Skip to content

direktspeed/apitizer

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

53 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

APItizer

APItizer is a library that allows you to mock APIs for browser applications with JSON schema. JSON schema is usually used to validate responses from APIs, but APItizer adds the ability to generate data from the same structure.

APItizer requires understanding of the JSON schema syntax and I can recommend this guide to get you started.

Updating from v0.0.4

You must call apitizer.start() now for APItizer to work.

Prior to the version 0.1.0 APItizer was using the can.fixture library to mock the XHR requests, but it was replaced with the FakeXMLHttpRequest library. FakeXMLHttpRequest library replaces the browser XHR object which enables APItizer to work without any library dependencies (jQuery or Zepto).

This change requires you to manually start the APItizer from your code with the following command:

apitizer.start();

This will replace the window.XMLHttpRequest object and allow APItizer to take over. Stopping APItizer is done with the following command:

apitizer.stop();

Why

When developing single page apps, it is beneficial to develop the frontend and the backend in the parallel. To achieve that, you need to mock the API. APItizer allows you to mock your API by defining the JSON schema which is used to generate the fake data.

By using the JSON schema to define the format of the API responses, you create an explict contract which can be used to validate backend responeses once you start to integrate the real API.

Installation

Install it with bower:

bower install apitizer

APItizer can used included either as a script tag:

<script type="text/javascript" src="path/to/apitizer.js"></script>

Or loaded with the Require.js (or any other AMD loader):

define(["path/to/apitizer"], function(apitizer){ })

After the APItizer is loaded you have to start it before it can intercept the requests:

define(["path/to/apitizer"], function(apitizer){ 
	apitizer.start();
})

Example

Let's implement a simple user endpoint. It will reside on the /users endpoint and implement all the usual REST operations.

First let's define the schema:

var schema = {
	type : "object",
	properties : {
		id : {
			type : "integer"
		},
		username : {
			type : "string"
		},
		password : {
			type : "string"
		}
	}
}

Now we can add it to the APItizer:

apitizer.addSchema('user', schema);

After adding it to the apitizer we can mock the API:

apitizer.fixture.resource('/users', apitizer.schemaStore('user', 10));

This will create a store with 10 users in it and add all REST API endpoints:

GET /users
GET /users/{id}
POST /users
PUT /users/{id}
DELETE /users/{id}

Now you can normally use AJAX functions and they will hit the mocked API:

$.get('/users') // Response will return 10 users
$.get('/users/1') // Response will return the user with the id 1
$.post('/users', {username : 'foo', password : 'bar'}) // User will be created and saved to the store
$.ajax('/users/1', {type : 'put', data : {username : 'baz'}}) // User with the id 1 will be updated
$.ajax('/users/1', {type : 'delete'}) // User with the id 1 will be destroyed and removed from the store

Overriding generators

APItizer implements it's own generators for all types supported by the JSON schema, but sometimes you want more control over the data that is being generated. To achieve this, you can pass overrides to the store:

var store = apitizer.schemaStore('user', 10, {
	id : apitizer.types.autoincrement(),
	username : function(){
		var count = 1;
		return function(){
			return "User " + (count++);
		}
	}
});

This store will now contain objects that look like this:

[{
	id: 1,
	username : "User 1",
	password : ...
},
{
	id: 2,
	username : "User 2",
	password : ...
}]

Using overrides will allow you to take control over parts of your data that are important to you. Another use for the overrides is embedding an object from one store to the object generated from another store.

Let's say you want to mock a simple publishing API, where you have two types of resources:

  1. Articles
  2. Authors

Each article contains the author object. You can easilly write a schema for this:

var authorSchema = {
	type : "object",
	properties : {
		id : {
			type : "integer"
		},
		username : {
			type : "string"
		},
		password : {
			type : "string"
		}
	}
}

var articleSchema = {
	type : "object",
	properties : {
		title : {
			type : "string"
		},
		body : {
			type : "string"
		},
		author : {
			$ref : "author"
		}
	}
}

apitizer.addSchema('author', authorSchema);
apitizer.addSchema('article', articleSchema);

This example introduces another concept, referenced schemas which are denoted by the $ref key. For now, it is enough to know that this will get the author schema from the repository and use it to generate the data.

If we create author and article stores without overrides:

var authorStore = apitizer.schemaStore('author', 10);
var articleStore = apitizer.schemaStore('article', 10);

Each article will contain generated author object, but that author object will not look like anything contained in the authorStore. We can fix that by using overrides:

var authorStore = apitizer.schemaStore('author', 10);
var articleStore = apitizer.schemaStore('article', 10, {
	author : authorStore.one()
});

In this case authorStore.one() will return a random object from the store, and that object will be embedded in the author property of the article.

Custom data and API endpoints

In some cases you might need additional API points that can handle some specific task. For instance you might have /login endpoint where users can login. This action will still use the users store, but will have to behave differently than the default REST actions. Also, for development and testing you need a user with the known credentials, so you can actually login to the app. Here is how you can solve this problem with APItizer:

var schema = {
	type : "object",
	properties : {
		id : {
			type : "integer"
		},
		username : {
			type : "string"
		},
		password : {
			type : "string"
		}
	}
}, userStore;

apitizer.addSchema('user', schema);
userStore = apitizer.schemaStore('user', 0, {
	id : apitizer.types.autoincrement()
})

Here we have defined the schema, and created an empty store, now we can add some custom data:

userStore.add({
	username : 'retro',
	password : '1337'
});

This will create a user with known credentials. Now all we need to do is create the /login endpoint:

apitizer.fixture('POST /login', function(params){
	var users = userStore.db(params) // Search the data in the store's database
	if(users.count() === 0){
		throw {errors: ['Wrong credentials'], status: 401}
	} else {
		return users.first();
	}
});

APItizer uses the excellent TaffyDB library to store the data, so you can use it's fancy querying possibilities to get the data.

Now you can emulate the login process by POSTing to the /login endpoint:

$.post('/login', {
	username : 'retro',
	password : 1338
}).then(function(user){
	alert('You logged in!')
}, function(error){
	alert('Wrong credentials!')
});

Response delay

To simulate the real requests, responses will be returned with a delay. Default delay is 200 milliseconds, but you can easiliy change it:

apitizer.fixture.delay(300) // delay is now 300 milliseconds

You can also give it a range of values, which will make the delay random:

apitizer.fixture.delay(200, 500) // delay will be between 200 and 500 milliseconds

Random delay is a good way to simulate the real network conditions, and to get a feeling of responsivnes of your app.

--

You can find more docs in the wiki

About

API mocking for the client side JavaScript applications

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 96.0%
  • HTML 3.6%
  • Makefile 0.4%