@mswjs/http-middleware
v0.10.2
Published
Spawn an [Express](https://expressjs.com) server from your [Mock Service Worker](https://github.com/mswjs/msw) request handlers or apply them to an existing server using a middleware.
Downloads
120,342
Readme
@mswjs/http-middleware
Spawn an Express server from your Mock Service Worker request handlers or apply them to an existing server using a middleware.
When to use this?
You should always prefer Mock Service Worker for API mocking because it can meet most of your requirements without having to spawn and maintain an actual HTTP server. Please refer to the Getting started tutorial to integrate next-generation API mocking into your application.
There are, however, use cases when this extension can be applicable:
- If you wish to
curl
your mock definitions locally; - When prototyping a Node.js backend implementation;
- When integrating API mocking in a complex application architecture (i.e. for dockerized applications).
Getting started
Install
$ npm install @mswjs/http-middleware
Declare request handlers
// src/mocks/handlers.js
import { http, graphql, HttpResponse } from 'msw'
export const handlers = [
http.post('/user', () => {
return HttpResponse.json({ firstName: 'John' })
}),
graphql.query('GetUser', () => {
return HttpResponse.json({
data: {
user: {
firstName: 'John',
},
},
})
}),
]
Learn more about writing request handlers.
Integration
Option 1: Standalone server
import { createServer } from '@mswjs/http-middleware'
import { handlers } from './handlers'
const httpServer = createServer(...handlers)
httpServer.listen(9090)
Option 2: Middleware
import { createMiddleware } from '@mswjs/http-middleware'
import app from './app'
import { handlers } from './handlers'
app.use(createMiddleware(...handlers))
API
createServer(...handlers: RequestHandler[])
Establishes a standalone Express server that uses the given request handlers to process all incoming requests.
import { http, HttpResponse } from 'msw'
import { createServer } from '@mswjs/http-middleware'
const httpServer = createServer(
http.get('/user', () => {
return HttpResponse.json({ firstName: 'John' })
}),
)
httpServer.listen(9090)
Making a GET http://localhost:9090/user
request returns the following response:
200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
{
"firstName": "John"
}
createMiddleware(...handlers: RequestHandler[])
Creates an Express middleware function that uses the given request handlers to process all incoming requests.
import { http, HttpResponse } from 'msw'
import { createMiddleware } from '@mswjs/http-middleware'
const app = express()
app.use(
createMiddleware(
http.get('/user', () => {
return HttpResponse.json({ firstName: 'John' })
}),
),
)
app.use(9090)
Mentions
- David Idol, original implementation.