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com.io7m.quixote

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OpenJDK (Temurin) Current Linux Build (OpenJDK (Temurin) Current, Linux)
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OpenJDK (Temurin) LTS Windows Build (OpenJDK (Temurin) LTS, Windows)

quixote

A tiny embedded HTTP server for unit testing.

Features

  • An embedded HTTP server for simulating external services.
  • Conveniently enqueue responses to arbitrary requests.
  • Verify that requests were received as expected.
  • Zero dependencies for the core module (optional modules may have dependencies).
  • Written in pure Java 21.
  • OSGi ready.
  • JPMS ready.
  • ISC license.
  • High-coverage automated test suite.

Motivation

Any code that makes requests to an external service should be tested to ensure that both the requests it makes are correct, and that it behaves correctly when presented with various responses. The quixote package provides a tiny embedded web server that can be configured to return canned responses to specified requests.

Building

$ mvn clean verify

Usage

Create a QWebServer before each test. The server will listen on the specified port.

@BeforeEach
public void setup()
  throws IOException
{
  this.server =
    QWebServers.createServer(42000);
  this.http =
    HttpClient.newHttpClient();
}

Enqueue responses to requests:

this.server.addResponse()
  .forMethod("GET")
  .forPath("/xyz")
  .withContentType("text/plain")
  .withFixedText("Hello 0.")
  .withStatus(201)
  .withHeader("Header-0", "XYZ");

Have code make requests to the server during tests, and then verify that the server received the requests:

final var requests =
  new LinkedList<>(this.server.requestsReceived());

{
  final var req = requests.remove(0);
  assertEquals("GET", req.method());
  assertEquals("/xyz", req.path());
}

Remember to clean up the server after each test:

@AfterEach
public void tearDown()
  throws IOException
{
  this.server.close();
}

OCI

quay.io/repository/io7mcom/quixote

The quixote server is also capable of acting as a standalone web server for use in integration tests involving containers. This is primarily useful for situations where an integration test starts multiple containers inside an isolated virtual network, and one or more of the test containers need to speak to a fake web server, and the host running the test suite needs to observe the requests in question. This particular configuration can be difficult to set up in an automated manner, as most virtual networking solutions don't allow for containers to "talk back" to the host machine. Using quixote as a container allows for it to be present inside the virtual network, and for the host to download and parse request logs after the test has completed, sidestepping the need for any containers to know about the host machine.

In other words:

  1. The host creates a virtual network using its container engine of choice.
  2. The host creates several containers inside the virtual network.
  3. The host writes a quixote configuration file in the host directory.
  4. The host creates a quixote container inside the virtual network, mounting the host directory into the container as a volume mount.
  5. The host runs the test. This causes the containers inside the virtual network to make requests to the quixote container.
  6. The host reads the resulting request log from the host directory and verifies that the correct requests were made for the test.

Virtual Network

Given a configuration file conforming to the provided schema, the quixote server can be started using a container engine such as Podman.

$ cat quixote/config.xml

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>

<Configuration xmlns="urn:com.io7m.quixote:configuration:1"
               Port="20001"
               GZIP="true">
  <Responses>
    <Response Method="GET"
              Path="/"
              Status="200">
      <Headers>
        <Header Name="Content-Type"
                Value="application/octet-stream"/>
      </Headers>
      <ContentUTF8>Hello world!</ContentUTF8>
    </Response>
  </Responses>
</Configuration>
$ podman run \
  --rm \
  --interactive \
  --tty \
  --volume quixote:/quixote/data:rw \
  --publish 20001:20001/tcp \
  quay.io/io7mcom/quixote:1.2.0 \
  /quixote/data/config.xml \
  /quixote/data/output.bin
INFO com.io7m.quixote.main.Main: Quixote running at http://localhost:20001/
$ curl http://localhost:20001/
Hello world!

The server appends every received request to a file consisting of an array of request records in a trivial binary format. A request record has the following structure:

RequestRecord
{
  Unsigned64  quixote;
  Unsigned32  version;
  Unsigned64  length;
  Unsigned8   data[length];
}

All integer values are in big-endian byte order.

The quixote field of the RequestRecord structure always has the value 0x515549584F544521 ("QUIXOTE!" in ASCII). The version field of the RequestRecord field currently has the value 0x00000001.

