Restito is a tool for validating your code's interactions with REST services. It provides the Middle Way between hammering real HTTP services from your tests (thus making them brittle) and mocking too much and not testing the HTTP communication layer at all.
Inspired by Mockito and Rest Assured, Restito provides a handy DSL for:
- Mimicking a behaviour of a REST server from your tests;
- Recording your code's HTTP calls to the server and verifying them;
- Integration with JUnit;
- (m)TLS and HTTPS support;
- Avoiding boilerplate code.
It helps you to test an application which makes calls to some HTTP service. Restito sets up a StubServer instance which responds to your application's Calls based on defined Stubs. A stub makes some Action to response when Condition is respected.
For more motivation, please read the Motivation section of the Developer's guide.
Developer's guide is the best place to start. FOR LOTS OF EXAMPLES CLICK -> HERE <- :-)
For more details you can also check Restito's javadoc.
package com.xebialabs.restito;
...
public class SimpleRequestsTest {
private StubServer server;
@Before
public void start() {
server = new StubServer().run();
RestAssured.port = server.getPort();
}
@After
public void stop() {
server.stop();
}
@Test
public void shouldPassVerification() {
// Restito
whenHttp(server).
match(get("/demo")).
then(status(HttpStatus.OK_200));
// Rest-assured
expect().statusCode(200).when().get("/demo");
// Restito
verifyHttp(server).once(
method(Method.GET),
uri("/demo")
);
}
}
- Use 1.x if you run JDK 11+;
- Use 0.9.x if you run JDK 8+
<dependency>
<groupId>com.xebialabs.restito</groupId>
<artifactId>restito</artifactId>
<version>1.1.1</version>
</dependency>
$ gradle clean build