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Gradle

Gradle plugin for verifying pacts against a provider.

The Gradle plugin creates a task pactVerify to your build which will verify all configured pacts against your provider.

Important Note: Any properties that need to be set when using the Gradle plugin need to be provided with -P and not -D as with the other Pact-JVM modules!

To Use It

For Gradle versions 2.1+

plugins {
  id "au.com.dius.pact" version "4.1.0"
}

For Gradle versions prior to 2.1

1.1. Add the gradle jar file to your build script class path:

buildscript {
    repositories {
        mavenCentral()
    }
    dependencies {
        classpath 'au.com.dius.pact.provider:gradle:4.1.0'
    }
}

1.2. Apply the pact plugin

apply plugin: 'au.com.dius.pact'

2. Define the pacts between your consumers and providers

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        // You can define as many as you need, but each must have a unique name
        provider1 {
            // All the provider properties are optional, and have sensible defaults (shown below)
            protocol = 'http'
            host = 'localhost'
            port = 8080
            path = '/'

            // Again, you can define as many consumers for each provider as you need, but each must have a unique name
            hasPactWith('consumer1') {

                // currently supports a file path using file() or a URL using url()
                pactSource = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')

            }

            // Or if you have many pact files in a directory
            hasPactsWith('manyConsumers') {

                // Will define a consumer for each pact file in the directory.
                // Consumer name is read from contents of pact file
                pactFileLocation = file('path/to/pacts')

            }

        }

    }

}

3. Execute gradle pactVerify

Project Properties

The following project properties can be specified with -Pproperty=value on the command line:

Property Description
pact.showStacktrace This turns on stacktrace printing for each request. It can help with diagnosing network errors
pact.showFullDiff This turns on displaying the full diff of the expected versus actual bodies
pact.filter.consumers Comma seperated list of consumer names to verify
pact.filter.description Only verify interactions whose description match the provided regular expression
pact.filter.providerState Only verify interactions whose provider state match the provided regular expression. An empty string matches interactions that have no state
pact.filter.pacturl This filter allows just the just the changed pact specified in a webhook to be run. It should be used in conjunction with pact.filter.consumers
pact.verifier.publishResults Publishing of verification results will be skipped unless this property is set to 'true'
pact.matching.wildcard Enables matching of map values ignoring the keys when this property is set to 'true'
pact.verifier.disableUrlPathDecoding Disables decoding of request paths
pact.pactbroker.httpclient.usePreemptiveAuthentication Enables preemptive authentication with the pact broker when set to true
pact.provider.tag Sets the provider tag to push before publishing verification results
`pact.content_type.override..=text binary`

Specifying the provider hostname at runtime

If you need to calculate the provider hostname at runtime, you can give a Closure as the provider host.

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {
            host = { lookupHostName() }

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
            }
        }

    }

}

You can also give a Closure as the provider port.

Specifying the pact file or URL at runtime

If you need to calculate the pact file or URL at runtime, you can give a Closure as the provider pactFile.

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {
            host = 'localhost'

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = { lookupPactFile() }
            }
        }

    }

}

Starting and shutting down your provider

If you need to start-up or shutdown your provider, define Gradle tasks for each action and set
startProviderTask and terminateProviderTask properties of each provider. You could use the jetty tasks here if you provider is built as a WAR file.

// This will be called before the provider task
task('startTheApp') {
  doLast {
    // start up your provider here
  }
}

// This will be called after the provider task
task('killTheApp') {
  doLast {
    // kill your provider here
  }
}

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {

            startProviderTask = startTheApp
            terminateProviderTask = killTheApp

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
            }

        }

    }

}

Following typical Gradle behaviour, you can set the provider task properties to the actual tasks, or to the task names as a string (for the case when they haven't been defined yet).

Preventing the chaining of provider verify task to pactVerify

Normally a gradle task named pactVerify_${provider.name} is created and added as a task dependency for pactVerify. You can disable this dependency on a provider by setting isDependencyForPactVerify to false (defaults to true).

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {

            isDependencyForPactVerify = false

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
            }

        }

    }

}

To run this task, you would then have to explicitly name it as in gradle pactVerify_provider1, a normal gradle pactVerify would skip it. This can be useful when you want to define two providers, one with startProviderTask/terminateProviderTask and as second without, so you can manually start your provider (to debug it from your IDE, for example) but still want a pactVerify to run normally from your CI build.

