Sample CRUD App (CSharp)
🪄 Dive into the world of User Authentication apps and see how seamlessly Keploy integrates with .Net and Postgres. Buckle up, it's gonna be a fun ride! 🎢
Running App Locally on Linux/WSL 🐧
Don’t have Keploy installed yet?
Before running this sample, make sure Keploy is installed on your system.
👉 Go to Installation GuideClone a sample user authentication app 🧪
git clone https://github.com/keploy/samples-csharp.git && cd samples-csharp
start the database instance
docker-compose up
We'll be running our sample application right on Linux, but just to make things a tad more thrilling, we'll have the database (Redis) chill on Docker. Ready? Let's get the party started!🎉
📼 Roll the Tape - Recording Time!
We need to run the migration command before starting our application:
dotnet ef migrations add InitialMigration
dotnet ef database update
Ready, set, record! Here's how:
keploy record -c "dotnet run"
Alright, magician! With the app alive and kicking, let's weave some test cases. The spell? Making some API calls! Postman, Hoppscotch, or the classic curl - pick your wand.
Generate testcases
To generate testcases we just need to make some API calls.
1. Create User
curl -k -X POST -H "Content-Type: application/json" -d '{"name":"Sarthak Shnygle","age":23}' http://localhost:5249/api/user
This will return the response:
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Sarthak Shnygle",
"age": 23
}
2. Get the User
curl -k http://localhost:5249/api/user
This will return the OTP verification response:
[
{
"id": 1,
"name": "Sarthak Shnygle",
"age": 23
}
]
Give yourself a pat on the back! With that simple spell, you've conjured up a test case with a mock! Explore the Keploy directory and you'll discover your handiwork in test-1.yml and mocks.yml.
version: api.keploy.io/v1beta1
kind: Http
name: test-1
spec:
metadata: {}
req:
method: POST
proto_major: 1
proto_minor: 1
url: http://localhost:5249/api/user
header:
Accept: "*/*"
Content-Length: "37"
Content-Type: application/json
Host: localhost:5249
User-Agent: curl/8.2.1
body: '{"age":"23","name":"Sarthak Shnygle"}'
body_type: ""
timestamp: 2023-12-15T10:31:57.291484259Z
host: ""
resp:
status_code: 201
header:
Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
Date: Fri, 15 Dec 2023 10:31:57 GMT
Location: http://localhost:5249/api/User/3
Server: Kestrel
body: '{"id":3,"name":"Sarthak Shnygle","age":23}'
body_type: ""
status_message: ""
proto_major: 0
proto_minor: 0
timestamp: 2023-12-15T10:31:59.566772512Z
objects: []
assertions:
noise:
body.age: []
header.Date: []
created: 1702636319
curl: |-
curl --request POST \
--url http://localhost:5249/api/user \
--header 'Host: localhost:5249' \
--header 'User-Agent: curl/8.2.1' \
--header 'Accept: */*' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data '{"age":"23","name":"Sarthak Shnygle"}'
Want to see if everything works as expected?
Run Tests
Time to put things to the test 🧪
keploy test -c "dotnet run" --delay 10
The
--delayflag? Oh, that's just giving your app a little breather (in seconds) before the test cases come knocking.
Final thoughts? Dive deeper! Try different API calls, tweak the DB response in the mocks.yml, or fiddle with the request or response in test-x.yml. Run the tests again and see the magic unfold!✨👩💻👨💻✨