.runVerificationForConsumer(failures, serviceProvider, consumer)
if (!failures.empty) {
verifier.displayFailures(failures)
}
failures
}
}
```
package au.com.dius.pact.provider
import groovy.lang.Binding
import groovy.lang.Closure
import groovy.lang.GroovyShell
import org.apache.http.config.RegistryBuilder
import org.apache.http.conn.socket.ConnectionSocketFactory
import org.apache.http.conn.socket.PlainConnectionSocketFactory
import org.apache.http.conn.ssl.AllowAllHostnameVerifier
import org.apache.http.conn.ssl.SSLConnectionSocketFactory
import org.apache.http.impl.client.CloseableHttpClient
import org.apache.http.impl.client.HttpClientBuilder
import org.apache.http.impl.client.HttpClients
import org.apache.http.impl.conn.PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager
import org.apache.http.ssl.SSLContextBuilder
import org.apache.http.ssl.TrustStrategy
import java.security.cert.X509Certificate
/**
* HTTP Client Factory
*/
class HttpClientFactory : IHttpClientFactory {
override fun newClient(provider: IProviderInfo): CloseableHttpClient {
return if (provider.createClient != null) {
if (provider.createClient is Closure<*>) {
(provider.createClient as Closure<*>).call(provider) as CloseableHttpClient
} else {
val binding = Binding()
binding.setVariable("provider", provider)
val shell = GroovyShell(binding)
shell.evaluate(provider.createClient.toString()) as CloseableHttpClient
}
} else if (provider.insecure) {
createInsecure()
} else if (provider.trustStore != null && provider.trustStorePassword != null) {
createWithTrustStore(provider)
} else {
HttpClients.createDefault()
}
}
private fun createWithTrustStore(provider: IProviderInfo): CloseableHttpClient {
val password = provider.trustStorePassword.orEmpty().toCharArray()
return HttpClients
.custom()
.setSslcontext(SSLContextBuilder().loadTrustMaterial(provider.trustStore, password).build())
.build()
}
private fun createInsecure(): CloseableHttpClient {
val b = HttpClientBuilder.create()
// setup a Trust Strategy that allows all certificates.
//
val trustStratergy = TrustStrategy { _: Array, _: String -> true }
val sslContext = SSLContextBuilder().loadTrustMaterial(null, trustStratergy).build()
b.setSslcontext(sslContext)
// don't check Hostnames, either.
// -- use SSLConnectionSocketFactory.getDefaultHostnameVerifier(), if you don't want to weaken
val hostnameVerifier = AllowAllHostnameVerifier()
// here's the special part:
// -- need to create an SSL Socket Factory, to use our weakened "trust strategy";
// -- and create a Registry, to register it.
//
val sslSocketFactory = SSLConnectionSocketFactory(sslContext, hostnameVerifier)
val socketFactoryRegistry = RegistryBuilder.create()
.register("http", PlainConnectionSocketFactory.getSocketFactory())
.register("https", sslSocketFactory)
.build()
// now, we create connection-manager using our Registry.
// -- allows multi-threaded use
val connMgr = PoolingHttpClientConnectionManager(socketFactoryRegistry)
b.setConnectionManager(connMgr)
// finally, build the HttpClient;
// -- done!
return b.build()
}
}