Smocker (server mock) is a simple and efficient HTTP mock server.
The documentation is available on smocker.dev.
docker run -d \
--restart=always \
-p 8080:8080 \
-p 8081:8081 \
--name smocker \
thiht/smocker
# This will be the deployment folder for the Smocker instance
mkdir -p /opt/smocker && cd /opt/smocker
wget -P /tmp https://github.com/Thiht/smocker/releases/latest/download/smocker.tar.gz
tar xf /tmp/smocker.tar.gz
nohup ./smocker -mock-server-listen-port=8080 -config-listen-port=8081 &
curl localhost:8081/version
Smocker exposes a configuration user interface. You can access it in your web browser on http://localhost:8081/.
Smocker exposes two ports:
8080
is the mock server port. It will expose the routes you register through the configuration port8081
is the configuration port. It's the port you will use to register new mocks. This port also exposes a user interface.
To register a mock, you can use the YAML and the JSON formats. A basic mock might look like this:
# helloworld.yml
# This mock register two routes: GET /hello/world and GET /foo/bar
- request:
# Note: the method could be omitted because GET is the default
method: GET
path: /hello/world
response:
# Note: the status could be omitted because 200 is the default
status: 200
headers:
Content-Type: application/json
body: >
{
"hello": "Hello, World!"
}
- request:
method: GET
path: /foo/bar
response:
status: 204
You can then register it to the configuration server with the following command:
curl -XPOST \
--header "Content-Type: application/x-yaml" \
--data-binary "@helloworld.yml" \
localhost:8081/mocks
After your mock is registered, you can query the mock server on the specified route, so that it returns the expected response to you:
$ curl -i localhost:8080/hello/world
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
Date: Thu, 05 Sep 2019 15:49:32 GMT
Content-Length: 31
{
"hello": "Hello, World!"
}
To cleanup the mock server without restarting it, you can execute the following command:
curl -XPOST localhost:8081/reset
For more advanced usage, please read the project's documentation.
The backend is written in Go. You can use the following commands to manage the development lifecycle:
make start
: start the backend in development mode, with live reloadmake build
,make VERSION=xxx build
: compile the code and generate a binarymake lint
: run static analysis on the codemake format
: automatically format the backend codemake test
: execute unit testsmake test-integration
: execute integration tests
The frontend is written with TypeScript and React. You can use the following commands to manage the development lifecycle:
yarn install
: install the dependenciesyarn start
: start the frontend in development mode, with live reloadyarn build
: generate the transpiled and minified files and assetsyarn lint
: run static analysis on the codeyarn format
: automatically format the frontend codeyarn test
: execute unit testsyarn test:watch
: execute unit tests, with live reload
The documentation is written in Markdown using Vuepress. You can use the following commands to manage the documentation:
yarn install
: install the dependenciesyarn docs:generate
: regenerate documentation screenshots (require the whole application to be started on the default ports)yarn docs:dev
: start the documentation in development mode, with live reloadyarn docs:build
: generate the static production documentation
The application can be packaged as a standalone Docker image. You can use the following commands to manage the development lifecycle:
make build-docker
,make VERSION=xxx build-docker
: build the application as a Docker imagemake start-docker
,make VERSION=xxx start-docker
: run a Smocker Docker image
If you need to test Smocker with a base path, you can use the Caddyfile provided in the repository (Caddy v2):
make start-release
,make VERSION=xxx start-release
: create a released version of Smocker and launch it with/smocker/
as base pathmake start-caddy
: start Caddy to make Smocker accessible at http://localhost:8082/smocker/
If you need to test Smocker with HTTPS enabled, the easiest way is to generate a locally signed certificate with mkcert:
# Install the local certificate authority
mkcert -install
# Create a certificate for localhost
mkcert -cert-file /tmp/cert.pem -key-file /tmp/key.pem localhost
Then, start Smocker with TLS enabled, using your generated certificate:
./smocker -mock-server-listen-port=44300 -config-listen-port=44301 -tls-enable -tls-cert-file=/tmp/cert.pem -tls-private-key-file=/tmp/key.pem
- Amanda Yoshiizumi (mandyellow): thank you for your awesome logo!