Instead of stubbing, you can try creating a local or "mock" server that responds to your requests. This avoids having to stub out http.request. One of the benefits of a local server is this method should work whether you are using http.request, XMLHttpRequest, or a similar method to grab an online resource.
Mock Server
You can try mock server. With it, you can create a fake server to fulfill your requests.
Installing
npm install mockserver-grunt --save-dev
npm install mockserver-client --save-dev
Jasmine Code
In your Spec (or test), you can use the following (change to suit your needs):
var mockServer = require("mockserver-grunt");
var mockServerClient = require("mockserver-client").mockServerClient;
beforeAll(function(done) {
// start the server
mockServer.start_mockserver({
serverPort: 1080,
verbose: true
});
// setup how to respond
let response = {name:'value'};
let statusCode = 203;
mockServerClient("localhost", 1080).mockSimpleResponse('/samplePath', response, statusCode);
setTimeout(function() {
// give time for the mock server to setup
done();
}, 4000);
});
it("should be able to GET an online resource", function(done) {
// perform tests, send requests to http://localhost:1080/samplePath
}
This will start the server on port 1080. Any requests made to http://localhost:1080/samplePath will receive the provided response.
In a similar manner, the server can be shutdown at the end of your test:
afterAll(function() {
mockServer.stop_mockserver({
serverPort: 1080,
verbose: true
});
});
Other Notes
Fixing a corrupt jar file
When the server is first started, it will attempt to download a jar file required for the server. This is a one time download (as far as I know). If it is not provided enough time, it will not fully download, and you will end up with an invalid or corrupt jar file. To correct this, you can download the jar file yourself. The link is provided in the run. For me, this was located at https://oss.sonatype.org/content/repositories/releases/org/mock-server/mockserver-netty/3.10.6/mockserver-netty-3.10.6-jar-with-dependencies.jar. Most likely, you will want to navigate to the latest version.
Update
Express JS Server
Since I originally posted, I found Express JS. Express starts a server instance much faster than Mock Server. You also do not have to worry about a jar file.
Installing
npm install express --save-dev
Jasmine Code
var express = require('express');
var app = express();
var port = 3000;
var server;
beforeAll(function() {
server = app.listen(port, function() {
console.log("Listening on port " + port);
});
app.get('/samplePath', function (req, res) {
res.send("my response");
});
});
afterAll(function() {
// shutdown
server.close();
});
it("should be able to GET an online resource", function(done) {
// perform tests, send requests to http://localhost:3000/samplePath
}
If you want to get fancy, you can return the path that you use. For example, if you go to http://localhost:3000/helloworld, the return value will be helloworld. You can adapt this to suit your needs.
app.get('/*', function (req, res) {
res.send(req.params[0]);
});
If you need to force the code down an error path, you can use
res.status(404) // HTTP status 404: NotFound
.send('Not found');
Source: How to programmatically send a 404 response with Express/Node?
Configuring Express JS with HTTPS
Express JS can be configured to use HTTPS. With openssl, a self-signed certificate can be created using:
openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:4096 -keyout key.pem -out cert.pem -days 365
Source: How to create a self-signed certificate with openssl?
Update the express js code with the following to use HTTPS.
const secureOptions = {
key: fs.readFileSync("./spec/ExpressServer/key.pem"),
cert: fs.readFileSync("./spec/ExpressServer/cert.pem")
};
var secureServer = https.createServer(secureOptions, app);
Note: You may have to configure the security of your applications to allow a self-signed certificate for HTTPS.