This version is still in development and is not considered stable yet. For the latest stable version, please use spring-cloud-contract 4.1.4! |
Provider Contract Testing with Stubs in Artifactory for a non-Spring Application
In this page you will learn how to do provider contract testing with a non-Spring application and stubs uploaded to Artifactory.
The Flow
You can read Developing Your First Spring Cloud Contract-based Application to see the flow for provider contract testing with stubs in Nexus or Artifactory.
Setting up the Consumer
For the consumer side, you can use a JUnit rule. That way, you need not start a Spring context. The following listing shows such a rule (in JUnit4 and JUnit 5);
- JUnit 4 Rule
-
@Rule public StubRunnerRule rule = new StubRunnerRule() .downloadStub("com.example","artifact-id", "0.0.1") .repoRoot("git://[email protected]:spring-cloud-samples/spring-cloud-contract-nodejs-contracts-git.git") .stubsMode(StubRunnerProperties.StubsMode.REMOTE);
- JUnit 5 Extension
-
@RegisterExtension public StubRunnerExtension stubRunnerExtension = new StubRunnerExtension() .downloadStub("com.example","artifact-id", "0.0.1") .repoRoot("git://[email protected]:spring-cloud-samples/spring-cloud-contract-nodejs-contracts-git.git") .stubsMode(StubRunnerProperties.StubsMode.REMOTE);
Setting up the Producer
By default, the Spring Cloud Contract Plugin uses Rest Assured’s MockMvc
setup for the
generated tests. Since non-Spring applications do not use MockMvc
, you can change the
testMode
to EXPLICIT
to send a real request to an application bound at a specific port.
In this example, we use a framework called Javalin to start a non-Spring HTTP server.
Assume that we have the following application:
import io.javalin.Javalin;
public class DemoApplication {
public static void main(String[] args) {
new DemoApplication().run(7000);
}
public Javalin start(int port) {
return Javalin.create().start(port);
}
public Javalin registerGet(Javalin app) {
return app.get("/", ctx -> ctx.result("Hello World"));
}
public Javalin run(int port) {
return registerGet(start(port));
}
}
Given that application, we can set up the plugin to use the EXPLICIT
mode (that is, to
send out requests to a real port), as follows:
- Maven
-
<plugin> <groupId>org.springframework.cloud</groupId> <artifactId>spring-cloud-contract-maven-plugin</artifactId> <version>${spring-cloud-contract.version}</version> <extensions>true</extensions> <configuration> <baseClassForTests>com.example.demo.BaseClass</baseClassForTests> <!-- This will setup the EXPLICIT mode for the tests --> <testMode>EXPLICIT</testMode> </configuration> </plugin>
- Gradle
-
contracts { // This will setup the EXPLICIT mode for the tests testMode = "EXPLICIT" baseClassForTests = "com.example.demo.BaseClass" }
The base class might resemble the following:
import io.javalin.Javalin;
import io.restassured.RestAssured;
import org.junit.After;
import org.junit.Before;
import org.springframework.cloud.test.TestSocketUtils;
public class BaseClass {
Javalin app;
@Before
public void setup() {
// pick a random port
int port = TestSocketUtils.findAvailableTcpPort();
// start the application at a random port
this.app = start(port);
// tell Rest Assured where the started application is
RestAssured.baseURI = "http://localhost:" + port;
}
@After
public void close() {
// stop the server after each test
this.app.stop();
}
private Javalin start(int port) {
// reuse the production logic to start a server
return new DemoApplication().run(port);
}
}
With such a setup:
-
We have set up the Spring Cloud Contract plugin to use the
EXPLICIT
mode to send real requests instead of mocked ones. -
We have defined a base class that:
-
Starts the HTTP server on a random port for each test.
-
Sets Rest Assured to send requests to that port.
-
Closes the HTTP server after each test.
-