.. _howto: Howto ===== This documentation is a collection of the most common use cases, and their solutions. If you have not used this library before, it may be better to read the :ref:`tutorial` first. Matching query parameters ------------------------- To match query parameters, you must not included them to the URI, as this will not work: .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_query_params_never_do_this.py :language: python There's an explicit place where the query string should go: .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_query_params_proper_use.py :language: python The ``query_string`` is the parameter which does not contain the leading question mark ``?``. .. note:: The reason behind this is the underlying http server library *werkzeug*, which provides the ``Request`` object which is used for the matching the request with the handlers. This object has the ``query_string`` attribute which contains the query. As the order of the parameters in the query string usually does not matter, you can specify a dict for the ``query_string`` parameter (the naming may look a bit strange but we wanted to keep API compatibility and this dict matching feature was added later). .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_query_params_dict.py :language: python In the example above, both requests pass the test as we specified the expected query string as a dictionary. Behind the scenes an additional step is done by the library: it parses up the query_string into the dict and then compares it with the dict provided. URI matching ------------ The simplest form of URI matching is providing as a string. This is a equality match, if the URI of the request is not equal with the specified one, the request will not be handled. If this is not desired, you can specify a regexp object (returned by the ``re.compile()`` call). .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_regexp.py :language: python The above will match every URI starting with "/foo". There's an additional way to extend this functionality. You can specify your own method which will receive the URI. All you need is to subclass from the ``URIPattern`` class and define the ``match()`` method which will get the uri as string and should return a boolean value. .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_url_matcher.py :language: python Authentication -------------- When doing http digest authentication, the client may send a request like this: .. code:: GET /dir/index.html HTTP/1.0 Host: localhost Authorization: Digest username="Mufasa", realm="testrealm@host.com", nonce="dcd98b7102dd2f0e8b11d0f600bfb0c093", uri="/dir/index.html", qop=auth, nc=00000001, cnonce="0a4f113b", response="6629fae49393a05397450978507c4ef1", opaque="5ccc069c403ebaf9f0171e9517f40e41" Implementing a matcher is difficult for this request as the order of the parameters in the ``Authorization`` header value is arbitrary. By default, pytest-httpserver includes an Authorization header parser so the order of the parameters in the ``Authorization`` header does not matter. .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_authorization_headers.py :language: python JSON matching ------------- Matching the request data can be done in two different ways. One way is to provide a python string (or bytes object) whose value will be compared to the request body. When the request contains a json, matching to will be error prone as an object can be represented as json in different ways, for example when different length of indentation is used. To match the body as json, you need to add the python data structure (which could be dict, list or anything which can be the result of `json.loads()` call). The request's body will be loaded as json and the result will be compared to the provided object. If the request's body cannot be loaded as json, the matcher will fail and *pytest-httpserver* will proceed with the next registered matcher. Example: .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_json_matcher.py :language: python .. note:: JSON requests usually come with ``Content-Type: application/json`` header. *pytest-httpserver* provides the *headers* parameter to match the headers of the request, however matching json body does not imply matching the *Content-Type* header. If matching the header is intended, specify the expected *Content-Type* header and its value to the headers parameter. .. note:: *json* and *data* parameters are mutually exclusive so both of then cannot be specified as in such case the behavior is ambiguous. .. note:: The request body is decoded by using the *data_encoding* parameter, which is default to *utf-8*. If the request comes in a different encoding, and the decoding fails, the request won't match with the expected json. Advanced header matching ------------------------ For each http header, you can specify a callable object (eg. a python function) which will be called with the header name, header actual value and the expected value, and will be able to determine the matching. You need to implement such a function and then use it: .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_case_insensitive_matcher.py :language: python .. note:: Header value matcher is the basis of the ``Authorization`` header parsing. If you want to change the matching of only one header, you may want to use the ``HeaderValueMatcher`` class. In case you want to do it globally, you can add the header name and the callable to the ``HeaderValueMatcher.DEFAULT_MATCHERS`` dict. .. code:: python from pytest_httpserver import HeaderValueMatcher def case_insensitive_compare(actual: str, expected: str) -> bool: return actual.lower() == expected.lower() HeaderValueMatcher.DEFAULT_MATCHERS["X-Foo"] = case_insensitive_compare def test_case_insensitive_matching(httpserver: HTTPServer): httpserver.expect_request("/", headers={"X-Foo": "bar"}).respond_with_data("OK") assert ( requests.get(httpserver.url_for("/"), headers={"X-Foo": "bar"}).status_code == 200 ) assert ( requests.get(httpserver.url_for("/"), headers={"X-Foo": "BAR"}).status_code == 200 ) In case you don't want to change the defaults, you can provide the ``HeaderValueMatcher`` object itself. .