• Stars
    star
    627
  • Rank 71,654 (Top 2 %)
  • Language
    TypeScript
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created almost 4 years ago
  • Updated about 1 year ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

Data modeling and relation library for testing JavaScript applications.

Data library logo

@mswjs/data

Data modeling and relation library for testing JavaScript applications.


Motivation

When testing API interactions you often need to mock data. Instead of keeping a hard-coded set of fixtures, this library provides you with must-have tools for data-driven API mocking:

  • An intuitive interface to model data;
  • The ability to create relationships between models;
  • The ability to query data in a manner similar to an actual database.

Getting started

Install

$ npm install @mswjs/data --save-dev
# or
$ yarn add @mswjs/data --save-dev

Describe data

With this library, you're modeling data using the factory function. That function accepts an object where each key represents a model name and the values are model definitions. A model definition is an object where the keys represent model properties and the values are value getters.

// src/mocks/db.js
import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

export const db = factory({
  // Create a "user" model,
  user: {
    // ...with these properties and value getters.
    id: primaryKey(() => 'abc-123'),
    firstName: () => 'John',
    lastName: () => 'Maverick',
  },
})

See the Recipes for more guidelines on data modeling.

Throughout this document native JavaScript constructors (i.e. String, Number) will be used as values getters for the models, as they both create a value and define its type. In practice, you may consider using value generators or tools like Faker for value getters.

Using the primary key

Each model must have a primary key. That is a root-level property representing the model's identity. Think of it as an "id" column for a particular table in a database.

Declare a primary key by using the primaryKey function:

import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
  },
})

In the example above, the id is the primary key for the user model. This means that whenever a user is created it must have the id property that equals a unique String. Any property can be marked as a primary key, it doesn't have to be named "id".

Just like regular model properties, the primary key accepts a getter function that you can use to generate its value when creating entities:

import { faker } from '@faker-js/faker'

factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(faker.datatype.uuid),
  },
})

Each time a new user is created, its user.id property is seeded with the value returned from the datatype.uuid function call.

Once your data is modeled, you can use Model methods to interact with it (create/update/delete). Apart from serving as interactive, queryable fixtures, you can also integrate your data models into API mocks to supercharge your prototyping/testing workflow.

API

factory

The factory function is used to model a database. It accepts a model dictionary and returns an API to interact with the described models.

import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    firstName: String,
    age: Number
  }
})

Learn more about the Model methods and how you can interact with the described models.

Each factory call encapsulates an in-memory database instance that holds the respective models. It's possible to create multiple database instances by calling factory multiple times. The entities and relationships, however, are not shared between different database instances.

primaryKey

Marks the property of a model as a primary key.

import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
  },
})

// Create a new "user" with the primary key "id" equal to "user-1".
db.user.create({ id: 'user-1' })

Primary key must be unique for each entity and is used as the identifier to query a particular entity.

nullable

Marks the current model property as nullable.

import { factory, primaryKey, nullable } from '@mswjs/data'

factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String)
    // "user.title" is a nullable property.
    title: nullable(String)
  }
})

Learn more how to work with Nullable properties.

oneOf

Creates a *-to-one relationship with another model.

import { factory, primaryKey, oneOf } from '@mswjs/data'

factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    role: oneOf('userGroup'),
  },
  userGroup: {
    name: primaryKey(String),
  },
})

Learn more about Modeling relationships.

manyOf

Creates a *-to-many relationship with another model.

import { factory, primaryKey, manyOf } from '@mswjs/data'

factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    publications: manyOf('post'),
  },
  post: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    title: String,
  },
})

Learn more about Modeling relationships.

drop

Deletes all entities in the given database instance.

import { factory, drop } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory(...models)

drop(db)

Model methods

Each model has the following methods:

create

Creates an entity for the model.

const user = db.user.create()

When called without arguments, .create() will populate the entity properties using the getter functions you've specified in the model definition.

