This article contains a short reminder of what Contract Testing is, how Spring Cloud Contract implements it, and how Spring Cloud Contract can be used in a polyglot world.

What is Contract Testing

In order to increase the certainty that our systems behave properly, we write different types of tests. According to the test pyramid the main types of tests are unit, integration, and UI. The more complex the tests, the more time and effort they require and the more brittle they become.

In a distributed system, one of the most frequent problems is testing integrations between applications. Let’s assume that your service sends a REST request to another application. When using Spring Boot, you can write a @SpringBootTest in which you test that behavior. You set up a Spring context, you prepare a request to be sent…​ and where do you send it? You haven’t started the other application, so you get a Connection Refused exception. You can try mocking the real HTTP call and returning a fake response. However, if you do that, you do not test any real HTTP integration, serialization and deserialization mechanisms, and so on. You could also start a fake HTTP server (for example, WireMock) and simulate how it should behave. The problem here is that you, as a client of an API, define how the server behaves. In other words, if you tell the fake server to return text testText when a request is sent to endpoint /myEndpoint , it does just that, even if the real server does not have such an endpoint. In short, the problem is that the stubs might not be reliable.

Another problem is integration with third-party systems. There may be a shared instance that breaks down every 5 minutes due to high load. In that situation we would like to stub that system out so that it doesn’t influence our integration tests, but we need those stubs to be reliable.

It’s always tempting to set up an environment for end-to-end tests, spawn all applications, and perform tests by running though the whole system. Often, that’s a good solution that increases the confidence that your business features are still working fine. However, the problem with end-to-end tests is that they often fail for no apparent reason and are very slow. There is nothing more frustrating than seeing that, after running for ten hours, the end-to-end tests have failed due to a typo in the API call.

A potential solution to this problem are Contract Tests. Before we go into details of what those are, let’s define some terms:

producer : The server-side owner (for example, the owner of a HTTP API) or a producer of a message sent through a queue, such as RabbitMQ.

consumer : The application that consumes the HTTP API or listens to messages received through (for example) RabbitMQ.

contract : An agreement between the producer and the consumer on what the communication should look like. It is not a schema . It is more of a scenario of usage. For example, for this particular scenario, I expect a specified input and then I reply with a specified output.

contract test: A test that verifies that the producer and the consumer can integrate with each other. It does not mean that the functionality works. This distinction is important, because you would not want to duplicate your work by writing a contract for each feature. Contract tests assert that the integration between the producer and the consumer meets the requirements defined in the contract. Their main advantage is that they are fast and reliable.

The following example shows a contract written in YAML:

request: # (1) method: PUT # (2) url: /fraudcheck # (3) body: # (4) "client.id": 1234567890 loanAmount: 99999 headers: # (5) Content-Type: application/json matchers: body: - path: $.['client.id'] # (6) type: by_regex value: "[0-9]{10}" response: # (7) status: 200 # (8) body: # (9) fraudCheckStatus: "FRAUD" "rejection.reason": "Amount too high" headers: # (10) Content-Type: application/json;charset=UTF-8 #From the Consumer perspective, when running a request in the integration test, we can interpret that test as follows: # #(1) - If the consumer sends a request #(2) - With the "PUT" method #(3) - to the URL "/fraudcheck" #(4) - with the JSON body that # * has a `client.id` field # * has a `loanAmount` field that is equal to `99999` #(5) - with `Content-Type` header equal to `application/json` #(6) - and a `client.id` json entry matches a regular expression of `[0-9]{10}` #(7) - then the response is sent with #(8) - status equal to `200` #(9) - and JSON body equal to # { "fraudCheckStatus": "FRAUD", "rejection.reason": "Amount too high" } #(10) - with header `Content-Type` equal to `application/json` # #From the Producer perspective, in the autogenerated producer-side test, we can interpret that test as follows: # #(1) - A request is sent to the producer #(2) - With the "PUT" method #(3) - to the URL "/fraudcheck" #(4) - with the JSON body that # * has a `client.id` field with a value of `1234567890` # * has a `loanAmount` field with a value of `99999` #(5) - with a `Content-Type` header equal to `application/json` #(7) - then the test asserts if the response has been sent with #(8) - status equal `200` #(9) - and a JSON body equal to # { "fraudCheckStatus": "FRAUD", "rejection.reason": "Amount too high" } #(10) - with a `Content-Type` header equal to `application/json;charset=UTF-8`

This article focuses on two main types of contract tests: Producer Contract testing and Consumer-Driven Contract testing. The main difference between them is the cooperation style of the producer and the consumer.

