# Webmock Method Gem-extension for webmock gem for creating services with mocked methods. ## Installation Add this line to your application's Gemfile: gem 'webmock_method' And then execute: $ bundle Or install it yourself as: $ gem install webmock_method ## Usage [WebMock] (https://github.com/bblimke/webmock) is gem for stubbing HTTP requests. You can use it in your tests if you don't want to hit actual service while testing other functionality of your service. For example: ```ruby require 'webmock' WebMock.stub_request(:any, "www.example.com").to_return(:body => "some body") expect(Net::HTTP.get("www.example.com", "/")).to eq "some body" ``` It will stub all http verbs (GET, POST, PUT etc.) thanks to **:any** parameter. You can also use webmock library for building **stubbed versions** of your services. This approach is especially useful when services to be called **are not implemented yet** (maybe by another team) and you still want to start working on your part and finish it on time. In order to facilitate the creation of **mocked service methods**, you can use **webmock_method** gem. How to use it? First, create **actual service wrapper** that works with future API of "not yet developed service". As an example, we can use publicly available [OpenWeatherMap](http://api.openweathermap.org) web service. We will implement call to **quote weather** for a given city. You have to provide **location** and **units** parameters: ```ruby # services/open_weather_map_service.rb require 'net/http' class OpenWeatherMapService attr_reader :url def initialize @url = 'http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/weather' end def quote location, units quote_url = "#{url}?q=#{location}%20nj&units=#{units}" uri = URI.parse(URI.escape(quote_url)) Net::HTTP.get(uri) # At this moment, service is not developed yet... end end ``` Then, create stub/mock for your service: ```ruby # stubs/open_weather_map_service.rb require 'webmock_method' require 'json' require 'services/open_weather_map_service.rb' class OpenWeatherMapService extend WebmockMethod webmock_method :quote, [:location, :units], lambda { |_| File.open "#{File.dirname(__FILE__)}/stubs/templates/quote_response.json.erb" }, /#{WebmockMethod.url}/ end ``` **webmock_method** requires you to provide the following information: * **method name** to be mocked; * **parameters names** for the method (same as in original service); * **proc/lambda** expression for building the response; * **url** to remote service (optional). You can build responses of arbitrary complexity with your own code or you can use **RenderHelper**, that comes with this gem. Currently it supports **erb** renderer only. Here is example of how to build xml response: ```ruby webmock_method :purchase, [:amount, :credit_card], lambda { |binding| RenderHelper.render :erb, "#{File.dirname(__FILE__)}/templates/purchase_response.xml.erb", binding } ``` It's possible to tweak your response on the fly: ```ruby webmock_method :purchase, [:amount, :credit_card], lambda { |binding| RenderHelper.render :erb, "#{File.dirname(__FILE__)}/templates/purchase_response.xml.erb", binding } do |parent, _, credit_card| if credit_card.card_type == "VISA" define_attribute(parent, :success, true) else define_attribute(parent, :success, false) define_attribute(parent, :error_message, "Unsupported Credit Card Type") end end ``` and then, use newly defined attributes, such as **success** and **error_message** inside your template: ```xml <%= success %> <% unless success %> <%= error_message %> <% end %> ``` **url** parameter is optional. If you don't specify it, gem will try to use **url** attribute defined on your service or you can define **url** parameter for WebmockMethod: ```ruby WebmockMethod.url = "http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/weather" ``` And finally, create spec for testing your mocked service: ```ruby require "stubs/open_weather_map_service" describe OpenWeatherMapService do describe "#quote" do it "gets the quote" do result = JSON.parse(subject.quote("plainsboro, nj", "imperial")) expect(result['sys']['country']).to eq("United States of America") end end end ``` ## Contributing 1. Fork it 2. Create your feature branch (`git checkout -b my-new-feature`) 3. Commit your changes (`git commit -am 'Add some feature'`) 4. Push to the branch (`git push origin my-new-feature`) 5. Create new Pull Request