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                                                                   Zerocode

                                                          Welcome to the zerocode wiki!

Use the sidebar on the right to locate a topic or use "Ctrl+f" to find a topic. 👉

If you are not sure where to start, why not take a look at the What is Zerocode, then jump to the Developer's Guide below.

Features

Developer Guide

Introduction

Zerocode helps you to design better Test Cases for your business functionalities and then maintain them easily to avoid sleepless nights. You do this simply by configuring, declaring and executing the scenario-files enabling you to completely eliminate the glue or boilerplate coding.

Super Easy and Reduced Complexity

Simply annotate your test method with @Test and run like JUnit tests.

Testing becomes an easy and effortless job due to the simplicity nature of YAML/JSON formats and their native support by popular IDEs e.g. Eclipse /IntelliJ /NetBeans etc with no extra plugin. Super easy!

Reduced Complexity

It enables us to write automation tests for our

  • API End Point Validations,
  • Performance(Load/Stress) Validations,
  • Consumer Contract Validations,
  • End to End User Journey,
  • In Memory Application Validations and
  • API Security Validations etc,

at the speed of writing JUnit tests.

It makes the tests declarative, configurable, and accurate.

Lenient and Strict Matching

Zerocode provides both LENIENT and STRICT matching mode for result comparison.

Validation and Verification

Zerocode enables you to achieve both Verification and Validation.

Load Testing Made Easy

Visit here to learn JUnit way of load and stress generation

Security Testing Made Easy

Zerocode gives you out of the box SSL enabled Http Client and SOAP Client along with the optional MIME type converters e.g. XML to JSON if needed to increase test readability. It provides you with the options to configure Corporate Proxy at runtime to allow API invocations via corporate-proxies.

Zerocode has built general functionality which enables you to extend and enrich the framework behaviour by simply executing external Java methods as utility-functions to achieve business goals rather than putting every feature into the core framework.

Useful Reports and Dashboards

Zerocode prints the request, response into the console as well as to the log file in the /target folder in a human/business readable format, along with producing granular report in the CSV format and Interactive Fuzzy Search Enabled Chart report.

You can search and filter the test report by author or test-scenario or test-step or any relevant matching text making it super easy to trace a step in the context of a scenario or user-journey.

Sample Test Report

Test reports are generated into /target folder every time the tests are run. Sample reports are here format.

Traceable Test Logs

Test logs are generated in the console as well as an user-defined log file. Default log location is target/logs/zerocode_rest_bdd_logs.log .

::Note:: Every step can be traced with an auto generated STEP-ID to correlate a request with its response.

e.g.

If the test passed:

--------- CORRELATION-ID: e6170365-94e7-49dc-a1a3-5e102468acd9 ---------
requestTimeStamp:2017-12-20T10:00:48.840
step:get_same_employee
url:http://localhost:9999/api/testing/v1/persons/UK1001
method:GET
request:
{ } 
--------- CORRELATION-ID: e6170365-94e7-49dc-a1a3-5e102468acd9 ---------
Response:
{
  "status" : 200,
  "headers" : {
    "Date" : [ [ "Wed, 20 Dec 2016 03:00:48 GMT" ] ]
  },
  "body" : {
    "id" : "UK1001",
    "name" : "Gov UK",
    "addresses" : [ {
      "line1" : "HOME, AECS Layout, ZIP-56094"
      }
    ]
  }
}
*responseTimeStamp:2017-12-20T10:00:48.847 
*Response delay:7.0 milli-secs 
---------> Expected Response: <----------
{
  "status" : 200,
  "body" : {
    "id" : "UK1001"
  }
} 
-done-

If the test failed:

Scenario failed for :-

[test_get_request_response_rainy_scene.json] 
	|
	|
	+---Step --> [get_an_employee_detail] 

Failures:
--------- 
Assertion path '$.status' with actual value '200' did not match the expected value '400'

Collaboration Made Easy

Zerocode aims to make development and testing easier and faster, not harder and slower. Enables both Dev-team and Test-team to collaborate towards the highest quality of the software.



                                           Developer's Guide

Supported testing frameworks

Running a scenario

ZeroCodeUnitRunner is the JUnit runner which enables us to run a single or more test-cases from a JUnit test-class.

e.g.