In the Producer Contract testing approach, the producer defines the contracts and writes the contract tests, describes the API, and publishes the stubs without any cooperation with its clients. Often, this happens when the API is public and the owners of the API don’t even know who exactly is using it. An example is Spring Initializr, which publishes its stubs with Spring Rest Docs tests. The stubs for version 0.5.0.BUILD-SNAPSHOT are available here with the stubs classifier.

In the Consumer-Driven Contract testing approach, the contracts are suggested by the consumers, in strong cooperation with the producer. The producer knows exactly which consumer defined which contract and which one gets broken when the contract compatibility gets broken. This approach is more common when working with an internal API.

In both cases, the contracts can be defined in the repository of the producer (either defined with a DSL or by writing contract tests) or an external repo where all the contracts are stored.

Introduction to Maven Nomenclature

Since it’s much easier now to use Spring Cloud Contract for non-JVM projects, it’s good to explain the basic terms behind the packaging defaults and introduce the Maven nomenclature.

Tip Apache Maven is a software project management and comprehension tool. Based on the concept of a project object model (POM), Maven can manage a project’s build, reporting, and documentation from a central piece of information. (See https://maven.apache.org/)

(Part of the following definitions were taken from the Maven Glossary.)

Project : Maven thinks in terms of projects. Everything that you build are projects. Those projects follow a well defined "Project Object Model". Projects can depend on other projects, in which case the latter are called "dependencies". A project may consistent of several subprojects. However, these subprojects are still treated as projects.

Artifact : An artifact is something that is either produced or used by a project. Examples of artifacts produced by Maven for a project include JARs and source and binary distributions. Each artifact is uniquely identified by a group ID and an artifact ID, which is unique within a group.

JAR : JAR stands for Java ARchive. It’s a format based on the ZIP file format. Spring Cloud Contract packages the contracts and generated stubs in a JAR file.

GroupId : A group ID is a universally unique identifier for a project. While this is often the project name (for example, commons-collections ), it is helpful to use a fully-qualified package name to distinguish it from other projects with a similar name (for example, org.apache.maven ). Typically, when published to the Artifact Manager, the GroupId gets slash separated and forms part of the URL. For example, for a group ID of com.example , an artifact ID for application would be /com/example/application/ .

Classifier : The Maven dependency notation looks as follows: groupId:artifactId:version:classifier . The classifier is an additional suffix passed to the dependency (for example stubs or sources ). The same dependency (for example, com.example:application ) can produce multiple artifacts that differ from each other by the classifier.

Artifact manager : When you generate binaries, sources, or packages, you would like them to be available for others to download, reference, or reuse. In the JVM world, those artifacts would be JARs. For Ruby, these would be gems. For Docker, they would be Docker images. You can store those artifacts in a manager. Examples of such managers include Artifactory and Nexus.

What is Spring Cloud Contract

Spring Cloud Contract is an umbrella project holding solutions that help users to implement different sorts of contract tests. It comes with two main modules: Spring Cloud Contract Verifier , which is used mainly by the producer side, and Spring Cloud Contract Stub Runner , which is used by the consumer side.

The project lets you define contracts using:

Let’s assume that we’ve decided to write the contracts using YAML. On the producer side, from the contracts:

Tests are generated with a Maven or Gradle plugin to assert that the contract is met.

Stubs are generated for other projects to reuse.

The simplified flow of the producer contract approach, for a JVM application using Spring Cloud Contract with YAML contracts goes as follows.

The producer:

Applies a Maven or Gradle Spring Cloud Contract plugin.

Defines YAML contracts under src/test/resources/contracts/ .

Generates tests and stubs from the contract.

Creates a base class that extends the generated tests and sets up the test context.

Once the tests pass, creates a JAR with stubs classifier where contracts and stubs are stored.

