Feel the rhythm! Feel the rhyme! Get on up, it's testing time! curl-runnings!
curl-runnings is a framework for writing declarative, curl based tests for your APIs. Write your tests quickly and correctly with a straight-forward specification in yaml or json that can encode simple but powerful matchers against responses.
Alternatively, you can use the curl-runnings library to write your tests in Haskell (though a Haskell setup is absolutely not required to use this tool).
This library came out of a pain-point my coworkers and I were running into
during development: Writing integration tests for our APIs was generally
annoying. They were time consuming to write especially considering how basic
they were, and we are a small startup where developer time is in short supply.
Over time, we found ourselves sometimes just writing bash scripts that would
curl
our various endpoints and check the output with very basic matchers.
These tests were fast to write, but quickly became difficult to maintain as
complexity was added. Not only did maintenance become challenging, but the whole
system was very error prone and confidence in the tests overall was decreasing.
At the end of the day, we needed to just curl some endpoints and verify the
output looks sane, and do this quickly and correctly. This is precisely the goal
of curl-runnings.
Now you can write your tests just as data in a yaml or json file, and curl-runnings will take care of the rest!
While yaml/json is the current way to write curl-runnings tests, this project is being built in a way that should lend itself well to an embedded domain specific language, which is a future goal for the project. curl-runnings specs in Dhall is also being developed and may fulfill the same needs.
The best way to install curl-runnings is with the scarf package manager.
# If you don't have scarf, you can easily install it with:
$ curl -L https://scarf.sh/install | bash
$ scarf install curl-runnings
Alternatively, you can compile from source with stack.
Curl runnings tests are just data! A test spec is an object containing an array
of cases
, where each item represents a single curl and set of assertions about
the response. Write your tests specs in a yaml or json file. Note: the legacy
format of a top level array of test cases is still supported, but may not be in
future releases.
---
# example-test.yaml
#
# specify all your test cases as an array keys on `cases`
cases:
- name: A curl runnings test case
url: http://your-endpoint.com/status
requestMethod: GET
# Specify the json payload we expect here
expectData:
# The 1 key in this object specifies the matcher we want
# to use to test the returned payload. In this case, we
# require the payload is exactly what we specify.
exactly:
okay: true
msg: 'a message'
# Assertions about the returned status code. Pass in
# an acceptable code or list of codes
expectStatus: 200
See /examples for more example curl runnings specifications, which walk through some of the other features that can be encoded in your tests such as:
- reference data from previous responses of previous test cases
- reference environment variables
- various easy-to-use json matchers
- support for importing data from other yaml files in your spec
Once you've written a spec, simply run it with:
curl-runnings -f path/to/your/spec.yaml
(hint: try using the --verbose flag for more output)
If all your tests pass, curl-runnings will cleanly exit with a 0 code. A code of 1 will be returned if any tests failed.
You can also select specific test cases by filtering via regex by using the
--grep
flag. Just make sure your case isn't referencing data from previous
examples that won't get run!
For more info:
curl-runnings --help
A dockerfile is included in the root of the project. The Dockerfile will expect the linux based curl-runnings executable in the same directory as the Dockerfile and a tests.yml
file. You can download the latest executable from the release page : https://github.com/aviaviavi/curl-runnings/releases .
docker build . -t curl-runnings-tests
docker run curl-runnings-tests
If you use docker-compose, you can add this to docker-compose.yml:
tests:
build:
context: .
dockerfile: ./Dockerfile
Contributions in any form are welcome and encouraged. Don't be shy! :D