You can also provide a partial initial values when creating an entity:

const user = db.user.create({
  firstName: 'John',
})

Note that all model properties are optional, including relational properties.

findFirst

Returns the first entity that satisfies the given query.

const user = db.user.findFirst({
  where: {
    id: {
      equals: 'abc-123',
    },
  },
})

findMany

Returns all the entities that satisfy the given query.

const users = db.user.findMany({
  where: {
    followersCount: {
      gte: 1000,
    },
  },
})

count

Returns the number of records for the given model.

db.user.create()
db.user.create()

db.user.count() // 2

Can accept an optional query argument to filter the records before counting them.

db.user.count({
  where: {
    role: {
      equals: 'reader',
    },
  },
})

getAll

Returns all the entities of the given model.

const allUsers = db.user.getAll()

update

Updates the first entity that matches the query.

const updatedUser = db.user.update({
  // Query for the entity to modify.
  where: {
    id: {
      equals: 'abc-123',
    },
  },
  // Provide partial next data to be
  // merged with the existing properties.
  data: {
    // Specify the exact next value.
    firstName: 'John',

    // Alternatively, derive the next value from
    // the previous one and the unmodified entity.
    role: (prevRole, user) => reformatRole(prevRole),
  },
})

updateMany

Updates multiple entities that match the query.

const updatedUsers = db.user.updateMany({
  // Query for the entity to modify.
  where: {
    id: {
      in: ['abc-123', 'def-456'],
    },
  },
  // Provide partial next data to be
  // merged with the existing properties.
  data: {
    firstName: (firstName) => firstName.toUpperCase(),
  },
})

delete

Deletes the entity that satisfies the given query.

const deletedUser = db.user.delete({
  where: {
    followersCount: {
      equals: 0,
    },
  },
})

deleteMany

Deletes multiple entities that match the query.

const deletedUsers = db.user.deleteMany({
  where: {
    followersCount: {
      lt: 10,
    },
  },
})

toHandlers

Generates request handlers for the given model to use with Mock Service Worker. All generated handlers are automatically connected to the respective model methods, enabling you to perform CRUD operations against your mocked database.

REST handlers

import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    firstName: String,
  },
})

// Generates REST API request handlers.
db.user.toHandlers('rest')

GraphQL handlers

import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    firstName: String,
  },
})

// Generates GraphQL API request handlers.
db.user.toHandlers('graphql')

Scoping handlers

The .toHandlers() method supports an optional second baseUrl argument to scope the generated handlers to a given endpoint:

db.user.toHandlers('rest', 'https://example.com')
db.user.toHandlers('graphql', 'https://example.com/graphql')

Recipes

Nullable properties

By default, all model properties are non-nullable. You can use the nullable function to mark a property as nullable:

import { factory, primaryKey, nullable } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    firstName: String,
    // "user.age" is a nullable property.
    age: nullable(Number),
  },
})

db.user.create({
  id: 'user-1',
  firstName: 'John',
  // Nullable properties can be explicit null as the initial value.
  age: null,
})

db.user.update({
  where: {
    id: {
      equals: 'user-1',
    },
  },
  data: {
    // Nullable properties can be updated to null.
    age: null,
  },
})

You can define Nullable relationships in the same manner.

When using Typescript, you can manually set the type of the property when it cannot be otherwise inferred from the seeding function, such as when you want a property to default to null:

import { factory, primaryKey, nullable } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    age: nullable<number>(() => null),
  },
})

Nested structures

You may use nested objects to design a complex structure of your model:

import { factory, primaryKey, nullable } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    address: {
      billing: {
        street: String,
        city: nullable(String),
      },
    },
  },
})

// You can then create and query your data
// based on the nested properties.

db.user.create({
  id: 'user-1',
  address: {
    billing: {
      street: 'Baker st.',
      city: 'London',
    },
  },
})

db.user.update({
  where: {
    id: {
      equals: 'user-1',
    },
  },
  data: {
    address: {
      billing: {
        street: 'Sunwell ave.',
        city: null,
      },
    },
  },
})

Note that you cannot mark a nested property as the primary key.

You may also specify relationships nested deeply in your model:

factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    address: {
      billing: {
        country: oneOf('country'),
      },
    },
  },
  country: {
    code: primaryKey(String),
  },
})

Learn more about Model relationships.

Model relationships

Relationship is a way for a model to reference another model.