Uploads the JAR with a stubs classifier to binary storage.

The consumer:

Uses Stub Runner to fetch the stubs of the producer. Stub Runner starts in memory HTTP servers (by default, those are WireMock servers) fed with the stubs.

Runs tests against the stubs.

Consequently, using Spring Cloud Contract and Contract Testing gives you:

stubs reliability: They were generated only after the tests have passed.

stubs reusability: They can be downloaded and reused by multiple consumers.

What is the Current "Problem" with Spring Cloud Contract

Distibuted systems are set up from applications written in different languages and frameworks. One of the "problems" with Spring Cloud Contract was that the DSL had to be written in Groovy. Even though the contract didn’t require any special knowledge of the language, it became a problem for non-JVM users.

On the producer side, Spring Cloud Contract generates tests in Java or Groovy. Of course, it became a problem to use those tests in a non-JVM environment. Not only do you need to have Java installed, but the tests are generated with a Maven or Gradle plugin, which requires using those build tools.

Spring Cloud Contract and Polyglot Support

Starting with the Edgware.SR2 release train and 1.2.3.RELEASE of Spring Cloud Contract, we decided to add features that allow much wider adoption of Spring Cloud Contract in the non-JVM world.

We added support for writing contracts with YAML. YAML is a (yet another) markup language that is not bound to any specific language and is already widely used. That should tackle the "problem" of defining contracts using a DSL that is related to any specific language.

In order to hide the implementation details (such as generation of java tests, plugin setup, or Java installation), we needed to introduce a layer of abstraction. We decided to hide those by using Docker images. We encapsulated all the project setup, required packages, and folder structures inside a docker image in such a way that no knowledge, other than required environment variables, is required from the user.

We introduced Docker images for both the producer and the consumer. All the JVM-related logic gets wrapped in a Docker container, which means that you don’t have to have Java installed to generate tests and run the stubs with Stub Runner.

The following sections go through an example of a NodeJS application being tested by using Spring Cloud Contract. The code was forked from https://github.com/bradtraversy/bookstore and is available under https://github.com/spring-cloud-samples/spring-cloud-contract-nodejs. Our aim is to start generating tests and stubs for an existing application as quickly as possible with the least effort.

Spring Cloud Contract on the Producer Side

Let’s clone the simple NodeJS MVC application, as follows:

$ git clone https://github.com/spring-cloud-samples/spring-cloud-contract-nodejs $ cd spring-cloud-contract-nodejs

It connects to a Mongo DB database to store data about books.

The YAML contracts are available under the /contracts folder, as follows:

$ ls contracts 1_shouldAddABook.yml 2_shouldReturnListOfBooks.yml

The numerical suffixes tell Spring Cloud Contract that the tests generated from these contracts need to be executed sequentially. The stubs are stateful, meaning that, only after performing a request matched by 1_shouldAddABook is the 2_shouldReturnListOfBooks.yml be available from the stubbed HTTP server.

Important In a real-life example, we would run our NodeJS application in a contract testing mode where calls to the database would be stubbed out and there would be no need for stateful stubs. In this example, we want to show how we can benefit from Spring Cloud Contract in no time.

Let’s take a look at one of the stubs:

description: | Should add a book request: method: POST url: /api/books headers: Content-Type: application/json body: '{ "title" : "Title", "genre" : "Genre", "description" : "Description", "author" : "Author", "publisher" : "Publisher", "pages" : 100, "image_url" : "https://d213dhlpdb53mu.cloudfront.net/assets/pivotal-square-logo-41418bd391196c3022f3cd9f3959b3f6d7764c47873d858583384e759c7db435.svg", "buy_url" : "https://pivotal.io" }' response: status: 200

The contract states that, if a POST request is sent to /api/books with a header of Content-Type: application/json and the aforementioned body, then the response should be 200 . Now, before running the contract tests, let’s analyze the Spring Cloud Contract docker image requirements.

Spring Cloud Contract Docker Image The image is available on DockerHub under SpringCloud org. Once you mount your contracts and pass the environment variables, the image: Generates the contract tests.

Executes the tests against the provided URL.

Generates the WireMock stubs.