@TargetEnv("app_sit1.properties")
@RunWith(ZeroCodeUnitRunner.class)
public class GitHubHelloWorldTest {

   @Test
   @Scenario("screening_tests/test_happy_flow.yml")
   public void testHappyFlow(){
   }

   @Test
   @Scenario("screening_tests/test_negative_flow.yml")
   public void testNegativeFlow(){
   }

}

Parameterized scenario

To run the scenario steps for each parameter from a list of values or CSV rows.

Examples:

  • YAML
para yaml
  • JSON
para json

Visit Wiki for details.

Using Custom HttpClient

Visit HelloWorld repo to see an example.

See example code:

java/org/jsmart/zerocode/zerocodejavaexec/httpclient/CustomHttpClient.java

e.g.

@TargetEnv("apihost_env1.properties")
@UseHttpClient(CustomHttpClient.class) //<--- Use your own HTTP client.
@RunWith(ZeroCodeUnitRunner.class)
public class HelloWorldCustomHttpClientSuite {
}

Sending query params to HTTP hosts

You can pass query params in the usual way in the URL e.g. ?page=1&page_size=5 -or- You can pass them in the request as below.

...
            "request": {
                "queryParams":{
                    "page":1,
                    "per_page":6
                }
            }
...

Http Basic-Auth security validation

You can validate Basic Auth in so many ways, it depends on your project requirement. Most simplest one is to pass the base64 basicAuth in the request headers as below - e.g. USERNAME/PASSWORD as charaanuser/passtwitter

Zerocode framework helps you to achieve this, but has nothing to do with Basic-Auth. It uses Apache Http Client behind the scenes, this means whatever you can do using Apache Http Client, you can do it simply using Zerocode.

  • Positive scenario
{
    "name": "get_book_using_basic_auth",
    "url": "http://localhost:8088/api/v1/white-papers/WP-001",
    "method": "GET",
    "request": {
        "headers": {
            "Authorization": "Basic Y2hhcmFhbnVzZXI6cGFzc3R3aXR0ZXI=" // You can generate this using Postman or java code
        }
    },
    "verify": {
        "status": 200, // 401 - if unauthorized. See negative test below
        "body": {
            "id": "WP-001",
            "type": "pdf"
        }
    }
}        
  • Negative scenario
{
    "name": "get_book_using_wrong_auth",
    "url": "http://localhost:8088/api/v1/white-papers/WP-001",
    "method": "GET",
    "request": {
        "headers": {
            "Authorization": "Basic aWRONG-PASSWORD"
        }
    },
    "verify": {
        "status": 401 //401(or similar code whatever the server responds), you can assert here.
        "body": {
            "message": "Unauthorized" 
        }
    }
}        
  • If your requirement is to put basic auth for all the API tests e.g. GET, POST, PUT, DELETE etc commonly in the regression suite, then you can put this "Authorization" header into your SSL client code.

Visit here to see an example scenario.

  • In your custom http-client, you add the header to the request at one central place, which is common to all the API tests. See: org.jsmart.zerocode.httpclient.CorpBankApcheHttpClient#addBasicAuthHeader in the http-client code it uses.

Boundary End Point Mocking

Visit HelloWorld example repo and see the following example.

src/test/resources/wiremock_tests/mock_via_wiremock_then_test_the_end_point.json

Externalizing RESTful host and port

Note: Each runner is capable of running with a properties file which can have host and port for specific to this runner.

  • So one can have a single properties file per runner which means you can run the tests against multiple environments -OR-
  • can have a single properties file shared across all the runners means running as a suite against the same environment.

** Note - As per Latest config update, we have updated endpoint configuration fields. From the release 1.2.8 onwards we will be allowing web. and deprecating restful. in endpoint configurations. We will take away support for restful. from endpoint configuration in the future releases. Version 1.2.8 will work for both as we have made the framework backward compatible.

e.g.

              "config_hosts_sample.properties"
              --------------------------------

web.application.endpoint.host=http://{host-name-or-ip}
web.application.endpoint.port=9998
web.application.endpoint.context=/gov-uk-services

The runner looks like this:

@TargetEnv("config_hosts_sample.properties")
@RunWith(ZeroCodeUnitRunner.class)
public class ScreeningServiceContractTest {

    @Test
    @Scenario("contract_tests/screeningservice/get_screening_details_by_id.json")
    public void testScreeningLocalAndGlobal() throws Exception {
    }
}

Running a scenario in loop

Runs the entire scenario two times i.e. executing both the steps once for each time.

