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Introduction

This is a teaching material aimed to demonstrate the peculiarities of testing distributed systems. More specifically, this repo illustrates the foundational principles of service virtualization using mountebank1. The following topics are covered in this unit:

  • Why there is a need for service virtualization in testing distributed systems.
  • Demonstration of the basic principles of service virtualization using mountebank, and it's Python binding called mbtest.
  • The differences between stubs and mocks as well as the importance of knowing when to use each of them. It is far more important to understand the implications of using one or the other than to uncritically accept and stick to a particular style (a debate known as mockists vs. classicists). Hence, the Mocks Aren't Stubs blog's value is in its ability to explain the trade-offs between the two styles rather than about finding the "right" answer should you be a mockist or a classicist.
  • How to virtualize a mail server to test your client.
  • How to virtualize a RESTful service to test your REST client.
  • How various authentication & authorization methods work and how can be tested in a controlled environment.
  • Why virtual development/runtime environments are so important, and how to make one leveraging the standard Python 3+ and JavaScript toolset.

Architecture of Distributed Tests with Virtualized Services

The main objective of service virtualization is to run tests in a manner that is opaque for a system under test (sut). In other words, a sut thinks that it is communicating with a real backend server. It is possible to check both the responses (verification of state changes) and the requests (verification of behavior). The latter is especially useful when you want to check if a sut is sending the correct commands to the backend server's API and/or stick to the protocol. The next figure illustrates the architecture of distributed tests with service virtualization and explains how mountebank responds to requests.

How Testing Services with mountebank Works

Figure 1 - How testing with mountebank works2. One important technical detail is the usage of the canonical data model, which isolates you from the specifics of protocols while defining rules for imposters.

Usage

It is assumed that all commands below will be executed from the project's root folder as well as that this repo was cloned from GitHub and is available on your machine. Furthermore, you must have Python 3.10+ installed and exposed as python as well as it's package manager as pip. If this is not the case, then you will need to adjust the instructions below accordingly. Windows users are expected to use the Cygwin environment.

The table below explains the directory structure of this repository.

Folder Description
root Contains the package dependencies for Python and NodeJS.
suts Systems under test that will be exercised via virtualized services.
tests Contains the Pytest tests.

Setup of the Python Related Environment

For educational purposes all steps related to handling a virtual environment are explicitly enrolled and expected to be manually executed. You can automate all these steps. for example, using Codespaces.

  1. Execute the next step only once inside the cloned project:
    python -m venv .venv
  2. At the beginning of a session active your virtual environment by running:
    source .venv/bin/activate
    As a sanity check you may want to run echo $VIRTUAL_ENV to see if the environment is activated.
  3. Install the required packages:
    pip install -r requirements.txt
  4. List the available packages to verify that everything is installed correctly:
    pip list
    This should produce an output that includes the following item:
    Package Version
    ------- -------
    mbtest  2.12.0
    <other dependencies>
    
  5. Deactivate the virtual environment once you are done running this project:
    deactivate

The advantage of using a virtual environment is that it allows you to work on multiple projects with different dependencies without them interfering with each other. It also makes it easy to share your project with others, as they can create the same environment on their machine.

Setup of mountebank

The following steps are required to set up mountebank:

  1. Install Node Version Manager (nvm) and use Node version 20.10 or higher.
  2. Run npm install mountebank to install mountebank locally. It is also possible to install it globally as well as use with Docker. Nevertheless, the latter requires explicitly opening up a port for each imposter, which is done automatically if mountebank is started via npx or npm.
  3. Run npx mb --version to verify that mountebank is installed correctly. You should see 2.9.1 or higher.

Running Distributed Tests

The tests are located in the tests directory. They will be separately described in the following sections. This section covers common steps to run the tests. Before executing any test, ensure that mountebank is running in the background. This can be achieved by running the following command3:

npx mb

I suggest that you run this command in a separate terminal window. This way, you can keep it running while you run tests in another window. If you encounter any error, like, any of the ports being already in use, then you can change the port number in the test configuration file or stop the process that is using the port. The configuration parameters for all tests are inside the tests/.env.test file. It is fully commented, so you should have no difficulty in understanding it. The same is true for all sorts of source files, both for tests and components.

Running the Mail Client Test

Execute:

PYTHONPATH=. pytest tests/test_mail_client.py

This will test the suts/mail_client.py module by sending a dummy email message to contrived recipients. Mountebank will record the requests and the test will verify that the client is sending the correct commands to the mail server. This is a perfect example of mocking, learn more.

Running the Album Viewer Test

Execute:

PYTHONPATH=. pytest tests/test_album_viewer.py

The album viewer test is more complex than the mail client test:

  1. It runs the album viewer module that uses the Spotify Web API (from now on denoted just as Spotify API) to retrieve an access token and some albums. Mountebank will emulate the real Spotify service and send back correct responses expected by the system under test.
  2. The test verifies that the client is getting correct responses. This is a perfect example of using stubs.

Configuring the Applications for Production Use

The mail client's source code contains instructions how to obtain an application password from Google to use the Gmail API.

The album viewer must be able to retrieve an access token to use any Spotify API endpoint. This entails registering a Spotify application and obtaining the client ID and client secret. The following steps are required to do this:

  1. Create a Spotify developer account here, as needed.
  2. Create an application via Spotify dashboard to obtain the client ID and client secret. To keep things simple put http://localhost/ as the redirect URI and select Web API.
  3. Call suts/album_viewer.py#get_access_token function from your program passing the above-mentioned credentials.

Conclusion

This project has demonstrated a miniscule subset of possibilities that service virtualization offers. It is a powerful tool that can be used to test distributed systems in a controlled environment. We have focused mostly on testing functionality, but mountebank can be efficiently used to test performance as well. The latter is especially important when you want to test how your system behaves under extreme load without inadvertently summon a DDoS attack on a remote dependency. Simulation of faults is also nearly impossible without some form of service virtualization, learn more.

As a side note, an imposter can proxy any up so far unmatched requests toward the target system (known as a self initializing fake), and tests will implicitly verify correctness of the client's requests as well (since they are also hitting real backend endpoints). In other words, they will inherently perform a contract test ensuring that nothing has changed in the Spotify API.

Footnotes

  1. There are many other good alternatives, like, WireMock. Nonetheless, all of them follow and deliver the same basic principles and features.

  2. This freely available image was taken from the accompanying site associated with the book about mountebank.

  3. There are lots of command line options, just run npx mb --help to read about them.