Awesome
JSONing API
JSONing API is a versatile tool that allows you to mock REST APIs. It allows to easily simulate and test API behaviors, providing a dynamic environment to craft custom responses and logic.
Install
$ npm install jsoning-api
# Or clone the repository
$ git clone https://github.com/cyrilbois/jsoning-api.git
$ cd jsoning-api
$ npm install
Configuration
Create a db.json
file
{
"products": [
{
"id": 1, "name": "T-shirt", "price": 19.99
},
{
"id": 2, "name": "Jeans", "price": 49.99
}
],
"users": [
{
"id": 1, "username": "johndoe", "email": "johndoe@example.com"
},
{
"id": 2, "username": "janedoe", "email": "janedoe@example.com"
}
]
}
In this example, you have created 2 resources: "products" and "users" (2 objects for each resource).
Create a rules.json
file (you can provide an empty array)
[
{
"input": { "method": "GET", "path": "/status/401" },
"output": { "status": 401, "response": {"error": "demo error"} },
"stop" : true
}
]
With this rule, calling the resource /status/401
will return a 401 error.
Usage
Start the REST API service
$ npm start
Get a REST API
$ curl http://localhost:3000/products/1
{
"id": 1,
"name": "T-shirt",
"price": 19.99
}
Routes
The REST API handles different HTTP methods for creating, retrieving, updating, and deleting resources
GET /products Returns all products
GET /products/2 Returns the product with ID 2
POST /products Create a new product
GET /products/2 Returns the product with ID 2
PUT /products/2 Update the product with ID 2
PATCH /products/2 Update partially the product with ID 2
DELETE /products/2 Delete the product with ID 2
Pagination
- page
- limit
GET /products?limit=5 Returns the first 5 products (Page defaults to 1)
GET /products?page=2 Returns 10 products from the second page (default limit is 10)
GET /products?page=2&limit=5 Returns 5 products from the second page (Page starts at 1)
Custom rules
Custom rules are defined using JSON. With these JSON-based rules, you can set conditions based on the request (such as HTTP method, headers, and payload) and specify the response (including HTTP status code and payload). This allows you to tailor the API's behavior to meet specific testing and development needs.
Rules are applied before the API execution (which reads, writes, or deletes data).
If multiple rules match the request, only one is executed (the first one found).
The HTTP status and payload defined by the rules take precedence over those set by the API.
Here is an example of a rule:
{
"input": { "method": "GET", "path": "/status/401" },
"output": { "status": 401, "response": {"error": "demo error"} },
"stop" : true
}
The stop
attribute indicates whether to halt after applying the rule or to continue with the API execution.
Input
The input
object is used to represent the different criteria that can be tested in the request.
| Attribute | Description |
|-----------|-------------------------------------------------------------|
| headers | The headers (Object: each header is an attribute) |
| method | The HTTP method ('GET', 'POST', 'PUT', 'PATCH', 'DELETE') |
| path | The pathname of the URL (e.g., /users/23). |
| payload | The payload (object or string) |
Output
The output
object is used to update the response if the rule match.
| Attribute | Description |
|-----------|---------------------------------------------|
| status | Sets the HTTP status (e.g., 200, 404, etc.) |
| response | Sets the response payload |
| headers | Sets the headers |
Tests
Launch tests
$ npm test
License
MIT License