{
  "scenarioName": "Execute multiple times - Scenario",
  "loop": 2,
  "steps": [
    {
      "name": "create_emp",
      ...
    },
    {
      "name": "get_emp",
      ...
    }
  ]
}

Passing Content-Type header

It is very easy to send this content-type in the header and verify the response.

When you use this header, then you just need to put the Key-Value or Name-Value content under request body or request queryParams section. That's it.

e.g.

         "request": {
            "headers": {
               "Content-Type": "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
            },
            "body": {
               "unit-no": "12-07",
               "block-number": 33,
               "state/region": "Singapore North",
               "country": "Singapore",
               "pin": "87654321",
            }
         }
  • What happens if my Key contains a space or front slash / etc?

This is automatically taken care by Apache Http Client. That means it gets converted to the equivalent encoded char which is understood by the server(e.g. Spring boot or Jersey or Tomcat etc ).

e.g. The above name-value pair behind the scene is sent to the server as below:

unit-no=12-07&country=Singapore&block-number=33&pin=87654321&state%2Fregion=Singapore+North

See more examples and usages in the Wiki >>

Ignoring step failures

Setting "ignoreStepFailures": true will allow executing the next step even if the earlier step failed.

e.g.

{
    "scenarioName": "Multi step - ignoreStepFailures",
    "ignoreStepFailures": true,
    "steps": [...]
}

See HelloWorld repo for a running example.

Running a Suite of Tests

  • Selecting all tests as usual JUnit Suite
@RunWith(Suite.class)       
@Suite.SuiteClasses({       
  HelloWorldSimpleTest.class,
  HelloWorldMoreTest.class,       
})    

public class HelloWorldJunitSuite {
    // This class remains empty   
}

Or

  • Selecting tests by cherry-picking from test resources
@TargetEnv("app_dev1.properties")
@UseHttpClient(CustomHttpClient.class)
@RunWith(ZeroCodePackageRunner.class)
@Scenarios({
        @Scenario("path1/test_case_scenario_1.yml"),
        @Scenario("path2/test_case_scenario_2.json"),
})
// Or a folder containng the scenario-files
public class HelloWorldSelectedGitHubSuite {
    // This space remains empty
}

Zerocode Tokens

Zerocode provides built-in tokens that help with your testing ranging from generating random numbers through to accessing system properties. Currently Zerocode offers the following tokens:

Verifications/Matcher Tokens:

Verifying HTTP error messages

Validating with $CONTAINS.STRING:

{
      ...
      ...
      "verify": {
        "status": 201,
        "body": {
          "name": "$CONTAINS.STRING:Larry"   //<-- PASS: If the "name" field in the response contains "Larry".
        }
      }
}
  • Similar way exception messages can be validated for part or full message.
  • Validating with $GT or $LT

$GT.<any_number>

{
  ...
  ...
  "verify": {
    "status": "$GT.200"   //<--- PASS: 201 or 200+ is greater than 200
  }
}

$LT.<any_number>

{
  ...
  ...
  "verify": {
      "status": "$LT.500"   //<--- PASS: 200 is lesser than 500
  }
}

Invoking java utility methods

Sometimes it is handy to invoke a Java utility method to performa specific task e.g. simply generating a custom random-ID or any complex operation specific to scenario automation.

e.g.

{
    "scenarioName": "Java method request, response as JSON",
    "steps": [
        {
            "name": "execute_java_method",
            "url": "org.jsmart.zerocode.zerocodejavaexec.OrderCreator",
            "method": "createOrder",
            "request": {
                "itemName" : "Tier4 Visa",
                "quantity" : 15
            },
            "verify": {
                "orderId" : 1020301,
                "itemName" : "Tier4 Visa",
                "quantity" : 15
            }
        }
    ]
}

Order pojo looks like below, full pojo src here-

public class Order {
    private Integer orderId;
    private String itemName;
    private Long quantity;

    @JsonCreator
    public Order(
            @JsonProperty("orderId")Integer orderId,
            @JsonProperty("itemName")String itemName,
            @JsonProperty("quantity")Long quantity) {
        this.orderId = orderId;
        this.itemName = itemName;
        this.quantity = quantity;
    }

    public Integer getOrderId() {
        return orderId;
    }

    public String getItemName() {
        return itemName;
    }

    public Long getQuantity() {
        return quantity;
    }

Re-Using or injecting custom properties

You can directly use the framework properties or introduce new properties to be used in the test steps.

e.g. ${my_new_url}, ${web.application.endpoint.host}, ${X-APP-SAML-TOKEN} etc

This is particularly useful when you want to introduce one or more common properties to use them across the test suite. 👍

(Clone HelloWorld repo to run this from your IDE)

e.g.