Enabling insecure SSL

For providers that are running on SSL with self-signed certificates, you need to enable insecure SSL mode by setting insecure = true on the provider.

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {
            insecure = true // allow SSL with a self-signed cert
            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
            }

        }

    }

}

Specifying a custom trust store

For environments that are running their own certificate chains:

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {
            trustStore = new File('relative/path/to/trustStore.jks')
            trustStorePassword = 'changeit'
            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
            }

        }

    }

}

trustStore is either relative to the current working (build) directory. trustStorePassword defaults to changeit.

NOTE: The hostname will still be verified against the certificate.

Modifying the HTTP Client Used

The default HTTP client is used for all requests to providers (created with a call to HttpClients.createDefault()). This can be changed by specifying a closure assigned to createClient on the provider that returns a CloseableHttpClient. For example:

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {

            createClient = { provider ->
                // This will enable the client to accept self-signed certificates
                HttpClients.custom().setSSLHostnameVerifier(new NoopHostnameVerifier())
                    .setSslcontext(new SSLContextBuilder().loadTrustMaterial(null, { x509Certificates, s -> true })
                        .build())
                    .build()
            }

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
            }

        }

    }

}

Modifying the requests before they are sent

Sometimes you may need to add things to the requests that can't be persisted in a pact file. Examples of these would be authentication tokens, which have a small life span. The Pact Gradle plugin provides a request filter that can be set to a closure on the provider that will be called before the request is made. This closure will receive the HttpRequest prior to it being executed.

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {

            requestFilter = { req ->
                // Add an authorization header to each request
                req.addHeader('Authorization', 'OAUTH eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsImN0eSI6ImFw...')
            }

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
            }

        }

    }

}

Important Note: You should only use this feature for things that can not be persisted in the pact file. By modifying the request, you are potentially modifying the contract from the consumer tests!

Turning off URL decoding of the paths in the pact file

By default the paths loaded from the pact file will be decoded before the request is sent to the provider. To turn this behaviour off, set the property pact.verifier.disableUrlPathDecoding to true.

Important Note: If you turn off the url path decoding, you need to ensure that the paths in the pact files are correctly encoded. The verifier will not be able to make a request with an invalid encoded path.

Overriding the handling of a body data type

NOTE: version 4.1.3+

By default, bodies will be handled based on their content types. For binary contents, the bodies will be base64 encoded when written to the Pact file and then decoded again when the file is loaded. You can change this with an override property: pact.content_type.override.<TYPE>.<SUBTYPE>=text|binary. For instance, setting pact.content_type.override.application.pdf=text will treat PDF bodies as a text type and not encode/decode them.

Provider States

For a description of what provider states are, see the pact documentations: http://docs.pact.io/documentation/provider_states.html

Using a state change URL

For each provider you can specify a state change URL to use to switch the state of the provider. This URL will receive the providerState description and all the parameters from the pact file before each interaction via a POST. As for normal requests, a request filter (stateChangeRequestFilter) can also be set to manipulate the request before it is sent.

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
                stateChangeUrl = url('http://localhost:8001/tasks/pactStateChange')
                stateChangeUsesBody = false // defaults to true
                stateChangeRequestFilter = { req ->
                    // Add an authorization header to each request
                    req.addHeader('Authorization', 'OAUTH eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsImN0eSI6ImFw...')
                }
            }

            // or
            hasPactsWith('consumers') {
                pactFileLocation = file('path/to/pacts')                
                stateChangeUrl = url('http://localhost:8001/tasks/pactStateChange')
                stateChangeUsesBody = false // defaults to true
            }

        }

    }

}

If the stateChangeUsesBody is not specified, or is set to true, then the provider state description and parameters will be sent as JSON in the body of the request :

{ "state" : "a provider state description", "params": { "a": "1", "b": "2" } }

If it is set to false, they will be passed as query parameters.

Teardown calls for state changes

You can enable teardown state change calls by setting the property stateChangeTeardown = true on the provider. This will add an action parameter to the state change call. The setup call before the test will receive action=setup, and then a teardown call will be made afterwards to the state change URL with action=teardown.

