Skip to content
This repository has been archived by the owner on Sep 2, 2021. It is now read-only.
/ ReplayZero Public archive

Record local web traffic on your laptop and generate functional API tests, utilizing open source industry standards like Karate and Gatling

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

intuit-archive/ReplayZero

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

59 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

CircleCI Go version Go Report Card License: Apache2.0

A lightweight, localized interface to API recording and test generation. Automatically turn local web traffic from your application into functional test scenarios. Replay Zero generates Karate scenarios by default, but the generation process utilizes a templating engine that allows extension to any HTTP-based test format.

NOTE: Replay Zero may be a web proxy, but DO NOT USE IN PRODUCTION... yet. This tool was originally made specifically with a developer laptop as the target environment (this can be seen in sample flows below), and should only be viewed as a developer productivity / testing assistant for now.

Installation

Homebrew

brew tap intuit/replay-zero https://github.com/intuit/ReplayZero
brew install replay-zero

Release builds

Binaries are built + attached to releases for Linux, MacOS and Windows.

# Download a platform specific build
curl -vkL https://github.com/intuit/ReplayZero/releases/download/v0.0.2/replay-zero-osx.zip
# Unpack && rename
unzip replay-zero-osx.zip && mv ./replay-zero-osx ./replay-zero
# Make executable
chmod a+x ./replay-zero

Quickstart

How does it work

  1. HTTP requests are proxied through an embedded web server
  2. Request + response data (URI, headers, payloads, response code) are collected and buffered
  3. Upon buffer flush, HTTP data is sent through a templating engine and converted into Karate scenarios
  4. Test contents are written to files on disk

Simple recording flow

Start Recording

  1. Start the tool with no arguments, containing the web proxy that listens on localhost:9000 and forwards (by default) to localhost:8080, where your app will run.
replay-zero
  1. In another terminal tab, download and start a dummy echo server on port 8080.
npm install http-echo-server -g
http-echo-server 8080
  1. Send some requests via curl, specifying Replay Zero as a proxy.
curl --proxy http://localhost:9000 -H 'my_header: some_value' localhost:8080/sample/api
  1. Shut down Replay Zero with Ctrl + C in the same terminal tab you started it in. Do the same for the echo server if you started that as well.

Streaming Mode

Instead of saving events locally, Replay Zero can also stream recorded request/response pairs to an AWS Kinesis data stream if you want to set up remote processing/storage.

To enable streaming mode

  1. Have valid AWS credentials for your Kinesis stream in either environment variables or a shared credentials file (see FAQ below for more)
  2. Pass in values to the following flags
    • -s / --stream-name - name of Kinesis stream
    • -r / --stream-role-arn - full IAM role ARN (arn:aws:iam::<account>:role/...) for a role that must allow at least the kinesis:PutRecord and kinesis:DescribeStream actions

Security

The AWS SDK provides in-transit encryption for API transactions (like the Kinesis PutRecord API used to send telemetry). However, Kinesis messages are by default unencrypted at rest while waiting to be consumed from the stream (24 hours by default). Kinesis does offer Server-Side Encryption (SSE) which can be enabled with a default or custom KMS master key.

We recommend enabling Kinesis SSE so that your recorded traffic will not be visible until it is consumed by whatever Kinesis consumer you implement. When provided a valid stream name and IAM role, Replay Zero will call the kinesis:DescribeStream API and log a warning if SSE is disabled for that stream (but will still record + send data to the stream).

See the AWS docs on Kinesis SSE to learn more.

Additional Features

Configure Proxy targets

Default target port

By default, all events Replay Zero receives will be proxied to localhost:8080. The default target port can be changed with the --target-port flag

replay-zero --target-port=8575

Proxy to multiple targets

By reading the contents of the Host header, Replay Zero can rewrite the proxy target on a per-request basis. Certain tools will do this for you (like the above methods for configuring a proxy using cURL or Postman). If you are sending your requests to be proxied some other way, as long as the Host header is set with the right localhost target each request will be dynamically rerouted to the right location. Now's a good time to remind that current only localhost / HTTP traffic is supported for proxying.

