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metch-fock

v1.1.0

Published

A `fetch` mock library

Downloads

15

Readme

metch-fock

A fetch mock library.

It will replace the fetch implementation by a custom one matching your response.

It does work with Node 18+ fetch implementation. (See Considered alternatives).

Installation

Install it with your package manager

# npm
npm i -D metch-fock
#yarn
yarn add --dev metch-fock
#pnpm
pnpm add -D metch-fock

Usage

Imagine that function:

/**
 * This is a really simple function, you might have something way more complicated in your codebase.
 * The only important thing is that it will call the `fetch` method.
 */
async function doFetchWithToken(input, options) {
  const options = addToken(options);

  return fetch(input, options);
}

You need to implement a beforeEach and afterEach method. The first one will be used to block all network fetch call to avoid calling distant urls when running your tests. The second one will reset the mock stack. If you don't do that, the second test will match the mock of the first test, you don't want that.

import { blockAllCalls, fetchMock, resetMocks } from './fetchMock';

describe('some test file', () => {
  beforeEach(() => {
    // block all network calls
    blockAllCalls();
  });

  afterEach(() => {
    // empty the mock call stack
    resetMocks();
  });

  test('a test that will match every call', () => {
    const expected = new Response('OK');

    fetchMock(() => true, expected);

    const r1 = await doFetchWithToken('https://match.shrug/test');

    expect(r1).toBe(expected);
  });

  test('some test', () => {
    const expected = new Response('OK');

    fetchMock.get('https://match.get/test', expected);
    fetchMock.put(/https:\/\/match.put\//, expected);
    fetchMock.post.startsWith('https://match.post/', expected);

    const r1 = await doFetchWithToken('https://match.get/test');

    expect(r1).toBe(expected);

    const r2 = await doFetchWithToken('https://match.put/test', {
      method: 'PUT',
    });

    expect(r2).toBe(expected);

    const r3 = await doFetchWithToken('https://match.post/test', {
      method: 'POST',
    });

    expect(r3).toBe(expected);
  });

  test('some test with a complex matcher', () => {
    const expected = new Response('OK');

    fetchMock((input, options): boolean => {
      // you have access to all parameters of `fetch` function here, you can return anything you want
      return options?.headers?.Authorization === 'Bearer some-token';
    }, expected);

    const r1 = await doFetchWithToken('https://match.shrug/test', {
      headers: { Authorization: 'Bearer some-token' },
    });

    expect(r1).toBe(expected);
  });
});

API

Main matcher function, with all the flexibility you want:

function fetchMock(
  matcher: (
    input: URL | RequestInfo,
    options: RequestInit | undefined,
  ) => boolean,
  response: Response,
): void;

Helpers for simple test writing:

function fetchMock.get(url: string | RegExp, response: Response): void;
function fetchMock.post(url: string | RegExp, response: Response): void;
function fetchMock.put(url: string | RegExp, response: Response): void;
function fetchMock.patch(url: string | RegExp, response: Response): void;
function fetchMock.delete(url: string | RegExp, response: Response): void;

// foreach methods, there are string helper too
function fetchMock.<httpVerb>.startsWith(url: string, response: Response): void;
function fetchMock.<httpVerb>.endsWith(url: string, response: Response): void;
function fetchMock.<httpVerb>.includes(url: string, response: Response): void;

Utility functions:

function getInputUrl(input: URL | RequestInfo): string;
function getOptionMethod(options: RequestInit | undefined): string;

Considered alternatives