One-to-One

import { factory, primaryKey, oneOf } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    firstName: String,
  },
  post: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    title: String,
    // The "post.author" references a "user" model.
    author: oneOf('user'),
  },
})

const user = db.user.create({ firstName: 'John' })
const post = db.post.create({
  title: 'My journey',
  // Use a "user" entity as the actual value of this post's author.
  author: user,
})

post.author.firstName // "John"

One-to-Many

import { factory, primaryKey, manyOf } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    // "user.posts" is a list of the "post" entities.
    posts: manyOf('post'),
  },
  post: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    title: String,
  },
})

const posts = [
  db.post.create({ title: 'First' }),
  db.post.create({ title: 'Second' }),
]

const user = db.user.create({
  // Assign the list of existing posts to this user.
  posts,
})

user.posts // [{ title: "First" }, { title: "Second" }]

Many-to-One

import { factory, primaryKey, oneOf } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  country: {
    name: primaryKey(String),
  },
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    country: oneOf('country'),
  },
  car: {
    serialNumber: primaryKey(String),
    country: oneOf('country'),
  },
})

const usa = db.country.create({ name: 'The United States of America' })

// Create a "user" and a "car" with the same country.
db.user.create({ country: usa })
db.car.create({ country: usa })

Unique relationships

Both oneOf and manyOf relationships may be marked as unique. A unique relationship is where a referenced entity cannot be assigned to another entity more than once.

In the example below we define the "user" and "invitation" models, and design their relationship so that one invitation cannot be assigned to multiple users.

import { factory, primaryKey, oneOf } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    invitation: oneOf('invitation', { unique: true }),
  },
  invitation: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
  },
})

const invitation = db.invitation.create()

const john = db.user.create({ invitation })

// Assigning the invitation already used by "john"
// will throw an exception when creating this entity.
const karl = db.user.create({ invitation })

Nullable relationships

Both oneOf and manyOf relationships may be passed to nullable to allow instantiating and updating that relation to null.

import { factory, primaryKey, oneOf, nullable } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    invitation: nullable(oneOf('invitation')),
    friends: nullable(manyOf('user')),
  },
  invitation: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
  },
})

const invitation = db.invitation.create()

// Nullable relationships are instantiated with null.
const john = db.user.create({ invitation }) // john.friends === null
const kate = db.user.create({ friends: [john] }) // kate.invitation === null

db.user.updateMany({
  where: {
    id: {
      in: [john.id, kate.id],
    },
  },
  data: {
    // Nullable relationships can be updated to null.
    invitation: null,
    friends: null,
  },
})

Querying data

This library supports querying of the seeded data similar to how one would query a SQL database. The data is queried based on its properties. A query you construct depends on the value type you are querying.

String operators

  • equals
  • notEquals
  • contains
  • notContains
  • in
  • notIn

Number operators

  • equals
  • notEquals
  • gt
  • gte
  • lt
  • lte
  • between
  • notBetween
  • in
  • notIn

Boolean operators

  • equals
  • notEquals

Date operators

  • equals
  • notEquals
  • gt
  • gte
  • lt
  • lte

Query example

const db = factory({
  post: {
    id: String,
    likes: Number,
    isDraft: Boolean,
  },
})

// Returns the list of `post` entities
// that satisfy the given query.
const popularPosts = db.post.findMany({
  where: {
    likes: {
      gte: 1000,
    },
    isDraft: {
      equals: false,
    },
  },
})

Strict mode

When querying or updating the entities you can supply the strict: boolean property on the query. When supplied, if a query operation fails (i.e. no entity found), the library will throw an exception.

import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
  },
})

db.user.create({ id: 'abc-123' })

// This will throw an exception, because there are
// no "user" entities matching this query.
db.user.findFirst({
  where: {
    id: {
      equals: 'def-456',
    },
  },
  strict: true,
})

Pagination

This library supports offset-based and cursor-based pagination of the findMany method results.

Offset-based pagination

const db = factory({
  post: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    category: String,
  },
})

db.post.findMany({
  where: {
    category: {
      equals: 'Science',
    },
  },
  take: 15,
  skip: 10,
})

Cursor-based pagination

The cursor option of the findMany query expects a primary key value of a model to start the pagination from.

const db = factory({
  post: {
    // The `id` primary key will be used as a cursor.
    id: primaryKey(String),
    category: String,
  },
})

const firstPage = db.post.findMany({
  where: {
    category: {
      equals: 'Science',
    },
  },
  take: 15,
  cursor: null,
})

const secondPage = db.post.findMany({
  where: {
    category: {
      equals: 'Science',
    },
  },
  take: 15,
  // The second page will start from the last post
  // of the `firstPage`.
  cursor: firstPage[firstPage.length - 1].id,
})

Sorting

Basic sorting

const db = factory({
  post: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    title: String,
  },
})

// Return first 10 posts in the "Science" category
// sorted by the post's "title".
db.post.findMany({
  where: {
    category: {
      equals: 'Science',
    },
  },
  take: 10,
  orderBy: {
    title: 'asc',
  },
})

You can use orderBy with pagination.

