pact_verifier_cli 0.4.0

Standalone pact verifier for provider pact verification
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Standalone Pact Verifier

This project provides a command line interface to verify pact files against a running provider. It is a single executable binary. It implements the V2 Pact specification.

Online rust docs

The Pact Verifier works by taking all the interactions (requests and responses) from a number of pact files. For each interaction, it will make the request defined in the pact to a running service provider and check the response received back against the one defined in the pact file. All mismatches will then be reported.

Command line interface

The pact verifier is bundled as a single binary executable pact_verifier_cli. Running this with out any options displays the standard help.

pact_verifier_cli v0.2.0
Standalone Pact verifier

USAGE:
    pact_verifier_cli [FLAGS] [OPTIONS] --file <file> --dir <dir> --url <url> --broker-url <broker-url> --provider-name <provider-name>

FLAGS:
        --filter-no-state          Only validate interactions that have no defined provider state
        --help                     Prints help information
        --state-change-as-query    State change request data will be sent as query parameters instead of in the request body
        --state-change-teardown    State change teardown requests are to be made after each interaction
    -v, --version                  Prints version information

OPTIONS:
    -b, --broker-url <broker-url>                    URL of the pact broker to fetch pacts from to verify (requires the provider name parameter)
    -d, --dir <dir>                                  Directory of pact files to verify (can be repeated)
    -f, --file <file>                                Pact file to verify (can be repeated)
    -c, --filter-consumer <filter-consumer>       Consumer name to filter the pacts to be verified (can be repeated)
        --filter-description <filter-description>    Only validate interactions whose descriptions match this filter
        --filter-state <filter-state>                Only validate interactions whose provider states match this filter
    -h, --hostname <hostname>                        Provider hostname (defaults to localhost)
    -l, --loglevel <loglevel>                        Log level (defaults to warn) [values: error, warn, info, debug, trace, none]
    -p, --port <port>                                Provider port (defaults to 8080)
    -n, --provider-name <provider-name>              Provider name (defaults to provider)
    -s, --state-change-url <state-change-url>        URL to post state change requests to
    -u, --url <url>                                  URL of pact file to verify (can be repeated)

Options

Log Level

You can control the log level with the -l, --loglevel <loglevel> option. It defaults to warn, and the options that you can specify are: error, warn, info, debug, trace, none.

Pact File Sources

You can specify the pacts to verify with the following options. They can be repeated to set multiple sources.

Option Type Description
-f, --file <file> File Loads a pact from the given file
-u, --url <url> URL Loads a pact from a URL resource
-d, --dir <dir> Directory Loads all the pacts from the given directory
-b, --broker-url <broker-url> Pact Broker Loads all the pacts for the provider from the pact broker. Requires the -n, --provider-name <provider-name> option

Provider Options

The running provider can be specified with the following options:

Option Description
-h, --hostname <hostname> The provider hostname, defaults to localhost
-p, --port <port> The provider port (defaults to 8080)
-n, --provider-name <provider-name> The name of the provider. Required if you are loading pacts from a pact broker

Filtering the interactions

The interactions that are verified can be filtered by the following options:

-c, --filter-consumer <filter-consumer>

This will only verify the interactions of matching consumers. You can specify multiple consumers by either seperating the names with a comma, or repeating the option.

--filter-description <filter-description>

This option will filter the interactions that are verified that match by desciption. You can use a regular expression to match.

--filter-state <filter-state>

This option will filter the interactions that are verified that match by provider state. You can use a regular expression to match. Can't be used with the --filter-no-state option.

--filter-no-state

This option will filter the interactions that are verified that don't have a defined provider state. Can't be used with the --filter-state option.

State change requests

Provider states are a mechanism to define the state that the provider needs to be in to be able to verify a particular request. This is achieved by setting a state change URL that will receive a POST request with the provider state before the actual request is made.

-s, --state-change-url <state-change-url>

This sets the URL that the POST requests will be made to before each actual request.

--state-change-as-query

By default, the state for the state change request will be sent as a JSON document in the body of the request. This option forces it to be sent as a query parameter instead.

--state-change-teardown

This option will cause the verifier to also make a tear down request after the main request is made. It will receive a second field in the body or a query parameter named action with the value teardown.

Example run

This will verify all the pacts for the happy_provider found in the pact broker (running on localhost) against the provider running on localhost port 5050. Only the pacts for the consumers Consumer and Consumer2 will be verified.

$ pact_verifier_cli -b http://localhost -n 'happy_provider' -p 5050 --filter-consumer Consumer --filter-consumer Consumer2
21:59:28 [WARN] pact_matching::models: No metadata found in pact file "http://localhost/pacts/provider/happy_provider/consumer/Consumer/version/1.0.0", assuming V1.1 specification
21:59:28 [WARN] pact_matching::models: No metadata found in pact file "http://localhost/pacts/provider/happy_provider/consumer/Consumer2/version/1.0.0", assuming V1.1 specification

Verifying a pact between Consumer and happy_provider
  Given I am friends with Fred
    WARNING: State Change ignored as there is no state change URL
  Given I have no friends
    WARNING: State Change ignored as there is no state change URL
  a request to unfriend but no friends
    returns a response which
      has status code 200 (OK)
      includes headers
      has a matching body (OK)
  a request friends
    returns a response which
      has status code 200 (FAILED)
      includes headers
        "Content-Type" with value "application/json" (FAILED)
      has a matching body (FAILED)
  a request to unfriend
    returns a response which
      has status code 200 (OK)
      includes headers
        "Content-Type" with value "application/json" (OK)
      has a matching body (FAILED)


Verifying a pact between Consumer2 and happy_provider
  Given I am friends with Fred
    WARNING: State Change ignored as there is no state change URL
  Given I have no friends
    WARNING: State Change ignored as there is no state change URL
  a request to unfriend but no friends
    returns a response which
      has status code 200 (OK)
      includes headers
      has a matching body (OK)
  a request friends
    returns a response which
      has status code 200 (FAILED)
      includes headers
        "Content-Type" with value "application/json" (FAILED)
      has a matching body (FAILED)
  a request to unfriend
    returns a response which
      has status code 200 (OK)
      includes headers
        "Content-Type" with value "application/json" (OK)
      has a matching body (FAILED)


Failures:

0) Verifying a pact between Consumer and happy_provider - a request friends returns a response which has a matching body
    expected 'application/json' body but was 'text/plain'

1) Verifying a pact between Consumer and happy_provider - a request friends returns a response which has status code 200
    expected 200 but was 404

2) Verifying a pact between Consumer and happy_provider - a request friends returns a response which includes header 'Content-Type' with value 'application/json'
    Expected header 'Content-Type' to have value 'application/json' but was 'text/plain'

3) Verifying a pact between Consumer and happy_provider Given I am friends with Fred - a request to unfriend returns a response which has a matching body
    $.body -> Type mismatch: Expected Map {"reply":"Bye"} but received  "Ok"


4) Verifying a pact between Consumer2 and happy_provider - a request friends returns a response which has a matching body
    expected 'application/json' body but was 'text/plain'

5) Verifying a pact between Consumer2 and happy_provider - a request friends returns a response which has status code 200
    expected 200 but was 404

6) Verifying a pact between Consumer2 and happy_provider - a request friends returns a response which includes header 'Content-Type' with value 'application/json'
    Expected header 'Content-Type' to have value 'application/json' but was 'text/plain'

7) Verifying a pact between Consumer2 and happy_provider Given I am friends with Fred - a request to unfriend returns a response which has a matching body
    $.body -> Type mismatch: Expected Map {"reply":"Bye"} but received  "Ok"



There were 8 pact failures