dredd
semver
Our great sponsors
dredd | semver | |
---|---|---|
15 | 720 | |
4,121 | 7,008 | |
0.5% | 1.1% | |
2.4 | 2.3 | |
6 months ago | 3 months ago | |
JavaScript | ||
MIT License | - |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
dredd
-
The Uncreative Software Engineer's Compendium to Testing
Dredd: used to test APIs based on the API blueprint or OpenAPI specification, to ensure implementation matches the specification.
-
Tool for generating example API requests and responses from OpenAPI
Here are three tools that you can use to generate example API requests and responses from OpenAPI specifications. These tools should work well even if your schemas are deeply nested: Nswag (Command Line and GUI): Nswag is a Swagger/OpenAPI toolchain for .NET, TypeScript, and other platforms. It supports code generation, client generation, and API documentation. You can use NswagStudio, which is a graphical interface, or you can use the command line tool called "NSwag.exe" for generating example API requests and responses. GitHub: https://github.com/RicoSuter/NJsonSchema NswagStudio: https://github.com/RicoSuter/NSwag/wiki/NSwagStudio Dredd (Command Line): Dredd is a language-agnostic command-line tool for validating API descriptions against backend implementations. It supports OpenAPI, Swagger, and API Blueprint formats. Dredd can generate example requests and responses and validate whether your API implementation conforms to the API description. GitHub: https://github.com/apiaryio/dredd Documentation: https://dredd.org/en/latest/ Stoplight Studio (GUI): Stoplight Studio is a modern API design and documentation platform that supports OpenAPI and JSON Schema. It allows you to create, edit, and validate OpenAPI specifications and provides a powerful visual interface for generating example API requests and responses. Website: https://stoplight.io/studio/ GitHub: https://github.com/stoplightio/studio These tools should provide you with the ability to generate example API requests and responses from your OpenAPI specifications and handle deeply nested schemas.
-
Integration testing best practices for API servers...
If you want to make sure the server implements a certain contract like there's an handler responding to a GET request to /API/what/ever I'd rather use something else. To be completely honest this is a topic I'm currently also searching for a really good solution but what I found so far (and looks promising) is https://dredd.org/ or https://microcks.io/ Both support OpenAPI testing so you can specify the contract as an OpenAPI spec and validate your server against it.
-
Faster time-to-market with API-first
Consolidating the API specification with OpenAPI was a turning point for the project. From that moment we were able to run mock servers to build and test the UI before integrating with the backend, and we were able to validate the backend implementation against the specification. We used prism to run mock servers, and Dredd to validate the server implementation (these days I’d rather use schemathesis).
-
API-first development maturity framework
In this approach, you produce an API specification first, then you build the API against the specification, and then you validate your implementation against the specification using automated API testing tools. This is the most reliable approach for building API servers, since it’s the only one that holds the server accountable and validates the implementation against the source of truth. Unfortunately, this approach isn’t as common as it should be. One of the reasons why it isn’t so common is because it requires you to produce the API specification first, which, as we saw earlier, puts off many developers who don’t know how to work with OpenAPI. However, like I said before, generating OpenAPI specifications doesn’t need to be painful since you can use tools for that. In this approach, you use automated API testing tools to validate your implementation. Tools like Dredd and schemathesis. These tools work by parsing your API specification and automatically generating tests that ensure your implementation complies with the specification. They look at every aspect of your API implementation, including use of headers, status codes, compliance with schemas, and so on. The most advanced of these tools at the moment is schemathesis, which I highly encourage you to check out.
-
What advice you could give to BEGINNER?
It's missing the greatest API testing classic Dredd! Other than that the best API testing tool I've used so far is schemathesis. It works by looking at your API specification and automatically launching hundreds of tests per endpoint. It also leverages advanced OpenAPI documentation strategies such as links to test the relationship between various endpoints.
-
Dealing with backend developers
One more tip for the backend developers: make sure the API implementation is tested against the API specification using contract-testing tools such as Dredd or Schemathesis. I specially recommend schemathesis as it's a lot more comprehensive. I recommend you run those tests in the CI and require them to pass before they can merge their API changes. This is the only reliable way to ensure the API works as expected.