Publishes the stubs to the Artifact Manager. (This step is optional but turned on by default.) Important The generated tests assume that your application is running and ready to listen to requests on the specified port. That means you have to run it before running the contract tests.

Spring Cloud Contract Docker Image setup The Docker image searches for contracts under the /contracts folder. The output from running the tests is available under the /spring-cloud-contract/build folder (it’s useful for debugging purposes). You need to mount those volumes when running the build. The Docker image also requires some environment variables that point to your running application, to the Artifact Manager instance, and others, as described in the following list: PROJECT_GROUP : Your project’s group ID. Defaults to com.example .

PROJECT_VERSION : Your project’s version. Defaults to 0.0.1-SNAPSHOT .

PROJECT_NAME . The artifact ID. Defaults to example .

REPO_WITH_BINARIES_URL - The URL of your Artifact Manager. Defaults to http://localhost:8081/artifactory/libs-release-local , which is the default URL of Artifactory when running locally.

REPO_WITH_BINARIES_USERNAME : (optional) username when the Artifact Manager is secured.

REPO_WITH_BINARIES_PASSWORD : (optional) password when the Artifact Manager is secured.

PUBLISH_ARTIFACTS : If set to true , publish the artifact to binary storage. Defaults to true . The following environment variables are used when tests run: APPLICATION_BASE_URL : URL against which tests should be executed. Remember that it has to be accessible from the Docker container ( localhost does not work).

APPLICATION_USERNAME : (optional) username for basic authentication to your application.

APPLICATION_PASSWORD : (optional) password for basic authentication to your application.

Running Spring Cloud Contract tests on the Producer Side

Important To run this sample you need to have Docker, Docker Compose and npm installed.

Since we want to run tests, we could use:

$ npm install $ npm test

However, for learning purposes, let’s split it into pieces, as follows (we’re going to analyze each line of a bash script):

# Install the required npm packages $ npm install # Stop docker infra (mongodb, artifactory) $ ./stop_infra.sh # Start docker infra (mongodb, artifactory) $ ./setup_infra.sh # Kill & Run app $ pkill -f "node app" $ nohup node app & # Prepare environment variables $ export SC_CONTRACT_DOCKER_VERSION="1.2.3.RELEASE" $ export APP_IP="192.168.0.100" # This has to be the IP that is available outside of Docker container $ export APP_PORT="3000" $ export ARTIFACTORY_PORT="8081" $ export APPLICATION_BASE_URL="http://${APP_IP}:${APP_PORT}" $ export ARTIFACTORY_URL="http://${APP_IP}:${ARTIFACTORY_PORT}/artifactory/libs-release-local" $ export CURRENT_DIR="$( pwd )" $ export PROJECT_NAME="bookstore" $ export PROJECT_GROUP="com.example" $ export PROJECT_VERSION="0.0.1.RELEASE" # Execute contract tests $ docker run --rm -e "APPLICATION_BASE_URL=${APPLICATION_BASE_URL}" \ -e "PUBLISH_ARTIFACTS=true" -e "PROJECT_NAME=${PROJECT_NAME}" \ -e "PROJECT_GROUP=${PROJECT_GROUP}" -e "REPO_WITH_BINARIES_URL=${ARTIFACTORY_URL}" \ -e "PROJECT_VERSION=${PROJECT_VERSION}" -v "${CURRENT_DIR}/contracts/:/contracts:ro" \ -v "${CURRENT_DIR}/node_modules/spring-cloud-contract/output:/spring-cloud-contract-output/" \ springcloud/spring-cloud-contract:"${SC_CONTRACT_DOCKER_VERSION}" # Kill app $ pkill -f "node app"

What will happen is that, through the bash scripts:

Infrastructure (MongoDb, Artifactory) gets set up.

Due to the constraint that we don’t have the database mocked in the NodeJS application, the contracts also represent the stateful situation The first request is a POST that causes data to get inserted to the database. The second request is a GET that returns a list of data with one previously inserted element.

The NodeJS application is started (on port 3000 ) and is available at 192.168.0.100 .

Contract tests are generated by Docker and tests are executed against the running application. The contracts are taken from the /contracts folder. The output of the test execution is available at node_modules/spring-cloud-contract/output .