Using a Closure

You can set a closure to be called before each verification with a defined provider state. The closure will be called with the state description and parameters from the pact file.

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
                // Load a fixture file based on the provider state and then setup some database
                // data. Does not require a state change request so returns false
                stateChange = { providerState ->
                    // providerState is an instance of ProviderState
                    def fixture = loadFixtuerForProviderState(providerState)
                    setupDatabase(fixture)
                }
            }

        }

    }

}

Teardown calls for state changes

You can enable teardown state change calls by setting the property stateChangeTeardown = true on the provider. This will add an action parameter to the state change closure call. The setup call before the test will receive setup, as the second parameter, and then a teardown call will be made afterwards with teardown as the second parameter.

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = file('path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json')
                // Load a fixture file based on the provider state and then setup some database
                // data. Does not require a state change request so returns false
                stateChange = { providerState, action ->
                    if (action == 'setup') {
                      def fixture = loadFixtuerForProviderState(providerState)
                      setupDatabase(fixture)
                    } else {
                      cleanupDatabase()
                    }
                    false
                }
            }

        }

    }

}

Returning values that can be injected

You can have values from the provider state callbacks be injected into most places (paths, query parameters, headers, bodies, etc.). This works by using the V3 spec generators with provider state callbacks that return values. One example of where this would be useful is API calls that require an ID which would be auto-generated by the database on the provider side, so there is no way to know what the ID would be beforehand.

There are methods on the consumer DSLs that can provider an expression that contains variables (like '/api/user/${id}' for the path). The provider state callback can then return a map for values, and the id attribute from the map will be expanded in the expression. For URL callbacks, the values need to be returned as JSON in the response body.

Filtering the interactions that are verified

You can filter the interactions that are run using three project properties: pact.filter.consumers, pact.filter.description and pact.filter.providerState. Adding -Ppact.filter.consumers=consumer1,consumer2 to the command line will only run the pact files for those consumers (consumer1 and consumer2). Adding -Ppact.filter.description=a request for payment.* will only run those interactions whose descriptions start with 'a request for payment'. -Ppact.filter.providerState=.*payment will match any interaction that has a provider state that ends with payment, and -Ppact.filter.providerState= will match any interaction that does not have a provider state.

Verifying pact files from a pact broker

You can setup your build to validate against the pacts stored in a pact broker. The pact gradle plugin will query the pact broker for all consumers that have a pact with the provider based on its name.

For Pact-JVM 4.1.0 and later

First: Add a broker configuration block

You can enable Pact broker support by adding a broker configuration block to the pact block.

For example:

pact {

    broker {
        pactBrokerUrl = 'https://your-broker-url/'
    
        // To use basic auth    
        pactBrokerUsername = '<USERNAME>'
        pactBrokerPassword = '<PASSWORD>'
    
        // OR to use a bearer token
        pactBrokerToken = '<TOKEN>'
    }

}

Second: Define your service provider

pact {

  serviceProviders {
    myProvider { // Define the name of your provider here

      fromPactBroker {
        selectors = latestTags('test') // specify your tags here. You can leave this out to just use the latest pacts  
      }

    }
  }

}

For Pact-JVM versions before 4.1.0

You configure your service provider and then use the hasPactsFrom.. methods.

For example:

pact {

    serviceProviders {
        provider1 {
            // You can get the latest pacts from the broker
            hasPactsFromPactBroker('http://pact-broker:5000/')
            // And/or you can get the latest pact with a specific tag
            hasPactsFromPactBrokerWithTag('http://pact-broker:5000/',"tagname")
        }
    }

}

This will verify all pacts found in the pact broker where the provider name is 'provider1'. If you need to set any values on the consumers from the pact broker, you can add a Closure to configure them.

pact {

    serviceProviders {
        provider1 {
            hasPactsFromPactBroker('http://pact-broker:5000/') { consumer ->
                 stateChange = { providerState -> /* state change code here */ true }
            }
        }
    }

}

NOTE: Currently the pacts are fetched from the broker during the configuration phase of the build. This means that if the broker is not available, you will not be able to run any Gradle tasks. This should be fixed in a forth coming release.