"config_hosts_sample.properties"

web.application.endpoint.host=http://{host-name-or-ip}
web.application.endpoint.port=9998
web.application.endpoint.context=/gov-products
# or e.g. some new properties you introduced
my_new_url=http://localhost:9998
X-APP-SAML-TOKEN=<SAML>token-xyz</SAML>

Then, you can simply use the properties as below.

{
    "scenarioName": "New property keys from host config file",
    "steps": [
        {
            "name": "get_api_call",
            "url": "${web.application.endpoint.host}:${web.application.endpoint.port}/v1/screenings",
            ...
        },
        {
            "name": "get_call_via_new_url",
            "url": "${my_new_url}/v1/sanctions",
            ...
        }

    ]
}

Bare JSON Strings as payload

e.g.

{
  "scenarioName": "Bare string as json @@Oliver",
  "steps": [
    {
      "name": "bare_string",
      "url": "http://localhost:9999/api/v1/status",
      "operation": "GET",
      "assertions": {
        "status": 200,
        "body" : "completed" //<----- Base string as JSON
      }
    }
  ]
}

Empty HTTP body payload

e.g.

{
  "scenarioName": "Empty body or no-body as payload @@John Smart@@",
  "steps": [
    {
      "operation": "GET OR POST",
      "request": {
           // No body content 
      }
    }
  ]
}

Handling Content-Type with charset-16 or charset-32

When the http server sends response with charset other than utf-8 i.e. utf-16 or utf-32 etc, then the Zerocode framework automatically handles it legally. See Wiki - Charset in response for details on how it handles.

Also the framework enables you to override this behaviour/handling by overriding method createCharsetResponse in the class BasicHttpClient.java. See an example in the working code example of HelloWorld repo.

Chatbot Validation

When you have series of questions and answers to be validated, you can arrange them in a CSV format and drive a test. Which means, for a given scenario, you just need to write one scenario and multiple CSV rows of input/output data nicely arranged to validate the Chatbot APIs.

e.g.

"parameterized": {
    "csvSource": [
        "What do you want to buy?,  Laptop, Color(Red or Blue)?,    Red,   RAM(16 or 32GB),    32,       2000 USD",
        "What do you want to buy?,  Laptop, Color(Red or Blue)?,    Blue,  RAM(16 or 32GB),    16,       1500 USD",
        "What do you want to buy?,  Mouse,  Color(Black or White)?, White, Wired or Wireless?, Wireless, 100 USD"
    ]
}

Python DSL

If you are looking for simillar REST API validation DSL in Python using YAML/JSON, then visit this open-source pyresttest lib in the GitHub.

- test: # create entity by PUT
    - name: "Create or update a person"
    - url: "/api/person/1/"
    - method: "PUT"
    - body: '{"first_name": "Gaius","id": 1,"last_name": "Baltar","login": "gbaltar"}'
    - headers: {'Content-Type': 'application/json'}
    - validators:  # This is how we do more complex testing!
        - compare: {header: content-type, comparator: contains, expected:'json'}
        - compare: {jsonpath_mini: 'login', expected: 'gbaltar'}  # JSON extraction
        - compare: {raw_body:"", comparator:contains, expected: 'Baltar' }  # Tests on raw response

The Quick-Start guide explains how to bring up a REST end point and run the tests.

Zerocode equivalent of the above example is

  • validators / comparator is equivalent to verify / assertions
  • raw_body is equivalent to rawBody

YAML and JSON Slice And Dice

Handy JSON and YAML slice/dice, format conversion, JSON Path evaluations tools can be found below:

Inspired By

Honorable references and credits

Pyresttest's JSON/YAML based test-DSL inspired many of Zerocode's Http DSL and test-config features.

Apache JMeter's intuitive load configuration inspired various Zerocode's declarative Load Testing DSL.

SkyScreamer's lenient and strict mode JSON matchers inspired various Zerocode's result matching features.

JUnit5 Jupiter engine's easy and declarative approach to parameterized testing inspired Zerocode's parameterized testing feature.

Credits to Jetbrains for IDE licenses Jetbrains.

Credits to the team members at HomeOffice(GOV.UK), Mizuho Bank, CMC Markets, HSBC Bank, Barclays and Zohocorp whose comments have helped to shape the lib.

Powered by open-source software.

References, Discussions and articles

Blogs

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