The stubs are uploaded to Artifactory. You can check them out at http://localhost:8081/artifactory/libs-release-local/com/example/bookstore/0.0.1.RELEASE/ . The stubs are at http://localhost:8081/artifactory/libs-release-local/com/example/bookstore/0.0.1.RELEASE/bookstore-0.0.1.RELEASE-stubs.jar.

To sum up, we defined the YAML contracts, ran the NodeJS application, and ran the Docker image to generate contract tests and stubs and upload them to Artifactory.

Using Spring Cloud Contract Stubs on the Consumer Side

In this example, We publish a spring-cloud/spring-cloud-contract-stub-runner Docker image that starts the standalone version of Stub Runner.

Tip If you’re comfortable with running a java -jar command instead of running Docker, you can download a standalone JAR from Maven (for example, for version 1.2.3.RELEASE), as follows: wget -O stub-runner.jar 'https://search.maven.org/remote_content?g=org.springframework.cloud&a=spring-cloud-contract-stub-runner-boot&v=1.2.3.RELEASE'

You can pass any of the properties as environment variables. The convention is that all the letters should be upper case and that the word delimiters and the dots ( . ) should be replaced with underscores ( _ ). For example, the stubrunner.repositoryRoot property should be represented as a STUBRUNNER_REPOSITORY_ROOT environment variable.

Let’s assume that we want to run the stubs of the bookstore application on port 9876 . To do so, let’s run the Stub Runner Boot application with the stubs, as follows:

# Provide the Spring Cloud Contract Docker version $ export SC_CONTRACT_DOCKER_VERSION="1.2.3.RELEASE" # The IP at which the app is running and the Docker container can reach it $ export APP_IP="192.168.0.100" # Spring Cloud Contract Stub Runner properties $ export STUBRUNNER_PORT="8083" # Stub coordinates 'groupId:artifactId:version:classifier:port' $ export STUBRUNNER_IDS="com.example:bookstore:0.0.1.RELEASE:stubs:9876" $ export STUBRUNNER_REPOSITORY_ROOT="http://${APP_IP}:8081/artifactory/libs-release-local" # Run the docker with Stub Runner Boot $ docker run --rm -e "STUBRUNNER_IDS=${STUBRUNNER_IDS}" \ -e "STUBRUNNER_REPOSITORY_ROOT=${STUBRUNNER_REPOSITORY_ROOT}" \ -p "${STUBRUNNER_PORT}:${STUBRUNNER_PORT}" -p "9876:9876" \ springcloud/spring-cloud-contract-stub-runner:"${SC_CONTRACT_DOCKER_VERSION}"

That script:

Starts a standalone Spring Cloud Contract Stub Runner application.

Causes Stub Runner to download the stubs with the following coordinates: com.example:bookstore:0.0.1.RELEASE:stubs .

Downloads the stubs from Artifactory at http://192.168.0.100:8081/artifactory/libs-release-local .

Starts (after a delay) Stub Runner on port 8083 .

Runs the stubs at port 9876 .

On the server side, we built a stateful stub. Let’s use curl to assert that the stubs are setup properly, as follows:

# let's execute the first request (no response is returned) $ curl -H "Content-Type:application/json" -X POST \ --data '{ "title" : "Title", "genre" : "Genre", "description" : "Description", "author" : "Author", "publisher" : "Publisher", "pages" : 100, "image_url" : "https://d213dhlpdb53mu.cloudfront.net/assets/pivotal-square-logo-41418bd391196c3022f3cd9f3959b3f6d7764c47873d858583384e759c7db435.svg", "buy_url" : "https://pivotal.io" }' http://localhost:9876/api/books # Now it's time for the second request $ curl -X GET http://localhost:9876/api/books # You should receive the contents of the JSON

To sum up, once the stubs got uploaded, you can run a Docker image with a couple of environment variables and reuse them in your integration tests, regardless of the programming language used.

Summary

In this blog post, we explained what Contract Tests are and why they are important. We presented how Spring Cloud Contract can be used to generate and execute contract tests. Finally, we went through an example of how you can use Spring Cloud Contract Docker images for the producer and the consumer for a non-JVM application.

Additional Resources