-
what are the best tools for documenting apis?
The other thing you want to make sure is that the server is implementing the API correctly. In this space, you can use tools such as Dredd and schemathesis, which look at the API specification and automatically test the server implementation against it.
-
How bad models ruin an API (or why design-first is the way to go)
Schemaless schemas make testing difficult. Tools like Dredd and Schemathesis rely on your API documentation to generate tests and validate your API responses. A collection of free-form arrays like the above model will pass nearly every test, even if the length of the arrays or their contents are wrong. Schemaless schemas are also useless for API mocking, which is a fundamental part of building reliable API integrations.
-
Is it possible to automate Api testing without writing any aditional code ?
Dredd: this is the classic API testing tool and it's been around for years. Dredd works by looking at your API specification and figuring out what tests need to be generated to validate your API implementation. You don't need to write any additional code, although you may want to create your own custom hooks to customise Dredd's behaviour. Dredd hooks are useful for example to test resource endpoints (the likes of /todo/{todo_id}) and to clean up your database from any resources created during the test suite. I wrote a tutorial on how to write Dredd hooks which you may find useful.
semver
-
Master the Art of Writing and Launching Your Own Modern JavaScript and Typescript Library in 2024
Following the Semantic Versioning rules, you should raise the version number every time you need to publish your library. In your "package.json" file, you need to change the version number to reflect whether the changes are major, minor, or patch updates.
-
Using semantic-release to automate releases and changelogs
Semantic Versioning: An established convention for version numbers following the pattern MAJOR.MINOR.PATCH
-
Essential Command Line Tools for Developers
Increases the major of the latest tag and prints it As per the Semver spec, it'll also clear the pre-release…
-
Testing Our Tasks
The reason for this is that software libraries and package managers, in general, but specifically here, rely on semantic versioning. Semantic versioning is really useful for distributing packages in a predictable way. What does this look like for our project?
-
What is Semantic Versioning and why you should use it for your software ?
For a more detailed and comprehensive guide on semantic versioning, visit https://semver.org
-
Neovim v0.9.5 Released
I believe neovim follows semantic versioning. https://semver.org/
-
Semver 2.0.0 Released
Semver has been 2.0.0 for 10 years, look at the date of the assets. Multiple releases created today where none existed before. Not sure why someone is creating releases now, perhaps just some housekeeping/cleanup.
-
First purchase advice
All ELRS hardware will talk to all other ELRS hardware, including Radiomaster's ELRS transmitters and receivers. There are one or two exceptions from scummy companies that have been pilloried by the community, and you probably won't find them anymore. So long as the ELRS firmware running on both devices has the same major version number, you're good to go. ie. 3.3.1 will still talk to 3.0.1, but won't talk to 2.0.0. (The "major version" is the 1st number, the "minor version" is the 2nd number, and the "patch version" is the 3rd number. See Semantic Versioning for more info.)
-
fkYAML v0.3.0: Support non-string-scalar nodes as mapping keys
If you're using semver, read the spec it's not overly long or hard to understand.
-
Immich will have breaking changes (again) in the next release
Semantic versioning actually has a clear rule about this:
What are some alternatives?
Schemathesis - Automate your API Testing: catch crashes, validate specs, and save time
react-native - A framework for building native applications using React
prism - Turn any OpenAPI2/3 and Postman Collection file into an API server with mocking, transformations and validations.
semantic-release - :package::rocket: Fully automated version management and package publishing
postman-app-support - Postman is an API platform for building and using APIs. Postman simplifies each step of the API lifecycle and streamlines collaboration so you can create better APIs—faster.
standard-version - :trophy: Automate versioning and CHANGELOG generation, with semver.org and conventionalcommits.org
redoc - 📘 OpenAPI/Swagger-generated API Reference Documentation
changesets - 🦋 A way to manage your versioning and changelogs with a focus on monorepos
ava - Node.js test runner that lets you develop with confidence 🚀
helmfile - Deploy Kubernetes Helm Charts
portman - Port OpenAPI Specs to Postman Collections, inject test suite and run via Newman 👨🏽🚀
Poetry - Python packaging and dependency management made easy