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_header_value_matcher.py :language: python Using custom request handler ---------------------------- In the case the response is not static, for example it depends on the request, you can pass a function to the ``respond_with_handler`` function. This function will be called with a request object and it should return a Response object. .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_custom_handler.py :language: python The above code implements a handler which returns a random number between 1 and 10. Not particularly useful but shows that the handler can return any computed or derived value. In the response handler you can also use the ``assert`` statement, similar to the tests, but there's a big difference. As the server is running in its own thread, this will cause a HTTP 500 error returned, and the exception registered into a list. To get that error, you need to call ``check_assertions()`` method of the httpserver. In case you want to ensure that there was no other exception raised which was unhandled, you can call the ``check_handler_errors()`` method of the httpserver. Two notable examples for this: .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_check_handler_errors.py :language: python If you want to call both methods (``check_handler_errors()`` and ``check_assertions()``) you can call the ``check()`` method, which will call these. .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_check.py :language: python .. note:: The scope of the errors checked by the ``check()`` method may change in the future - it is added to check all possible errors happened in the server. Customizing host and port ------------------------- By default, the server run by pytest-httpserver will listen on localhost on a random available port. In most cases it works well as you want to test your app in the local environment. If you need to change this behavior, there are a plenty of options. It is very important to make these changes before starting the server, eg. before running any test using the httpserver fixture. Use IP address *0.0.0.0* to listen globally. .. warning:: You should be careful when listening on a non-local ip (such as *0.0.0.0*). In this case anyone knowing your machine's IP address and the port can connect to the server. Environment variables ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Set ``PYTEST_HTTPSERVER_HOST`` and/or ``PYTEST_HTTPSERVER_PORT`` environment variables to the desired values. Class attributes ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Changing ``HTTPServer.DEFAULT_LISTEN_HOST`` and ``HTTPServer.DEFAULT_LISTEN_PORT`` attributes. Make sure that you do this before running any test requiring the ``httpserver`` fixture. One ideal place for this is putting it into ``conftest.py``. Fixture ~~~~~~~ Overriding the ``httpserver_listen_address`` fixture. Similar to the solutions above, this needs to be done before starting the server (eg. before referencing the ``httpserver`` fixture). .. code-block:: python import pytest @pytest.fixture(scope="session") def httpserver_listen_address(): return ("127.0.0.1", 8000) Multi-threading support ----------------------- When your client runs in a thread, everything completes without waiting for the first response. To overcome this problem, you can wait until all the handlers have been served or there's some error happened. This is available only for oneshot and ordered handlers, as permanent handlers last forever. To have this feature enabled, use the context object returned by the ``wait()`` method of the ``httpserver`` object. This method accepts the following parameters: * raise_assertions: whether raise assertions on unexpected request or timeout or not * stop_on_nohandler: whether stop on unexpected request or not * timeout: time (in seconds) until time is out Behind the scenes it synchronizes the state of the server with the main thread. Last, you need to assert on the ``result`` attribute of the context object. .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_wait_success.py :language: python In the above code, all the request.get() calls could be in a different thread, eg. running in parallel, but the exit condition of the context object is to wait for the specified conditions. Emulating connection refused error ---------------------------------- If by any chance, you want to emulate network errors such as *Connection reset by peer* or *Connection refused*, you can simply do it by connecting to a random port number where no service is listening: .