MicroShed Testing Framework :: Payara Server extensions

Extensions for using MicroShed Testing with Payara servers

License

License

Categories

Categories

Payara Container Application Servers
GroupId

GroupId

org.microshed
ArtifactId

ArtifactId

microshed-testing-payara-server
Last Version

Last Version

0.9.1
Release Date

Release Date

Type

Type

module
Description

Description

MicroShed Testing Framework :: Payara Server extensions
Extensions for using MicroShed Testing with Payara servers
Project URL

Project URL

https://microshed.org/microshed-testing/
Source Code Management

Source Code Management

https://github.com/MicroShed/microshed-testing.git

Download microshed-testing-payara-server

Dependencies

compile (1)

Group / Artifact Type Version
org.microshed : microshed-testing-testcontainers jar 0.9.1

Project Modules

There are no modules declared in this project.

MicroShed Testing

Maven Central Javadocs Website Build Status License

Why use MicroShed Testing?

MicroShed Testing offers a fast and simple way of writing and running true-to-production integration tests for Java microservice applications. MicroShed Testing exercises your containerized application from outside the container so you are testing the exact same image that runs in production.

MicroShed Testing aims to:

  1. be easy to get started with
  2. work with any Java EE, Jakarta EE or MicroProfile runtime
  3. provide true-to-production tests

How to use in an existing project:

Add microshed-testing-testcontainers and junit-jupiter as test-scoped dependencies:

<dependencies>
    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.microshed</groupId>
        <artifactId>microshed-testing-testcontainers</artifactId>
        <version>0.9.1</version>
       <scope>test</scope>
    </dependency>
    
    <dependency>
        <groupId>org.junit.jupiter</groupId>
        <artifactId>junit-jupiter</artifactId>
        <version>5.4.2</version>
        <scope>test</scope>
    </dependency>

    <!-- other dependencies... -->
</dependencies>

How to try out a sample locally:

Run with Maven:

./gradlew publishToMavenLocal
cd sample-apps/maven-app
mvn clean install

Run with Gradle:

./gradlew :microshed-testing-jaxrs-json:test

NOTE: The first run will take longer due to downloading required container layers. Subsequent runs will be faster.

Tested with:

  • OpenLiberty
  • Wildfly
  • Payara Micro
  • Apache TomEE
  • Quarkus

To change which app server is used, [un]comment sections of the test app's Dockerfile at sample-apps/jaxrs-json/Dockerfile

What it looks like

Assume we have a basic JAX-RS application that can perform create, update, and delete operations on 'Person' data objects. It may look something like this:

@Path("/people")
@ApplicationScoped
@Produces(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
@Consumes(MediaType.APPLICATION_JSON)
public class PersonService {

    private final PersonRepo personRepo = // ...

    @GET
    public Collection<Person> getAllPeople() {
        return personRepo.values();
    }

    @GET
    @Path("/{personId}")
    public Person getPerson(@PathParam("personId") long id) {
        Person foundPerson = personRepo.get(id);
        if (foundPerson == null)
            throw new NotFoundException("Person with id " + id + " not found.");
        return foundPerson;
    }
    
    // ...
}

Using MicroShed Testing, we can write an integration test that looks something like this:

import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.*;
import javax.ws.rs.NotFoundException;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
import org.microshed.testing.jaxrs.RESTClient;
import org.microshed.testing.jupiter.MicroShedTest;
import org.microshed.testing.testcontainers.ApplicationContainer;
import org.testcontainers.junit.jupiter.Container;

@MicroShedTest
public class BasicJAXRSServiceTest {

    // This will search for a Dockerfile in the repository and start up the application
    // in a Docker container, and wait for it to be ready before starting the tests.
    @Container
    public static ApplicationContainer app = new ApplicationContainer()
                    .withAppContextRoot("/myservice");

    // This injects a REST _Client_ proxy of the PersonService shown above
    // This allows us to easily invoke HTTP requests on the running application container
    @RESTClient
    public static PersonService personSvc;

    @Test
    public void testGetPerson() {
        // This invokes an HTTP POST request to the running container, which triggers
        // the PersonService#createPerson endpoint and returns the generated ID
        Long bobId = personSvc.createPerson("Bob", 24);
        
        // Using the generated ID, invoke an HTTP GET request to read the record we just created
        // The JSON response will be automatically converted to a 'Person' object using JSON-B 
        Person bob = personSvc.getPerson(bobId);
        
        assertEquals("Bob", bob.name);
        assertEquals(24, bob.age);
        assertNotNull(bob.id);
    }
    
    @Test
    public void testGetUnknownPerson() {
        // This invokes an HTTP GET request to get a person with ID -1, which does not exist
        // asserts that the application container returns an HTTP 404 (not found) exception
        assertThrows(NotFoundException.class, () -> personSvc.getPerson(-1L));
    }

    // ...
}
org.microshed

MicroShed

Developer tools for creating Java microservices

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