Mocking and Stubbing with protractor
This blog post discusses advance usage scenarios for Protractor. In particular it covers the the little know addMockModule()
method of the Protractor browser object. The method allows you to create angular modules in Protractor (i.e. mocks or stubs of your API module) and upload them to the browser to replace the real implementation within the context of a given spec or set of specs.
You do not have access to $httpBackend, controllers or services from within a protractor test so the idea is to create another angular module and include it in the browser during the test.
beforeEach(function(){
var httpBackendMock = function() {
angular.module('httpBackendMock', ['ngMockE2E', 'myApp'])
.run(function($httpBackend) {
$httpBackend.whenPOST('/api/packages').respond(200, {} );
})
}
browser.addMockModule('httpBackendMock', httpBackendMock)
})
ngMockE2E allows you to create a fake backend implementation for your application. Here is a more in depth post on the topic http://product.moveline.com/testing-angular-apps-end-to-end-with-protractor.html
Although I've not tried it myself at this point, Angular provides a mock $httpBackend for E2E tests:
http://docs.angularjs.org/api/ngMockE2E/service/$httpBackend
So, taking from the above docs page, I suspect you can use something like the following before your tests
beforeEach(function() {
$httpBackend.whenGET('/remote-url').respond(edgeCaseData);
});
I created a little customizable mock module to help me handle success and error scenarios, maybe it will help you better organize mocking.
https://github.com/unDemian/protractor-mock
I've been trying to mock some services in protractor, and after looking some blogs I've arrived to a solution that works for me. The idea is not to do heavy mocking, just generate some error responses; since for the fixtures I already have a backdoor in my API server to populate the backend.
This solution uses the $provide.decorator()
to just alter some methods. Here how it's used in the tests:
it('should mock a service', function () {
app.mock.decorateService({
// This will return a rejected promise when calling to "user"
// service "login()" method resolved with the given object.
// rejectPromise() is a convenience method
user: app.mock.rejectPromise('login', { type: 'MockError' }),
// You can decorate the service
// Warning! This code get's stringified and send to the browser
// it does not have access to node
api: function ($delegate, $q) {
$delegate.get = function () {
var deferred = $q.defer();
deferred.resolve({ id: 'whatever', name: 'tess' });
return defer.promise;
};
return $delegate;
},
// Internally decorateService converts the function to string
// so if you prefer you can set an string. Usefull for creating your
// own helper methods like "rejectPromise()".
dialog: [
"function ($delegate, $window) {",
"$delegate.alert = $window.alert;",
"return $delegate;",
"}"
].join('\n')
});
// ...
// Important!
app.mock.clearDecorators();
});
Here the code:
App.prototype.mock = {
// This must be called before ".get()"
decorateService: function (services) {
var code = [
'var decorer = angular.module("serviceDecorator", ["visitaste"]);',
'decorer.config(function ($provide) {'
];
for (var service in services) {
var fn = services[service];
if (_.isFunction(fn)) {
code.push('$provide.decorator("'+ service +'", '+ String(fn) +');');
} else if (_.isString(fn)) {
code.push('$provide.decorator("'+ service +'", '+ fn +');');
}
}
code.push('});');
browser.addMockModule('serviceDecorator', code.join('\n'));
},
clearDecorators: function () {
browser.clearMockModules();
},
rejectPromise: function (method, error, delay) {
return [
'function ($delegate, $q) {',
'$delegate.'+ method +' = function () {',
'var deferred = $q.defer();',
'',
'setTimeout(function () {',
'deferred.reject('+ JSON.stringify(error) +');',
'}, '+ (delay || 200) +');',
'',
'return deferred.promise;',
'};',
'',
'return $delegate;',
'}'
].join('\n');
}
};