Nock
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Nock | miragejs | |
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21 | 17 | |
12,513 | 5,279 | |
0.4% | 0.3% | |
8.3 | 6.1 | |
16 days ago | 4 months ago | |
JavaScript | JavaScript | |
MIT License | 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.
Nock
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I made wirepig, a simple way to mock HTTP and TCP dependencies in tests.
That said, folks seem to like "recording" features in these sorts of tools (Ruby's VCR, nock, etc), so maybe there's a future where I add something similar. I've always just found the ergonomics of those features awkward to deal with, especially having to flip back and forth between tests and fixtures files to figure out what's wired to what, but maybe there's a clean solution... perhaps a "live request" mode that just prints mock code snippets of request/response pairs passing through your app.
When it comes time to test these applications, things can get awkward. Do I stand up a real redis instance to test against? Do I stub out functions to "fake" the network calls? Do I use a tool like nock that monkey patches node's standard lib?
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Is there a better way to mock an axios call?
While not mocking per say I usually use nock for http calls. You can use nock.recorder.rec() to capture the http call to play back during test, That way you are always using "live" code but not making real calls to servers.
- How do you practice with React without setting up your own backend?
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OSD600 - Telescope - Testing for feed URLs
I looked at the service which is used to get the feed URLs from a blog URL and noticed it takes the html response of the blog URL and gets the links ( tags) by checking the type attribute value against a list of valid feed values. So, I decided to use a similar approach by getting the html response for a provided URL and checking the Content-Type header against a list of valid MIME types for a feed. I ended up updating the logic to test if a URL is a feed URL, returning it if true. If the URL is found to not be a feed URL, it would try to get the feed URLs assuming the URL is a blog URL. I tested and confirmed that the new logic worked for both blog and feed URLs. Then, I added some tests for the new function I added to test for a feed URL. Testing this ended up being simpler than I expected as all I had to do was mock the response of a test url (using nock), and then check if the function returned the correct boolean value for a url. I created a PR and noticed that some of the tests in another file were now failing. While I was investigating this, I got a review on my PR, requesting me to add another test to the file which had the failing tests. That file tested the API service as a whole. I found out that nock only mocks a URL's response for one request by default. And since I was now checking for a feed URL as well, the function which returned the feed URLs from a blog URL was throwing an error since the nock for that was used up. To fix this, I had to specify in the nock statement to mock the URL response for two requests:
- What features would you consider missing/nice to haves for backend web development in Rust?
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Axios shipped a buggy version and it broke many productions apps. Let this be a lesson to pin your dependencies!
For example in my backend project I use Nock to do so. This library captures the request before sending them and you can validate the expected url to have all properties required.
There are libraries like https://github.com/nock/nock to prevent mocking the whole axios.
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Is it acceptable to use mock servers, like Postman, for testing in Android?
If you’re willing to venture into nodejs territory, then nock is a fantastic and simple to set up http mock server. https://github.com/nock/nock
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Mocking API calls in React Tests with Nock
We'll use a third-party package called nock that helps us to mock HTTP requests. With nock, we can specify the desired behavior of our mock HTTP requests, including the URL, headers, and body. This allows us to test our code against a known data set, making debugging and testing much more straightforward.
miragejs
- Mock server
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The Definitive Guide to Make API Calls in React
For the styles, I'll be using TailwindCSS. To simulate API requests Mirage JS will be used, which is a very easy to use and useful API mocking library. To call this API, we're going to use Fetch.
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How do you practice with React without setting up your own backend?
Mirage JS is specifically built for this purpose as well. It‘s a frontend JavaScript library meant for mocking backend APIs. https://miragejs.com/
We use miragejs https://miragejs.com/
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Do tests without seeing the code!
The best case scenario you would be using something like MirageJS, MSW, or even JSON Server, but mocking fetch is always an option.
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Mocking API calls in React Tests with Nock
Mirage JS: Mirage JS is an API mocking library that lets you build, test, and share a complete working JavaScript application without having to rely on any backend services.
- How to correctly mock node-fetch?
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Should I try doing this assignment for Frontend Engineering position
You can try something like https://miragejs.com/ or https://github.com/mswjs/msw to mock out an API to make your frontend code work.
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Is there any equivalent to json-server that can just run directly in my frontend?
The packages miragejs and msw provide API interception running directly on the frontend, but they don't seem to automatically generate CRUD routes from a single JSON object like json-server does. Is there any way to get json-server's automatic CRUD route logic running on the frontend like miragejs?
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What makes a Impressive Web Developer Portfolio
You may use API mocking providers like miragejs for other projects without back-end.
What are some alternatives?
msw - Seamless REST/GraphQL API mocking library for browser and Node.js.
node-fetch - A light-weight module that brings the Fetch API to Node.js
http-proxy - A full-featured http proxy for node.js
axios - Promise based HTTP client for the browser and node.js
superagent - Ajax for Node.js and browsers (JS HTTP client). Maintained for @forwardemail, @ladjs, @spamscanner, @breejs, @cabinjs, and @lassjs.
json-server - Get a full fake REST API with zero coding in less than 30 seconds (seriously)
undici - An HTTP/1.1 client, written from scratch for Node.js
Express - Fast, unopinionated, minimalist web framework for node.
mockoon - Mockoon is the easiest and quickest way to run mock APIs locally. No remote deployment, no account required, open source.
isomorphic-fetch - Isomorphic WHATWG Fetch API, for Node & Browserify