npm package discovery and stats viewer.

Discover Tips

  • General search

    [free text search, go nuts!]

  • Package details

    pkg:[package-name]

  • User packages

    @[username]

Sponsor

Optimize Toolset

I’ve always been into building performant and accessible sites, but lately I’ve been taking it extremely seriously. So much so that I’ve been building a tool to help me optimize and monitor the sites that I build to make sure that I’m making an attempt to offer the best experience to those who visit them. If you’re into performant, accessible and SEO friendly sites, you might like it too! You can check it out at Optimize Toolset.

About

Hi, 👋, I’m Ryan Hefner  and I built this site for me, and you! The goal of this site was to provide an easy way for me to check the stats on my npm packages, both for prioritizing issues and updates, and to give me a little kick in the pants to keep up on stuff.

As I was building it, I realized that I was actually using the tool to build the tool, and figured I might as well put this out there and hopefully others will find it to be a fast and useful way to search and browse npm packages as I have.

If you’re interested in other things I’m working on, follow me on Twitter or check out the open source projects I’ve been publishing on GitHub.

I am also working on a Twitter bot for this site to tweet the most popular, newest, random packages from npm. Please follow that account now and it will start sending out packages soon–ish.

Open Software & Tools

This site wouldn’t be possible without the immense generosity and tireless efforts from the people who make contributions to the world and share their work via open source initiatives. Thank you 🙏

© 2024 – Pkg Stats / Ryan Hefner

aws-sdk-mock

v6.2.0

Published

Functions to mock the JavaScript aws-sdk

Downloads

1,251,232

Readme

aws-sdk-mock

AWSome mocks for Javascript aws-sdk services.

GitHub Workflow Status codecov.io Known Vulnerabilities npm package version Node.js Version npm monthly downloads HitCount contributions welcome

This module was created to help test AWS Lambda functions but can be used in any situation where the AWS SDK needs to be mocked.

This library is best suited for AWS SDK for Javascript (v2) - see the introductory post on the AWS blog for more context. If you are using AWS SDK v3 you might not need this library, see: aws-sdk-mock/issues#209

If you are new to Amazon WebServices Lambda (or need a refresher), please checkout our our
Beginners Guide to AWS Lambda: https://github.com/dwyl/learn-aws-lambda

Why?

Testing your code is essential everywhere you need reliability.

Using stubs means you can prevent a specific method from being called directly. In our case we want to prevent the actual AWS services to be called while testing functions that use the AWS SDK.

What?

Uses Sinon.js under the hood to mock the AWS SDK services and their associated methods.

Documentation

AWS.mock(service, method, replace)

Replaces a method on an AWS service with a replacement function or string.

| Param | Type | Optional/Required | Description | | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | | service | string | Required | AWS service to mock e.g. SNS, DynamoDB, S3 | | method | string | Required | method on AWS service to mock e.g. 'publish' (for SNS), 'putItem' for 'DynamoDB' | | replace | string or function | Required | A string or function to replace the method |

AWS.restore(service, method)

Removes the mock to restore the specified AWS service

| Param | Type | Optional/Required | Description | | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | | service | string | Optional | AWS service to restore - If only the service is specified, all the methods are restored | | method | string | Optional | Method on AWS service to restore |

If AWS.restore is called without arguments (AWS.restore()) then all the services and their associated methods are restored i.e. equivalent to a 'restore all' function.

AWS.remock(service, method, replace)

Updates the replace method on an existing mocked service.

| Param | Type | Optional/Required | Description | | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | | service | string | Required | AWS service to mock e.g. SNS, DynamoDB, S3 | | method | string | Required | method on AWS service to mock e.g. 'publish' (for SNS), 'putItem' for 'DynamoDB' | | replace | string or function | Required | A string or function to replace the method |

AWS.setSDK(path)

Explicitly set the require path for the aws-sdk

| Param | Type | Optional/Required | Description | | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | | path | string | Required | Path to a nested AWS SDK node module |

AWS.setSDKInstance(sdk)

Explicitly set the aws-sdk instance to use

| Param | Type | Optional/Required | Description | | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | :------------- | | sdk | object | Required | The AWS SDK object |

How? (Usage)

install aws-sdk-mock from NPM

npm install aws-sdk-mock --save-dev

Use in your Tests

Using plain JavaScript


const AWS = require('aws-sdk-mock');

AWS.mock('DynamoDB', 'putItem', function (params, callback){
  callback(null, 'successfully put item in database');
});

AWS.mock('SNS', 'publish', 'test-message');

// S3 getObject mock - return a Buffer object with file data
AWS.mock('S3', 'getObject', Buffer.from(require('fs').readFileSync('testFile.csv')));


/**
    TESTS
**/

AWS.restore('SNS', 'publish');
AWS.restore('DynamoDB');
AWS.restore('S3');
// or AWS.restore(); this will restore all the methods and services

Using TypeScript

import AWSMock from 'aws-sdk-mock';
import AWS from 'aws-sdk';
import { GetItemInput } from 'aws-sdk/clients/dynamodb';

beforeAll(async (done) => {
  //get requires env vars
  done();
 });

describe('the module', () => {

/**
    TESTS below here
**/

  it('should mock getItem from DynamoDB', async () => {
    // Overwriting DynamoDB.getItem()
    AWSMock.setSDKInstance(AWS);
    AWSMock.mock('DynamoDB', 'getItem', (params: GetItemInput, callback: Function) => {
      console.log('DynamoDB', 'getItem', 'mock called');
      callback(null, {pk: 'foo', sk: 'bar'});
    })

    const input:GetItemInput = { TableName: '', Key: {} };
    const dynamodb = new AWS.DynamoDB({apiVersion: '2012-08-10'});
    expect(await dynamodb.getItem(input).promise()).toStrictEqual({ pk: 'foo', sk: 'bar' });