In the mean time, to only load the pacts when running the validate task, you can do something like:

pact {

    serviceProviders {
        provider1 {
            // Only load the pacts from the broker if the start tasks from the command line include pactVerify
            if ('pactVerify' in gradle.startParameter.taskNames) {
                hasPactsFromPactBroker('http://pact-broker:5000/') { consumer ->
                     stateChange = { providerState -> /* state change code here */ true }
                }
            }
        }
    }

}

Using an authenticated Pact Broker

You can add the authentication details for the Pact Broker like so:

pact {

    serviceProviders {
        provider1 {
            hasPactsFromPactBroker('http://pact-broker:5000/', authentication: ['Basic', pactBrokerUser, pactBrokerPassword])
        }
    }

}

pactBrokerUser and pactBrokerPassword can be defined in the gradle properties.

Or with a bearer token:

pact {

    serviceProviders {
        provider1 {
            hasPactsFromPactBroker('http://pact-broker:5000/', authentication: ['Bearer', pactBrokerToken])
        }
    }
    
}

Preemptive Authentication can be enabled by setting the pact.pactbroker.httpclient.usePreemptiveAuthentication property to true.

NOTE: If you're using pactflow.io, follow these instructions for configuring your bearer token.

Allowing just the changed pact specified in a webhook to be verified [4.0.6+]

When a consumer publishes a new version of a pact file, the Pact broker can fire off a webhook with the URL of the changed pact file. To allow only the changed pact file to be verified, you can override the URL by using the pact.filter.consumers and pact.filter.pacturl project properties.

For example, running:

gradle pactVerify -Ppact.filter.consumers='Foo Web Client' -Ppact.filter.pacturl=https://test.pact.dius.com.au/pacts/provider/Activity%20Service/consumer/Foo%20Web%20Client/version/1.0.1

will only run the verification for Foo Web Client with the given pact file URL.

Verifying pact files from a S3 bucket

NOTE: You will need to add the Amazon S3 SDK jar file to your project.

Pact files stored in an S3 bucket can be verified by using an S3 URL to the pact file. I.e.,

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        provider1 {

            hasPactWith('consumer1') {
                pactFile = 's3://bucketname/path/to/provider1-consumer1-pact.json'
            }

        }

    }

}

NOTE: you can't use the url function with S3 URLs, as the URL and URI classes from the Java SDK don't support URLs with the s3 scheme.

Publishing pact files to a pact broker

The pact gradle plugin provides a pactPublish task that can publish all pact files in a directory to a pact broker. To use it, you need to add a publish configuration to the pact configuration that defines the directory where the pact files are and the URL to the pact broker.

If you have configured your broker details in a broker configuration block, the task will use that. Otherwise, configure the broker details on the publish block.

For example:

pact {

    publish {
        pactDirectory = '/pact/dir' // defaults to $buildDir/pacts
        pactBrokerUrl = 'http://pactbroker:1234'
    }

}

You can set any tags that the pacts should be published with by setting the tags property. A common use of this is setting the tag to the current source control branch. This supports using pact with feature branches.

pact {

    publish {
        pactDirectory = '/pact/dir' // defaults to $buildDir/pacts
        tags = [project.pactBrokerTag]
    }

}

NOTE: The pact broker requires a version for all published pacts. The pactPublish task will use the version of the gradle project by default. You can override this with the providerVersion property. Make sure you have set one otherwise the broker will reject the pact files.

Publishing to an authenticated pact broker

To publish to a broker protected by basic auth, include the username/password in the broker configuration

For example:

pact {

    broker {
        pactBrokerUrl = 'https://your-broker-url/'
    
        // To use basic auth    
        pactBrokerUsername = '<USERNAME>'
        pactBrokerPassword = '<PASSWORD>'
    
        // OR to use a bearer token
        pactBrokerToken = '<TOKEN>'
    }

}

You can add the username and password as properties on the publish block.

pact {

    publish {
        pactBrokerUrl = 'https://mypactbroker.com'
        pactBrokerUsername = 'username'
        pactBrokerPassword = 'password'
    }

}

or with a bearer token

pact {

    publish {
        pactBrokerUrl = 'https://mypactbroker.com'
        pactBrokerToken = 'token'
    }

}

Excluding pacts from being published

You can exclude some of the pact files from being published by providing a list of regular expressions that match against the base names of the pact files.

