Robot Framework test library for (RESTful) JSON APIs
Project description
Robot Framework test library for (RESTful) JSON APIs
Advantages
RESTinstance relies on Robot Framework’s language-agnostic, clean and minimal syntax, for API tests. It is neither tied to any particular programming language nor development framework. Using RESTinstance requires little, if any, programming knowledge. It builts on long-term technologies with well established communities, such as HTTP, JSON (Schema), Swagger/OpenAPI and Robot Framework.
It validates JSON using JSON Schema, guiding you to write API tests to base on properties rather than on specific values (e.g. “email must be valid” vs “email is foo@bar.com”). This approach reduces test maintenance when the values responded by the API are prone to change. Although values are not required, you can still test them whenever they make sense (e.g. GET response body from one endpoint, then POST some of its values to another endpoint and verify the results).
It generates JSON Schema for requests and responses automatically, and the schema gets more accurate by your tests. Output the schema to a file and reuse it as expectations to test the other methods, as most of them respond similarly with only minor differences. Or extend the schema further to a full Swagger spec (version 2.0, OpenAPI 3.0 also planned), which RESTinstance can test requests and responses against. All this leads to reusability, getting great test coverage with minimum number of keystrokes and very clean tests.
Installation
Pick the one that suits your environment best.
As a Python package
On 3.6, 3.7 and 2.7, you can install and upgrade from PyPi:
pip install --upgrade RESTinstance
This also installs Robot Framework if you do not have it already.
As a Docker image
RESTinstance Docker image contains Python 3.6 and the latest Robot Framework:
docker pull asyrjasalo/restinstance
Usage
There is a step-by-step tutorial in the making, best accompanied with keyword documentation.
Quick start
Create two new (empty) directories tests and results.
Create a new file tests/YOURNAME.robot with content:
*** Settings ***
Library REST https://jsonplaceholder.typicode.com
Documentation Test data can be read from variables and files.
... Both JSON and Python type systems are supported for inputs.
... Every request creates a so-called instance. Can be `Output`.
... Most keywords are effective only for the last instance.
... Initial schemas are autogenerated for request and response.
... You can make them more detailed by using assertion keywords.
... The assertion keywords correspond to the JSON types.
... They take in either path to the property or a JSONPath query.
... Using (enum) values in tests optional. Only type is required.
... All the JSON Schema validation keywords are also supported.
... Thus, there is no need to write any own validation logic.
... Not a long path from schemas to full Swagger/OpenAPI specs.
... The persistence of the created instances is the test suite.
... Use keyword `Rest instances` to output the created instances.
*** Variables ***
${json} { "id": 11, "name": "Gil Alexander" }
&{dict} name=Julie Langford
*** Test Cases ***
GET an existing user, notice how the schema gets more accurate
GET /users/1 # this creates a new instance
Output schema response body
Object response body # values are fully optional
Integer response body id 1
String response body name Leanne Graham
[Teardown] Output schema # note the updated response schema
GET existing users, use JSONPath for very short but powerful queries
GET /users?_limit=5 # further assertions are to this
Array response body
Integer $[0].id 1 # first id is 1
String $[0]..lat -37.3159 # any matching child
Integer $..id maximum=5 # multiple matches
[Teardown] Output $[*].email # outputs all emails as an array
POST with valid params to create a new user, can be output to a file
POST /users ${json}
Integer response status 201
[Teardown] Output response body ${OUTPUTDIR}/new_user.demo.json
PUT with valid params to update the existing user, values matter here
PUT /users/2 { "isCoding": true }
Boolean response body isCoding true
PUT /users/2 { "sleep": null }
Null response body sleep
PUT /users/2 { "pockets": "", "money": 0.02 }
String response body pockets ${EMPTY}
Number response body money 0.02
Missing response body moving # fails if property moving exists
PATCH with valid params, reusing response properties as a new payload
&{res}= GET /users/3
String $.name Clementine Bauch
PATCH /users/4 { "name": "${res.body['name']}" }
String $.name Clementine Bauch
PATCH /users/5 ${dict}
String $.name ${dict.name}
DELETE the existing successfully, save the history of all requests
DELETE /users/6 # status can be any of the below
Integer response status 200 202 204
Rest instances ${OUTPUTDIR}/all.demo.json # all the instances so far
Chose Python installation? Let’s go (not that language):
robot --outputdir results tests/
If you chose the Docker method instead (recall the story about red and blue pill here, if you want), this is quaranteed to work in most environments:
docker run --rm -ti --env HOST_UID=$(id -u) --env HOST_GID=$(id -g) \ --env HTTP_PROXY --env HTTPS_PROXY --network host \ --volume "$PWD/tests":/home/robot/tests \ --volume "$PWD/results":/home/robot/results \ asyrjasalo/restinstance tests/
Tip: If you prefer installing from source, pip install --editable . and verify the installation with robot README.rst
Contributing
Bug reports and feature requests are tracked in GitHub.