    AWSMock.restore('DynamoDB');
  });

  it('should mock reading from DocumentClient', async () => {
    // Overwriting DynamoDB.DocumentClient.get()
    AWSMock.setSDKInstance(AWS);
    AWSMock.mock('DynamoDB.DocumentClient', 'get', (params: GetItemInput, callback: Function) => {
      console.log('DynamoDB.DocumentClient', 'get', 'mock called');
      callback(null, {pk: 'foo', sk: 'bar'});
    });

    const input:GetItemInput = { TableName: '', Key: {} };
    const client = new AWS.DynamoDB.DocumentClient({apiVersion: '2012-08-10'});
    expect(await client.get(input).promise()).toStrictEqual({ pk: 'foo', sk: 'bar' });

    AWSMock.restore('DynamoDB.DocumentClient');
  });
});

Sinon

You can also pass Sinon spies to the mock:

const updateTableSpy = sinon.spy();
AWS.mock('DynamoDB', 'updateTable', updateTableSpy);

// Object under test
myDynamoManager.scaleDownTable();

// Assert on your Sinon spy as normal
assert.isTrue(updateTableSpy.calledOnce, 'should update dynamo table via AWS SDK');
const expectedParams = {
  TableName: 'testTableName',
  ProvisionedThroughput: {
    ReadCapacityUnits: 1,
    WriteCapacityUnits: 1
  }
};
assert.isTrue(updateTableSpy.calledWith(expectedParams), 'should pass correct parameters');

NB: The AWS Service needs to be initialised inside the function being tested in order for the SDK method to be mocked e.g for an AWS Lambda function example 1 will cause an error ConfigError: Missing region in config whereas in example 2 the sdk will be successfully mocked.

Example 1:

const AWS      = require('aws-sdk');
const sns      = AWS.SNS();
const dynamoDb = AWS.DynamoDB();

exports.handler = function(event, context) {
  // do something with the services e.g. sns.publish
}

Example 2:

const AWS = require('aws-sdk');

exports.handler = function(event, context) {
  const sns      = AWS.SNS();
  const dynamoDb = AWS.DynamoDB();
  // do something with the services e.g. sns.publish
}

Also note that if you initialise an AWS service inside a callback from an async function inside the handler function, that won't work either.

Example 1 (won't work):

exports.handler = function(event, context) {
  someAsyncFunction(() => {
    const sns      = AWS.SNS();
    const dynamoDb = AWS.DynamoDB();
    // do something with the services e.g. sns.publish
  });
}

Example 2 (will work):

exports.handler = function(event, context) {
  const sns      = AWS.SNS();
  const dynamoDb = AWS.DynamoDB();
  someAsyncFunction(() => {
    // do something with the services e.g. sns.publish
  });
}

Nested services

It is possible to mock nested services like DynamoDB.DocumentClient. Simply use this dot-notation name as the service parameter to the mock() and restore() methods:

AWS.mock('DynamoDB.DocumentClient', 'get', function(params, callback) {
  callback(null, {Item: {Key: 'Value'}});
});

NB: Use caution when mocking both a nested service and its parent service. The nested service should be mocked before and restored after its parent:

// OK
AWS.mock('DynamoDB.DocumentClient', 'get', 'message');
AWS.mock('DynamoDB', 'describeTable', 'message');
AWS.restore('DynamoDB');
AWS.restore('DynamoDB.DocumentClient');

// Not OK
AWS.mock('DynamoDB', 'describeTable', 'message');
AWS.mock('DynamoDB.DocumentClient', 'get', 'message');

// Not OK
AWS.restore('DynamoDB.DocumentClient');
AWS.restore('DynamoDB');

Don't worry about the constructor configuration

Some constructors of the aws-sdk will require you to pass through a configuration object.

const csd = new AWS.CloudSearchDomain({
  endpoint: 'your.end.point',
  region: 'eu-west'
});

Most mocking solutions with throw an InvalidEndpoint: AWS.CloudSearchDomain requires an explicit 'endpoint' configuration option when you try to mock this.

aws-sdk-mock will take care of this during mock creation so you won't get any configuration errors! If configurations errors still occur it means you passed wrong configuration in your implementation.

Setting the aws-sdk module explicitly

Project structures that don't include the aws-sdk at the top level node_modules project folder will not be properly mocked. An example of this would be installing the aws-sdk in a nested project directory. You can get around this by explicitly setting the path to a nested aws-sdk module using setSDK().

Example:

const path = require('path');
const AWS = require('aws-sdk-mock');

AWS.setSDK(path.resolve('../../functions/foo/node_modules/aws-sdk'));

/**
    TESTS
**/

Setting the aws-sdk object explicitly

Due to transpiling, code written in TypeScript or ES6 may not correctly mock because the aws-sdk object created within aws-sdk-mock will not be equal to the object created within the code to test. In addition, it is sometimes convenient to have multiple SDK instances in a test. For either scenario, it is possible to pass in the SDK object directly using setSDKInstance().

Example:

// test code
const AWSMock = require('aws-sdk-mock');
import AWS from 'aws-sdk';
AWSMock.setSDKInstance(AWS);
AWSMock.mock('SQS', /* ... */);

// implementation code
const sqs = new AWS.SQS();

Configuring promises

If your environment lacks a global Promise constructor (e.g. nodejs 0.10), you can explicitly set the promises on aws-sdk-mock. Set the value of AWS.Promise to the constructor for your chosen promise library.

Example (if Q is your promise library of choice):

const AWS = require('aws-sdk-mock'),
    Q = require('q');

AWS.Promise = Q.Promise;


/**
    TESTS
**/

Background Reading

Contributions welcome! Please submit issues or PRs if you think of anything that needs updating/improving