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Pact.Net v3 implementation of message only for services that communicate via event streams and message queues

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PactNetMessages

AppVeyor

Pact.Net v3 implementation of message only for services that communicate via event streams and message queues.

This project started off as a port of PactNet 1.3.2. Implementations for HTTP request and response are not supported. PactNetMessages is aiming to be only compliant with the messages portion of the Pact Specification Version 3.

Read more about Pact and the problems it solves at https://github.com/realestate-com-au/pact

Please feel free to contribute, we do accept pull requests.

Usage

Below are some samples of usage.

Installing

Via Nuget Package Manager https://www.nuget.org/packages/PactNetMessages/

Install-Package PactNetMessages

Service Consumer

1. Build your message consumer

It should have some sort of message handler. Which may look something like this.

    public class BusinessLogic
    {
        public Message BuildMessage(string json)
        {
            var newMessage = (Message) JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<Message>(json);
            return newMessage;
        }
    }
    
    public class Message
    {
        public DateTime end { get; set; }
        public DateTime start { get; set; }
        public string request { get; set; }

        [JsonIgnore]
        public string receiverOnlyInfo { get; set; }
   
        public Message()
        {
            start = new DateTime();
            end = new DateTime();
            request = "";
            receiverOnlyInfo = "";
        }
    }

2. Describe and configure the pact as a service consumer

Create a new test case within your service consumer test project, using whatever test framework you like (in this case we used NUnit).
This should only be instantiated once for the consumer you are testing.

[TestFixture]
public class Tests
{
    public IPactMessageBuilder PactMessageBuilder { get; set; }

    [OneTimeSetUp]
    public void OneTimeSetup()
    {
        PactMessageBuilder = new PactMessageBuilder()
            .ServiceConsumer("Receive")
            .HasPactWith("Send");
    }

    [OneTimeTearDown]
    public void Cleanup()
    {
        PactMessageBuilder.Build();
    }
}

3. Write your test

Create a new test case and implement it.

[Test]
public void ReceiveTest()
{
    string json = "{\"end\":\"2018-01-01T00:00:00\",\"start\":\"2017-12-01T00:00:00\",\"request\":\"Hello World!\",\"senderOnlyInfo\":\"I want something in here to be private to the sender\"}";
    var message = new Receive.BusinessLogic().BuildMessage(json);

    PactMessageBuilder.MockMq().Given("Send Hello World")
        .UponReceiving("Hello World message")
        .WithMetaData(new {routingKey = "hello"})
        .WithContent(message);

    Assert.AreEqual("Hello World!", message.request, "Check the request.");
}

4. Run the test

Everything should be green

Service Provider

1. Create the Message

You can create the message using whatever message queue library you want. Translate your message queue object to a Message object

private PactNetMessages.Mocks.MockMq.Models.Message SetupState()
{
    var message = new Send.BusinessLogic().GetMessage();
    var pactNetMessage = new PactNetMessages.Mocks.MockMq.Models.Message()
    {
        MetaData = new {routingKey = "hello"},
        Contents = message
    };

    return pactNetMessage;
}

2. Tell the provider it needs to honour the pact

Create a new test case within your service provider test project, using whatever test framework you like (in this case we used NUnit).

  • Note: PactUri() Only supports local file paths currently since the Pact Broker does not handle v3 specifications yet.
[Test]
public void PactTest()
{
    var config = new PactVerifierConfig();
    IPactVerifier pactVerifier = new PactVerifier(() => { }, () => { }, config);
    pactVerifier
        .ProviderState("Send Hello World", setUp: SetupState);

    pactVerifier
        .MessageProvider("Send")
        .HonoursPactWith("Receive")
        .PactUri("/pacts/receive-send.json")
        .Verify();
}

4. Run the test

Everything should be green

Related Tools

You might also find the following tool and library helpful:

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