We do respect pull request(er)s. Please mention if you do not want to be listed below as contributors.
A CircleCI job is created automatically for your GitHub pull requests as well.
Local development
On Linux distros and on OS X, may make rules ease repetitive workflows:
$ make help all Run test, build, install and atest (default) atest Run acceptance tests atest_py2 Run acceptance tests on Python 2 black Reformat source code in-place build Build source dist and wheel check-manifest Run check-manifest for MANIFEST.in completeness clean Remove .venvs, builds, dists, and caches dc Start docker-composed test API on background dc_rm Stop and remove docker-composed test API flake8 Run flake8 for static code analysis install Install package from source tree, as --editable install_pypi Install the latest PyPI release install_test Install the latest test.pypi.org release libdoc Regenerate library keyword documentation mypy Run mypy for static type checking publish_pypi Publish dists to PyPI publish_test Publish dists to test.pypi.org pur Update requirements-dev for locked versions pyroma Run pyroma for Python packaging best practices retest Run failed tests only, if none, run all test Run tests, installs requirements(-dev) first uninstall Uninstall the package, regardless of its origin
Running make runs rules test, build, install and atest at once, and uses separate virtualenvs .venvs/dev/ and .venvs/release/ to ensure that no (user or system level) dependencies interfere with the process.
If make is not available, you can setup for development with:
virtualenv --no-site-packages .venvs/dev source .venvs/dev/bin/activate pip install --editable .
To recreate the keyword documentation from source (equals to make libdoc):
python -m robot.libdoc REST docs/index.html
Acceptance tests
The testapi/ is built on mountebank. You can monitor requests and responses at localhost:2525
To start it with docker-compose (daemonized) and run all acceptance tests:
make atest
This uses rfdocker underneath to build a yet another container for tests. Host directories tests/ and results/ are accessed inside the container via the respective Docker volumes. Same arguments are accepted as for robot.
To run only specific test suite(s):
RUN_ARGS="--network=host --env HTTP_PROXY --env HTTPS_PROXY" ./rfdocker tests/output.robot
Host network is used to minimize divergence between different host OSes. It may or may not be necessary to pass any of RUN_ARGS in your environment, but there should be no downside either (on OS X --network=host is required).
If Docker (Compose) is not available, you can use npm’s npx to install mountebank npm package and start the very same test API (keep --localOnly for security):
npx mountebank --localOnly --allowInjection --configfile testapi/apis.ejs
And run tests on Python:
python -m robot --outputdir results tests/
Docker releases
The Docker image is built with (included) rfdocker (regarding the changed parts) each time make atest is run.
To push it to your Docker registry as “latest” (remember to docker login):
./release_docker https://your.docker.registry.com/restinstance
For Docker Hub, just org/username will do:
./release_docker {{organization}}/restinstance
Credits
RESTinstance is under Apache License 2.0 and was originally written by Anssi Syrjäsalo.
It was first presented at the first RoboCon, 2018.
Contributors:
jjwong for helping with keyword documentation and examples (also check RESTinstance_starter_project)
Przemysław “sqilz” Hendel for using and testing RESTinstance in early phase (also check RESTinstance-wrapper)
We use following Python excellence under the hood:
Flex, by Piper Merriam, for Swagger 2.0 validation
GenSON, by Jon “wolverdude” Wolverton, for JSON Schema generator
jsonpath-ng, by Tomas Aparicio and Kenneth Knowles, for handling JSONPath queries
jsonschema, by Julian Berman, for JSON Schema validator
pygments, by Georg Brandl et al., for JSON syntax coloring, in terminal Output
requests, by Kenneth Reitz et al., for making HTTP requests
See requirements.txt for all the direct run time dependencies.
REST your mind, OSS got your back.
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