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_howto_timeout_requests.py :language: python However, connecting to the port where the httpserver had been started will still succeed as the server is running continuously. This is working by design as starting/stopping the server is costly. .. code-block:: python import pytest import requests # setting a fixed port for httpserver @pytest.fixture(scope="session") def httpserver_listen_address(): return ("127.0.0.1", 8000) # this test will pass def test_normal_connection(httpserver): httpserver.expect_request("/foo").respond_with_data("foo") assert requests.get("http://localhost:8000/foo").text == "foo" # this tess will FAIL, as httpserver started in test_normal_connection is # still running def test_connection_refused(): with pytest.raises(requests.exceptions.ConnectionError): # this won't get Connection refused error as the server is still # running. # it will get HTTP status 500 as the handlers registered in # test_normal_connection have been removed requests.get("http://localhost:8000/foo") To solve the issue, the httpserver can be stopped explicitly. It will start implicitly when the first test starts to use it. So the ``test_connection_refused`` test can be re-written to this: .. code-block:: python def test_connection_refused(httpserver): httpserver.stop() # stop the server explicitly with pytest.raises(requests.exceptions.ConnectionError): requests.get("http://localhost:8000/foo") Emulating timeout ----------------- To emulate timeout, there's one way to register a handler function which will sleep for a given amount of time. .. code-block:: python import time from pytest_httpserver import HTTPServer import pytest import requests def sleeping(request): time.sleep(2) # this should be greater than the client's timeout parameter def test_timeout(httpserver: HTTPServer): httpserver.expect_request("/baz").respond_with_handler(sleeping) with pytest.raises(requests.exceptions.ReadTimeout): assert requests.get(httpserver.url_for("/baz"), timeout=1) There's one drawback though: the test takes 2 seconds to run as it waits the handler thread to be completed. Running an HTTPS server ----------------------- To run an https server, `trustme` can be used to do the heavy lifting: .. code-block:: python @pytest.fixture(scope="session") def ca(): return trustme.CA() @pytest.fixture(scope="session") def httpserver_ssl_context(ca): context = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLS_SERVER) localhost_cert = ca.issue_cert("localhost") localhost_cert.configure_cert(context) return context @pytest.fixture(scope="session") def httpclient_ssl_context(ca): with ca.cert_pem.tempfile() as ca_temp_path: return ssl.create_default_context(cafile=ca_temp_path) @pytest.mark.asyncio async def test_aiohttp(httpserver, httpclient_ssl_context): import aiohttp httpserver.expect_request("/").respond_with_data("hello world!") connector = aiohttp.TCPConnector(ssl=httpclient_ssl_context) async with aiohttp.ClientSession(connector=connector) as session: async with session.get(httpserver.url_for("/")) as result: assert (await result.text()) == "hello world!" def test_requests(httpserver, ca): import requests httpserver.expect_request("/").respond_with_data("hello world!") with ca.cert_pem.tempfile() as ca_temp_path: result = requests.get(httpserver.url_for("/"), verify=ca_temp_path) assert result.text == "hello world!" def test_httpx(httpserver, httpclient_ssl_context): import httpx httpserver.expect_request("/").respond_with_data("hello world!") result = httpx.get(httpserver.url_for("/"), verify=httpclient_ssl_context) assert result.text == "hello world!" Using httpserver on a dual-stack (IPv4 and IPv6) system ------------------------------------------------------- *pytest-httpserver* can only listen on one address and it also means that address family is determined by that. As it relies on *Werkzeug*, it passes the provided host parameter to it and then it is up to *Werkzeug* how the port binding is done. *Werkzeug* determines the address family by examining the string provided. If it contains a colon (``:``) then it will be an IPv6 (``AF_INET6``) socket, otherwise, it will be an IPv4 (``AF_INET``) socket. The default string in *pytest-httpserver* is ``localhost`` so by default, the httpserver listens on IPv4. If you want it to listen on IPv6 address, provide an IPv6 address (``::1`` for example) to it. It should be noted that dual-stack systems are still working with *pytest-httpserver* because the clients obtain the possible addresses for the a given name by calling ``getaddrinfo()`` or similar function which returns the addresses together with address families, and the client iterates over this list. In the case when *pytest-httpserver* is listening on ``127.0.0.1``, and the client uses ``localhost`` name in the url, it will try ``::1`` first, and then it will move on to ``127.0.0.1``, which will succeed, or vica-versa, where ``127.0.0.1`` will be successful first. If you want to test a connection error case in your test (such as TLS error), the client can fail in a strange way as we seen in `this issue `_. In such case, client tries with ``127.0.0.1`` first, then reaches a TLS error (which is normal as the test case is about testing for the TLS issue), then it moves on to ``::1``, then it fails with ``Connection reset``. In such case fixing the bind address to ``127.0.0.1`` (and thereby fixing the host part of the URL returned by the `url_for` call) solves the issue as the client will receive the address (``127.0.0.1``) instead of the name (``localhost``) so it won't move on to the IPv6 address. Running httpserver in blocking mode ----------------------------------- In this mode, the code which is being tested (the client) is executed in a background thread, while the server events are synchronized to the main thread, so it looks like it is running in the main thread. This allows to catch the assertions occured on the server side synchronously, and assertions are raised to the main thread. You need to call `check_assertions` at the end for only the unexpected requests. This is an experimental feature so *pytest-httpserver* has no fixture for it yet. If you find this feature useful any you have ideas or suggestions related to this, feel free to open an issue. Example: .. literalinclude :: ../tests/examples/test_example_blocking_httpserver.py :language: python