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Example provider using Postman collections and PactFlow's bi-directional contracts feature

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Example NodeJS Provider - Postman

Build Status

Can I deploy Status

Overview of Example

This is an example of a NodeJS "Product" API Provider that uses Postman, Pact, PactFlow and GitHub Actions to generate and publish Pact provider contracts.

It performs pre-deployment cross-compatability checks to ensure that it is compatible with specified consumers using the Bi-Directional contract capability of PactFlow.

See the full PactFlow Bi-Directional Workshop for which this can be substituted in as the "provider".

Key points

It:

  • Is an API written in Express JS
  • Has a Postman 2.1 collection (see ./test/PactflowProductsAPI.postman_collection.json)
  • Uses Newman to test the API against the postman collection
  • Uses Postman2OpenAPI to convert a Postman collection to an OAS for use in the bi-directional contracts feature.

What is uploaded to PactFlow is an OpenAPI specification that represents what you actually tested with Postman, to give us confidence it is compatible with a Pact consumer.

Overview of Part of Bi-Directional Contract Testing Flow

In the following diagram, you can see how the provider testing process works.

When we call "can-i-deploy" the cross-contract validation process kicks off on PactFlow, to ensure any consumer consumes a valid subset of the OAS for the provider.

Provider Test

The project uses a Makefile to simulate a very simple build pipeline with two stages - test and deploy.

When you run the CI pipeline (see below for doing this), the pipeline should perform the following activities (simplified):

  • Test
    • Run tests to check spec compliance with openAPI spec
    • Create branch tag via Pact CLI
    • Publish openAPI spec, along with a version with the name of the current branch
    • Check if we are safe to deploy to Production with can-i-deploy (ie. has the cross-contract validation has been successfully performed)
  • Deploy (only from <main|master>)
    • Deploy app to Production
    • Record the Production deployment in the Pact Broker

Provider Pipeline

Compatibile with Consumers

This project is currently compatible with the following consumers(s):

See Environment variables on how to set these up

Pre-requisites

Software:

Environment variables

To be able to run some of the commands locally, you will need to export the following environment variables into your shell:

Usage

Steps

  • make install - install project dependencies

Run each step separately

  • make test_and_publish - tests the provider and publishes provider contracts to PactFlow
    • This will perform the following 2 calls
      • make test
      • make publish_provider_contract
  • make can_i_deploy - runs can-i-deploy to check if its safe to deploy the provider
  • make deploy - deploys the app and records deployment

or run the whole lot in one go

  • make ci - run the CI process, but locally (uses Docker by default)

Installing alternate pact CLI tools.

If you don't have docker, you can use one of the ruby tools. The standalone, doesn't require that you install Ruby on your host machine.

  • make install-pact-ruby-cli - installs the pact ruby CLI tool
  • make install-pact-ruby-standalone - installs the pact standalone CLI depending on your platform
  • make uninstall-pact-ruby-standalone - uninstalls the pact standalone CLI

Using alternate pact CLI tools.

  • PACT_TOOL=docker make ci - run the CI process, using the pact Docker CLI tool
  • PACT_TOOL=ruby_standalone make ci - run the CI process, using the pact standalone CLI tool
  • PACT_TOOL=ruby_cli make ci - run the CI process, using the pact ruby CLI tool

OS/Platform specific considerations

The makefile has been configured to run on Unix/Windows and MacOS based systems, and tested against Github Actions

They can be run locally on Unix/Windows and MacOS, or on Windows via WSL2 or a shell with bash.

Caveats

  • OAS considerations
  • OAS is generated by the examples attached to each request. If there are mulitple overlapping paths, the last one will clobber earlier ones (use the Postman examples feature to overcome this)
  • Postman tests are attached to the "item" level, not the examples. So it's possible to put in examples that don't actually match reality and aren't tested.

Related topics / posts / discussions

Other examples of how to do this form of testing

  • TBC

Found an issue?

Reach out via a GitHub Issue, or reach us over in the Pact foundation Slack

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