Sorting by relational properties

const db = factory({
  post: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    title: String,
    author: oneOf('user'),
  },
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    firstName: String,
  },
})

// Return all posts in the "Science" category
// sorted by the post author's first name.
db.post.findMany({
  where: {
    category: {
      equals: 'Science',
    },
  },
  orderBy: {
    author: {
      firstName: 'asc',
    },
  },
})

Sorting by multiple criteria

Provide a list of criteria to sort the query result against.

db.post.findMany({
  orderBy: [
    {
      title: 'asc',
    },
    {
      views: 'desc',
    },
  ],
})

You can also use a combination of direct and relational properties on a single query:

db.post.findMany({
  orderBy: [
    {
      title: 'asc',
    },
    {
      author: {
        firstName: 'asc',
      },
    },
  ],
})

Database utilities

drop

Drops the given database, deleting all its entities.

import { factory, drop } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({...})

drop(db)

Usage with Faker

Libraries like Faker can help you generate fake data for your models.

import { faker } from '@faker-js/faker'
import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

// (Optional) Seed `faker` to ensure reproducible
// random values of model properties.
faker.seed(123)

factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(faker.datatype.uuid),
    firstName: faker.name.firstName,
  },
})

Collocated updates

When you wish to update a parent entity and one of its relational properties at the same time, collocate such an update operation via the updater function of the update method.

import { factory, primaryKey, oneOf } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  post: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    title: String,
    revision: oneOf('revision'),
  },
  revision: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    updatedAt: () => new Date(),
  },
})

db.post.update({
  where: {
    id: { equals: 'post-1' },
  },
  data: {
    title: 'Renamed post',
    // The next value of the "post.revision"
    // is returned from this updater function.
    revision(prevRevision, post) {
      // Update this post's revision as you'd do usually,
      // but nested within the post's update operation.
      return db.revision.update({
        where: {
          id: { equals: post.revision.id },
        },
        data: {
          updatedAt: Date.now(),
        },
      })
    },
  },
})

While the post above will get updated, both post.revision and the respective revision standalone will be updated as well.

Collocating nested updates grants you a predictable behavior when changing multiple related entities.

Usage with API mocks

While this library can be used standalone, it brings a tremendous benefit in a combination with tools like Mock Service Worker. We provide a build-in API to quickly generate API request handlers based on your models, representing model interactions via HTTP requests.

Generate request handlers

Both REST and GraphQL request handlers can be generated from a model using the .toHandlers() method of that model. When generated, request handlers automatically have that model's CRUD methods like POST /user or mutation CreateUser.

Generate REST API

REST API request handlers can be generated by calling the .toHandlers('rest') method on the respective factory model.

import { setupServer } from 'msw/node'
import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    firstName: String,
  },
})

const handlers = [...db.user.toHandlers('rest')]

// Establish requests interception.
const server = setupServer(...handlers)
server.listen()

Given the "user" model definition above, the following request handlers are generated and connected to the respective database operations:

  • GET /users/:id (where "id" is your model's primary key), returns a user by ID;
  • GET /users, returns all users (supports pagination);
  • POST /users, creates a new user;
  • PUT /users/:id, updates an existing user by ID;
  • DELETE /users/:id, deletes an existing user by ID;

The "/user" part of the route is derived from your model name. For example, if you had a "post" model defined in your factory, then the generated handlers would be /posts, /posts/:id, etc.