Request Batching

Running replay-zero with no arguments causes each request/response pair to be written to its own Karate *.feature file. But there are several ways to configure consecutive events to be written to the same file.

Things to keep in mind:

  • When stopping Replay Zero via Ctrl+C, if there are any events left in the buffer they will also be written out so that no data will ever be lost

Fixed Batch Size

Pass in an extra --batch-size <n> flag that will buffer multiple requests before writing them out. This batch size will be fixed for the duration that Replay Zero is running, and will require a shutdown to change.

All-in-one Batch

If you'd like to simply start Replay Zero and have it buffer everything until you shut it down and write all recorded events into 1 big file, pass in any negative batch size:

replay-zero --batch-size=-1

Dynamic Batch Size

Say you want to record 2 API flows in your app, one which involves 3 sequential API calls and the other requires 5. Instead of turning on Replay Zero once with --batch-size=3 and again with --batch-size=5, pass an extra header in the first request of each flow that looks like 'replay_batch: N'. Whenever Replay Zero receives a request with this header, it will change its batch size to a valid integer in the header value. After that batch is processed, it will fall back to the default (either the value you passed in --batch-size or 1 as a fallback). If a dynamic batch size is received, the event buffer will be flushed to a file so that recorded data will not be lost.

Via cURL, this scenario could look like (with some very complex sequential calls)

 $ curl -H 'replay_batch: 3' localhost:8080/my/api
hello! here is some data - 123
 $ curl localhost:8080/my/api
hello! here is some data - 456
 $ curl localhost:8080/my/api
hello! here is some data - 789
$ curl -H 'replay_batch: 5' localhost:8080/some/other/api
abc - here is some other data
$ curl localhost:8080/some/other/api
def - here is some other data
$ curl localhost:8080/some/other/api
ghi - here is some other data
$ curl localhost:8080/some/other/api
jkl - here is some other data
$ curl localhost:8080/some/other/api
mno - here is some other data

And Replay Zero's output would look something like

Starting nginx + log forwarder
2020/01/16 03:02:33 Running OFFLINE, writing out events to Karate scripts
2020/01/16 03:02:58 Saw event:
a41555fb22543469d126719292390820 GET /my/api
2020/01/16 03:02:58 Collecting dynamic batch size with size 3
2020/01/16 03:03:10 Saw event:
813812b835b4f900f3e6ea7eb7af624a GET /my/api
2020/01/16 03:03:14 Saw event:
5dec9aa40573522fa41966dfbf0e753b GET /my/api
2020/01/16 03:03:14 Wrote 3 scenarios to file replay_scenarios_1.feature
2020/01/16 03:03:35 Saw event:
42c9e477621bc65ac2918ebbfc2f6644 GET /some/other/api
2020/01/16 03:03:35 Collecting dynamic batch size with size 5
2020/01/16 03:03:46 Saw event:
d52734b60a30ba2032edcd4c11e4eb00 GET /some/other/api
2020/01/16 03:03:48 Saw event:
ee87ba117b2ba079dd194b53a8005891 GET /some/other/api
2020/01/16 03:03:49 Saw event:
5330a9b0b1e449e762575bfa97528e4e GET /some/other/api
2020/01/16 03:03:49 Saw event:
e46bfc69b893b659c4db713ba2cc84f1 GET /some/other/api
2020/01/16 03:03:49 Wrote 5 scenarios to file replay_scenarios_2.feature

Different output formats

By default Replay Zero generates Karate *.feature files and outputs them to the directory Replay Zero was started in. But the --template or -t flag allows you to specify the format you'd like your tests to be generated in. The created files will always following the naming format replay_scenarios_{N}.{extension}. Out of the box we support below test formats

  • Karate (*.feature)
  • Gatling (*.scala)

Specify the output as a lowercase input to the flag:

replay-zero --template=gatling

Custom templates

You can also pass path to your own custom template (in case you dont want to use karate or gatling) to the same paramater and --extension or -e to pass extentsion of the output.