For example:

pact {

    publish {
        excludes = [ '.*\\-\\d+$' ] // exclude all pact files that end with a dash followed by a number in the name 
    }

}

Verifying a message provider

The Gradle plugin has been updated to allow invoking test methods that can return the message contents from a message producer. To use it, set the way to invoke the verification to ANNOTATED_METHOD. This will allow the pact verification task to scan for test methods that return the message contents.

Add something like the following to your gradle build file:

pact {

    serviceProviders {

        messageProvider {

            verificationType = 'ANNOTATED_METHOD'
            packagesToScan = ['au.com.example.messageprovider.*'] // This is optional, but leaving it out will result in the entire
                                                                  // test classpath being scanned

            hasPactWith('messageConsumer') {
                pactFile = url('url/to/messagepact.json')
            }

        }

    }

}

Now when the pactVerify task is run, will look for methods annotated with @PactVerifyProvider in the test classpath that have a matching description to what is in the pact file.

class ConfirmationKafkaMessageBuilderTest {

  @PactVerifyProvider('an order confirmation message')
  String verifyMessageForOrder() {
      Order order = new Order()
      order.setId(10000004)
      order.setExchange('ASX')
      order.setSecurityCode('CBA')
      order.setPrice(BigDecimal.TEN)
      order.setUnits(15)
      order.setGst(new BigDecimal('15.0'))
      order.setFees(BigDecimal.TEN)

      def message = new ConfirmationKafkaMessageBuilder()
              .withOrder(order)
              .build()

      JsonOutput.toJson(message)
  }

}

It will then validate that the returned contents matches the contents for the message in the pact file.

Verification Reports

The default behaviour is to display the verification being done to the console, and pass or fail the build via the normal Gradle mechanism. Additional reports can be generated from the verification.

Enabling additional reports

The verification reports can be controlled by adding a reports section to the pact configuration in the gradle build file.

For example:

pact {

    reports {
      defaultReports() // adds the standard console output

      markdown // report in markdown format
      json // report in json format
    }
}

Any report files will be written to "build/reports/pact".

Additional Reports

The following report types are available in addition to console output (which is enabled by default): markdown, json.

Publishing verification results to a Pact Broker

For pacts that are loaded from a Pact Broker, the results of running the verification can be published back to the broker against the URL for the pact. You will be able to see the result on the Pact Broker home screen.

To turn on the verification publishing, set the project property pact.verifier.publishResults to true.

By default, the Gradle project version will be used as the provider version. You can override this by setting the providerVersion property.

pact {
    serviceProviders {
        provider1 {
            providerVersion = { branchName() + '-' + abbreviatedId() }
            hasPactsFromPactBroker('http://pact-broker:5000/', authentication: ['Basic', pactBrokerUser, pactBrokerPassword])
        }
    }
}

Tagging the provider before verification results are published [4.0.1+]

You can have a tag pushed against the provider version before the verification results are published. There are two ways to do this with the Gradle plugin. You can provide a closure in a similar way to the provider version, i.e.

pact {
    serviceProviders {
        provider1 {
            providerVersion = { branchName() + '-' + abbreviatedId() }
            providerTag = { branchName() }
            hasPactsFromPactBroker('http://pact-broker:5000/', authentication: ['Basic', pactBrokerUser, pactBrokerPassword])
        }
    }
}

or you can set the pact.provider.tag JVM system property. For example:

$ ./gradlew -d pactverify -Ppact.verifier.publishResults=true -Dpact.provider.tag=Test2

Pending Pact Support (version 4.1.0 and later)

If your Pact broker supports pending pacts, you can enable support for that by turning that on in your provider configuration. You also need to provide the tags used to publish the providers main-line results (i.e. tags like prod or master). The broker will then label any pacts found that don't have a successful verification result as pending. That way, if they fail verification, the verifier will ignore those failures and not fail the build.

For example:

pact {

  serviceProviders {
    myProvider {

      fromPactBroker {
        selectors = latestTags('test') // specify your tags here. You can leave this out to just use the latest pacts
        enablePending = true // enable pending pacts support
        providerTags = ['master'] // specify the provider main-line tags  
      }

    }
  }

}

Then any pending pacts will not cause a build failure.