This is an example of a Java Spring Boot provider that uses Pact, Pactflow and GitHub Actions to ensure that it is compatible with the expectations its consumers have of it.
The project uses a Makefile to simulate a very simple build pipeline with two stages - test and deploy.
It is using a public tenant on Pactflow, which you can access here using the credentials dXfltyFMgNOFZAxr8io9wJ37iUpY42M
/O5AIZWxelWbLvqMd8PkAVycBJh2Psyg1
.
The project uses a Makefile to simulate a very simple build pipeline with two stages - test and deploy.
- Test
- Run tests (including the pact tests that generate the contract)
- Publish pacts, tagging the consumer version with the name of the current branch
- Check if we are safe to deploy to prod (ie. has the pact content been successfully verified)
- Deploy (only from master)
- Deploy app (just pretend for the purposes of this example!)
- Tag the deployed consumer version as 'prod'
- Docker
- A Pactflow account
- A read/write API Token from your Pactflow account
- Java 8+ installed
See the Pactflow CI/CD Workshop.
The below commands are designed for a Linux/OSX environment, please translate for use on Windows/PowerShell as necessary:
Please ensure the following environment variables have been exported in the process that you run the tests (generally a terminal):
export PACT_BROKER_TOKEN=<your pactflow read/write token here>
export PACT_BROKER_BASE_URL=https://<your pactflow subdomain>.pactflow.io
export PACT_BROKER_HOST=<your pactflow subdomain>.pactflow.io
You can run the tests locally with:
make test
Usually, you would integrate this into a real CI system (such as Buildkite/Jenkins/CircleCI etc., or GitHub Actions as this repository is built against).
You can simulate a CI process with the following command:
make fake_ci