E.g.

replay-zero --template=/path/to/your/custom-template --extension=java

Templates are following the format from the text/template package. And it also support all template functions provided by Sprig. You can even extend your template's functionality with string manipulation, math operators, and more from the Sprig library

Roadmap

Replay Zero has many plans for improvement which you can find in the Issues tab of this repo. Now that you've read the entire README up until this point (right?) and know of all the features Replay Zero offers, here is a visual recap of both some of the features currently provided (multiple target proxying, output templating) as well as some planned roadmap items (remote proxyingm, custom template sourcing) and how they may fit in alongside existing features.

Full Feature flow + Roadmap

FAQ

Q: My app is running on a port other than 8080.

A: See the "Additional Features" section "Configure Proxy targets" on how to define the target port both globally or per-request.

Q: When I run Replay Zero in streaming mode and try to record something, an error about credentials shows up.

(Something like this)

2019/12/31 00:48:40 NoCredentialProviders: no valid providers in chain
caused by: EnvAccessKeyNotFound: failed to find credentials in the environment.
SharedCredsLoad: failed to load profile, .
EC2RoleRequestError: no EC2 instance role found
caused by: RequestError: send request failed

A: Check that either

  • you have valid AWS credentials under the right profile in the file ~/.aws/credentials
  • the following environment variables are set in your current shell
    • AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
    • AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
    • AWS_SESSION_TOKEN (optional)

Telemetry

This tool supports sending usage metrics to an Amazon Kinesis data stream, but this is completely disabled in the open source repo - there's no URL set to send data to. If you want to use this for internal reporting, set the environment variables

  • REPLAY_ZERO_TELEMETRY_STREAM (stream name)
  • REPLAY_ZERO_TELEMETRY_ROLE (IAM role to assume credentials for writing to the stream)

The code for this is in telemetry.go - take a look if you're curious or concerned.

Security

The AWS SDK provides in-transit encryption for API transactions (like the Kinesis PutRecord API used to send telemetry). However, Kinesis messages are by default unencrypted at rest while waiting to be consumed from the stream (24 hours by default). Kinesis does offer Server-Side Encryption (SSE) which can be enabled with a default or custom KMS master key.

We recommend enabling Kinesis SSE so that your telemetry logs will not be visible until it is consumed by whatever Kinesis consumer you implement. When provided a valid stream name and IAM role, Replay Zero will call the kinesis:DescribeStream API and log a warning if SSE is disabled for that stream (but will still record + send data to the stream).

See the AWS docs on Kinesis SSE to learn more.

Developing

Requirements

Basics

  • Running make will build the tool for Mac, Linux, and Windows.
  • Running make test will run tests
  • Running make coverage will run tests, save the coverage, and then open your browser to the coverage report

Kinesalite

For both streaming recording and telemetry messages, Replay Zero uses Amazon Kinesis. To test out Kinesis functionality locally, the tool Kinesalite provides a lightweight implementation that works well in a dev environment but can interact with the AWS Kinesis API's.

If you'd like to test your own consumer of either Replay Zero streaming data or telemtry,

  1. Follow the Kinesalite docs to install then start it on https://localhost:4567
  2. When specifying the stream name for Replay Zero set the stream name to replay-zero-dev and a special client will be constructed to connect to Kinesalite. Replay Zero will not try to assume an IAM role for credentials with this client.
    • Stream name for HTTP data: -s / --stream-name flag
    • Stream name for telemetry: REPLAY_ZERO_TELEMETRY_STREAM environment variable

Contribution Guidelines

See the .github/CONTRIBUTING.md file.

Builds

See the releases page for pre-built binaries.

License

Apache 2.0

About

Record local web traffic on your laptop and generate functional API tests, utilizing open source industry standards like Karate and Gatling

Topics

Resources

License

Code of conduct

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Contributors 3

  •  
  •  
  •