The data field is a sequence of length bytes that represents a serialized java.util.Properties XML document. For example, the curl request above resulted in the following record being appended to /quixote/output.bin:

0000:0000 | 51 55 49 58  4F 54 45 21  00 00 00 01  00 00 00 00 | QUIXOTE!........
0000:0010 | 00 00 01 BF  3C 3F 78 6D  6C 20 76 65  72 73 69 6F | ...¿<?xml versio
0000:0020 | 6E 3D 22 31  2E 30 22 20  65 6E 63 6F  64 69 6E 67 | n="1.0" encoding
0000:0030 | 3D 22 55 54  46 2D 38 22  3F 3E 0A 3C  21 44 4F 43 | ="UTF-8"?>.<!DOC
0000:0040 | 54 59 50 45  20 70 72 6F  70 65 72 74  69 65 73 20 | TYPE properties
0000:0050 | 53 59 53 54  45 4D 20 22  68 74 74 70  3A 2F 2F 6A | SYSTEM "http://j
0000:0060 | 61 76 61 2E  73 75 6E 2E  63 6F 6D 2F  64 74 64 2F | ava.sun.com/dtd/
0000:0070 | 70 72 6F 70  65 72 74 69  65 73 2E 64  74 64 22 3E | properties.dtd">
0000:0080 | 0A 3C 70 72  6F 70 65 72  74 69 65 73  3E 0A 3C 65 | .<properties>.<e
0000:0090 | 6E 74 72 79  20 6B 65 79  3D 22 48 65  61 64 65 72 | ntry key="Header
0000:00A0 | 2E 72 65 6D  6F 74 65 2D  61 64 64 72  22 3E 31 32 | .remote-addr">12
0000:00B0 | 37 2E 30 2E  30 2E 31 3C  2F 65 6E 74  72 79 3E 0A | 7.0.0.1</entry>.
0000:00C0 | 3C 65 6E 74  72 79 20 6B  65 79 3D 22  49 6E 66 6F | <entry key="Info
0000:00D0 | 2E 4D 65 74  68 6F 64 22  3E 47 45 54  3C 2F 65 6E | .Method">GET</en
0000:00E0 | 74 72 79 3E  0A 3C 65 6E  74 72 79 20  6B 65 79 3D | try>.<entry key=
0000:00F0 | 22 48 65 61  64 65 72 2E  68 74 74 70  2D 63 6C 69 | "Header.http-cli
0000:0100 | 65 6E 74 2D  69 70 22 3E  31 32 37 2E  30 2E 30 2E | ent-ip">127.0.0.
0000:0110 | 31 3C 2F 65  6E 74 72 79  3E 0A 3C 65  6E 74 72 79 | 1</entry>.<entry
0000:0120 | 20 6B 65 79  3D 22 49 6E  66 6F 2E 50  61 74 68 22 |  key="Info.Path"
0000:0130 | 3E 2F 3C 2F  65 6E 74 72  79 3E 0A 3C  65 6E 74 72 | >/</entry>.<entr
0000:0140 | 79 20 6B 65  79 3D 22 48  65 61 64 65  72 2E 61 63 | y key="Header.ac
0000:0150 | 63 65 70 74  22 3E 2A 2F  2A 3C 2F 65  6E 74 72 79 | cept">*/*</entry
0000:0160 | 3E 0A 3C 65  6E 74 72 79  20 6B 65 79  3D 22 48 65 | >.<entry key="He
0000:0170 | 61 64 65 72  2E 75 73 65  72 2D 61 67  65 6E 74 22 | ader.user-agent"
0000:0180 | 3E 63 75 72  6C 2F 38 2E  37 2E 31 3C  2F 65 6E 74 | >curl/8.7.1</ent
0000:0190 | 72 79 3E 0A  3C 65 6E 74  72 79 20 6B  65 79 3D 22 | ry>.<entry key="
0000:01A0 | 48 65 61 64  65 72 2E 68  6F 73 74 22  3E 31 32 37 | Header.host">127
0000:01B0 | 2E 30 2E 30  2E 31 3A 32  30 30 30 31  3C 2F 65 6E | .0.0.1:20001</en
0000:01C0 | 74 72 79 3E  0A 3C 2F 70  72 6F 70 65  72 74 69 65 | try>.</propertie
0000:01D0 | 73 3E 0A                                           | s>.

Extracting the XML document and formatting it gives:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE properties SYSTEM "http://java.sun.com/dtd/properties.dtd">
<properties>
<entry key="Header.remote-addr">127.0.0.1</entry>
<entry key="Info.Method">GET</entry>
<entry key="Header.http-client-ip">127.0.0.1</entry>
<entry key="Info.Path">/</entry>
<entry key="Header.accept">*/*</entry>
<entry key="Header.user-agent">curl/8.7.1</entry>
<entry key="Header.host">127.0.0.1:20001</entry>
</properties>

We can see that the client made a GET request to the / path. The QWebRequestLogging class provides convenient functions to read and write request logs.