With the request handlers generated and MSW configured, you can query the "database" using REST API:

// Create a new user in the database.
fetch('/users', {
  method: 'POST',
  headers: {
    'Content-Type': 'application/json',
  },
  body: JSON.stringify({
    id: 'abc-123',
    firstName: 'John',
  }),
})

Generate GraphQL API

GraphQL API request handlers can be generated by calling the .toHandlers('graphql') method on the respective factory model.

import { setupServer } from 'msw/node'
import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  user: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    firstName: String,
  },
})

const handlers = [...db.user.toHandlers('graphql')]

// Establish requests interception.
const server = setupServer(...handlers)
server.listen()

Given the "user" model definition above, the following request handlers are generated and connected to the respective database operations:

  • user(where: UserQueryInput): User, returns a user matching the query;
  • users(where: UserQueryInput, cursor: ID, skip: Int, take: Int): [User!], returns all users matching the query (supports pagination);
  • createUser(data: UserInput!): User!, creates a new user;
  • updateUser(where: UserQueryInput!, data: UserInput!): User!, updates a user that match the where query;
  • updateUsers(where: UserQueryInput!, data: UserInput!): [User!], updates multiple users that match the where query;
  • deleteUser(where: UserQueryInput!): User!, deletes a user that match the where query;
  • deleteUsers(where: UserQueryInput!): [User!], deletes multiple users that match the where query.

The "User" part of the GraphQL operation names is derived from your model's name. For example, if you had a "post" model defined in your factory, then the generated handlers would have operations like post, createPost, updatePosts, etc.

With the request handlers generated and MSW configured, you can query the database using GraphQL API:

import { gql, useQuery } from '@apollo/client'

const CREATE_USER = gql`
  query CreateUser($initialValues: UserInput!) {
    createUser(data: $initialValues) {
      firstName
    }
  }
`

useQuery(CREATE_USER, {
  variables: {
    initialValues: {
      firstName: 'John',
    },
  },
})

Manual integration

To gain more control over the mocks and implement more complex mocking scenarios (like authentication), consider manual integration of this library with your API mocking solution.

Take a look at how you can create an entity based on the user's authentication status in a test:

import { rest } from 'msw'
import { setupServer } from 'msw/node'
import { factory, primaryKey } from '@mswjs/data'

const db = factory({
  post: {
    id: primaryKey(String),
    title: String,
  },
})

const handlers = [
  rest.post('/post', (req, res, cxt) => {
    // Only authenticated users can create new posts.
    if (req.headers.get('authorization') === 'Bearer AUTH_TOKEN') {
      return res(ctx.status(403))
    }

    // Create a new entity for the "post" model.
    const newPost = db.post.create(req.body)

    // Respond with a mocked response.
    return res(ctx.status(201), ctx.json({ post: newPost }))
  }),
]

// Establish requests interception.
const server = setupServer(...handlers)
server.listen()

Honorable mentions

More Repositories

1

msw

Industry standard API mocking for JavaScript.
TypeScript
15,862
star
2

examples

Examples of Mock Service Worker usage with various frameworks and libraries.
JavaScript
565
star
3

interceptors

Low-level HTTP/HTTPS/XHR/fetch request interception library.
TypeScript
420
star
4

msw-storybook-addon

Mock API requests in Storybook with Mock Service Worker.
TypeScript
392
star
5

mswjs.io

Official website and documentation for the Mock Service Worker library.
TypeScript
154
star
6

source

Generate MSW request handlers from various sources (HAR files, OpenAPI documents, etc).
TypeScript
120
star
7

http-middleware

Spawn an HTTP server from your request handlers or apply them to an existing server using a middleware.
TypeScript
73
star
8

jest-fixed-jsdom

A superset of the JSDOM environment for Jest that respects Node.js globals.
JavaScript
30
star
9

node-match-path

Matches a URL against a path. Parameters, wildcards, RegExp.
TypeScript
30
star
10

headers-polyfill

A Fetch API "Headers" polyfill and transformation library.
TypeScript
27
star
11

cookies

Manage request/response cookies in the environments where those are not supported.
TypeScript
19
star
12

storage

Persistence and live synchronization layer for testing JavaScript applications.
TypeScript
16
star
13

is-node-process

Reliably determines if the code is running in Node.js. Treats Jest, React Native, Electron, and others like Node.js.
TypeScript
9
star
14

examples-new

6
star
15

gh-issue-forms

A test repository that is going to disappear.
Shell
4
star
16

msw-github-bot

Mock Service Worker community bot. Beep. Bop.
TypeScript
3
star
17

github-webhooks

TypeScript
1
star
18

local-storage-polyfill

The "localStorage" polyfill for Node.js.
TypeScript
1
star