Pact server
The pact server is a stand-alone interactions recorder and verifier, aimed at clients that are non-JVM or non-Ruby based.
The pact client for that platform will need to be implemented, but it only be responsible for generating the JSON
interactions, running the tests and communicating with the server.
The server implements a JSON REST Admin API with the following endpoints.
Running the server
Pact server takes the following parameters:
Using trust store
Trust store can be used. However, it is limited to a single port for the time being.
Using a distribution archive
You can download a distribution from maven central. There is both a ZIP and TAR archive. Unpack it to a directory of choice and then run the script in the bin directory.
Building a distribution bundle
You can build an application bundle with gradle by running:
This will create an app bundle in build/install/pact-jvm-server. You can then execute it with:
or with the generated bundle script file:
By default will run on port 29999 but a port number can be optionally supplied.
Running it with docker
You can use a docker image to execute the mock server as a docker container.
This will run the main server on port 8080, and each created mock server on ports 20000-20010. You can map the ports to any you require.
Life cycle
The following actions are expected to occur
- The client calls
/createto initialise a server with the expectedJSONinteractions and state - The admin server will start a mock server on a random port and return the port number in the response
- The client will execute its interaction tests against the mock server with the supplied port
- Once finished, the client will call `/complete' on the Admin API, posting the port number
- The pact server will verify the interactions and write the
JSONpactfile to disk under/target - The mock server running on the supplied port will be shutdown.
- The client will call
/publishto publish the created contract to the configured pact broker
Endpoints
/create
The client will need POST to /create the generated JSON interactions, also providing a state as a query parameter
and a path.
For example:
This will create a new running mock service provider on a randomly generated port. The port will be returned in the
201 response:
But you can also reference the path from /sub/ref/path using the server port. The service will not strip
the prefix path, but instead will use it as a differentiator. If your services do not have differences
in the prefix of their path, then you will have to use the port method.
/complete
Once the client has finished running its tests against the mock server on the supplied port (in this example port
34423) the client will need to POST to /complete the port number of the mock server that was used.
For example:
This will cause the Pact server to verify the interactions, shutdown the mock server running on that port and writing
the pact JSON file to disk under the target directory.
/publish
Once all interactions have been tested the /publish endpoint can be called to publish the created pact to the pact broker
For this it is required to run the pact-jvm-server with the -b parameter to configure the pact broker to publish the pacts to.
Optionaly an authentication token can be used for authentication against the broker.
For example:
This will cause the Pact server to check for the pact Zoo-Animal_Service.json on disk under target and publish it to
the configured pact broker. After a successful publish the pact will be removed from disk.
/
The / endpoint is for diagnostics and to check that the pact server is running. It will return all the currently
running mock servers port numbers.
For example: