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restful-ng-mock

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When you're writing an Angular app for those APIs, you will often want to create a client-side mock that simulates the server. This is typically done with $httpBackend, but manually adding all your web methods with that module's low-level interface can be tedious and error-prone. restful-ng-mock is a frontend to $httpBackend that handles a lot of the most common stuff for you, such as converting responses to JSON and providing sensible default implementations of the standard CRUD methods.

Installation

After you've downloaded the restful-ng-mock component with bower, add the usual lines in app.js (to restfulNgMock) and index.html (to components/restful-ng-mock/build/restful-ng-mock.js).

Basic mocks

Create a mock object for each major resource on your server under a given URL prefix. For example, suppose you have some URLs available under /items:

angular.module('myApp').factory('mockItems', [
'basicMock', // This service is from restful-ng-mock
function(basicMock) {
  var items = {
    1: { id: 1, name: 'Foo'},
    2: { id: 2, name: 'Bar'}
  };
  var itemsMock = basicMock('/items');
  
  // This handles requests to '/items'
  itemsMock.route('GET', '', function() {
    return items;
  });
  
  // A question mark allows an arbitrary argument
  // So, this handles requests to '/items/<n>' for any single value <n>
  itemsMock.route('GET', '/?', function(request) {
    var id =  request.pathArgs[0];
    // Null and undefined values will automatically be transformed to 404 responses
    return items[id]; 
  });
  
  // This handles POST requests to '/items/<n>/form_voltron'
  itemsMock.route('POST', '/?/form_voltron', function(request) {
    // request.url is a purl url object, see https://github.com/allmarkedup/purl
    // Here we require that the URL was like /items/123/form_voltron?password=abc123
    if (request.url.param('password') == 'abc123') {
      // If the request had a JSON body, then it is automatically parsed and
      // made available in request.body
      if (request.body.pilot) {
        return { result: "I'll form the head!", pilot: request.body.pilot };
      } else {
        return { result: "I guess John will form the head.", pilot: "John" };
      }
    } else {
      // Return HttpError for non-200 responses
      return new this.HttpError(400, "You're not a member of the Voltron team!");
    }
  });
}]);

Post-processing

The route method returns an object that you can use to further customize the mock's behavior. Use the addPostProc method to add a function which accepts the data returned by the route implementation and can return a modified version of that data:

var route = itemsMock.route('GET', '', function() {
  return items;
});
route.addPostProc(data, function(data, request) {
  data.reverse();
  return data;
}

This is convenient when you are doing the same or similar transformations in many different places in your mock.

Resource mocks

Often, a server may be implementing a database-like service with the usual CRUD actions. There is a convenience service resourceMock that makes this easier:

angular.module('myApp').factory('mockPeople', [
'resourceMock', // This service is from restful-ng-mock
function(resourceMock) {
  var people = {
    1: { id: 1, name: 'Alice'},
    2: { id: 2, name: 'Bob'}
  };
  var peopleMock = resourceMock('/people', people);
}]);

This automatically provides all the usual CRUD methods:

  • Get a list of people at GET /people. Indexes are returned as arrays rather than objects, even though the internal data store is an object.
  • Create new people with POST /people. They are automatically assigned a new random numeric id.
  • Retrieve an individual person with id 2 at GET /people/2.
  • Update them with a new object at PUT /people/2.
  • Delete them with DELETE /people/2.

You can override the default implementations of these by setting new methods (respectively, indexAction, createAction, showAction, updateAction, and deleteAction) on the mock object. The default method is available to these through the parent object:

// Let's anonymize the first person returned by every index request
peopleMock.indexAction = function(request) {
  var people = this.parent.indexAction.call(this, request);
  if (people.length > 0) {
    people[0].name = "John Doe";
  }
  return people;
}

The resource mock also supports all the same methods as basicMock, which is convenient for adding RPC-ish stuff and other not-strictly-RESTful methods:

peopleMock.route('POST', '/?/jump', function(request) {
  return { result: "I jumped! Now what?" };
});

The automatic routes themselves are available as attributes under the names indexRoute, showRoute, etc., which means you can apply post processors. There are some convenience methods on resourceMock for common post-processing situations:

  • addIndexFilter(fieldName[, filterFunc]): Allows you to specify a GET argument to filter results by a particular field value. You can optionally specify a filter function, which is given the GET argument value and a data object, and should return true if the object matches the filter specified by the value.
  • addIndexArrayFilter(fieldName[, sep[, filterFunc]]): A filter that checks against a list of acceptable values. The default separator is a comma.
  • addIndexPagination([skipName, limitName]): Specify GET arguments used to retrieve a subset of the results. The skipName argument slices off results from the beginning of the array, and the limitName argument sets a maximum number of results to return; if you don't specify these, they are simply "skip" and "limit" by default.
  • addLabeller(singleLabel, pluralLabel): Puts the data returned under a key in a containing object. The pluralLabel is used for index results, and the singleLabel is used for the results from all other actions. Note that this must be applied after the other index-related filters above.
  • addSingletonPostProcs(func): Apply the same post processing function to the show, update, create, and destroy actions.

Options

There are various options you can enable on both types of mock. These can be set with an additional argument to the constructor, or by calling the setOptions method:

var oneMock = basicMock('/foo', { debug: true });
var twoMock = resourceMock('/bar', stuff);
twoMock.setOptions({ httpResponseInfoLabel: 'response' });

These options are available for both basicMock and resourceMock:

  • debug: If set to true, then all HTTP responses will be logged with console.log. Alternately, you can provide a function here, and it will be called with the request object, the response info object, and the response data.
  • httpResponseInfoLabel: If set to a string, then HTTP response info will be embedded in all JSON responses under this key. The response info object includes the HTTP code and a status message.

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Quickly mock up common HTTP service API patterns

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