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- # Pact.js Utils Consumer Helpers
-
- ## Principle
-
- Use `createProviderState`, `toJsonMap`, `setJsonContent`, and `setJsonBody` from `@seontechnologies/pactjs-utils` to build type-safe provider state tuples and reusable PactV4 JSON callbacks for consumer contract tests. These helpers eliminate manual `JsonMap` casting and repetitive inline builder lambdas.
-
- ## Rationale
-
- ### Problems with raw consumer helper handling
-
- - **JsonMap requirement**: Pact's `.given(stateName, params)` requires `params` to be `JsonMap` — a flat object where every value must be `string | number | boolean | null`
- - **Type gymnastics**: Complex params (Date objects, nested objects, null values) require manual casting that TypeScript can't verify
- - **Inconsistent serialization**: Different developers serialize the same data differently (e.g., dates as ISO strings vs timestamps)
- - **Verbose `.given()` calls**: Repeating state name and params inline makes consumer tests harder to read
- - **Repeated interaction callbacks**: PactV4 interactions duplicate inline `(builder) => { ... }` blocks for body/query/header setup
-
- ### Solutions
-
- - **`createProviderState`**: Returns a `[string, JsonMap]` tuple that spreads directly into `.given()` — one function handles name and params
- - **`toJsonMap`**: Explicit coercion rules documented and tested — Date→ISO string, null→"null" string, nested objects→JSON string
- - **`setJsonContent`**: Curried callback helper for request/response builders — set `query`, `headers`, and/or `body` from one reusable function
- - **`setJsonBody`**: Body-only shorthand for `setJsonContent({ body })` — ideal for concise `.willRespondWith(...)` bodies
-
- ## Pattern Examples
-
- ### Example 1: Basic Provider State Creation
-
- ```typescript
- import { PactV3, MatchersV3 } from '@pact-foundation/pact';
- import { createProviderState } from '@seontechnologies/pactjs-utils';
-
- const provider = new PactV3({
- consumer: 'movie-web',
- provider: 'SampleMoviesAPI',
- dir: './pacts',
- });
-
- describe('Movie API Contract', () => {
- it('should return movie by id', async () => {
- // createProviderState returns [stateName, JsonMap] tuple
- const providerState = createProviderState({
- name: 'movie with id 1 exists',
- params: { id: 1, name: 'Inception', year: 2010 },
- });
-
- await provider
- .given(...providerState) // Spread tuple into .given(name, params)
- .uponReceiving('a request for movie 1')
- .withRequest({ method: 'GET', path: '/movies/1' })
- .willRespondWith({
- status: 200,
- body: MatchersV3.like({ id: 1, name: 'Inception', year: 2010 }),
- })
- .executeTest(async (mockServer) => {
- const res = await fetch(`${mockServer.url}/movies/1`);
- const movie = await res.json();
- expect(movie.name).toBe('Inception');
- });
- });
- });
- ```
-
- **Key Points**:
-
- - `createProviderState` accepts `{ name: string, params: Record<string, unknown> }`
- - Both `name` and `params` are required (pass `params: {}` for states without parameters)
- - Returns `[string, JsonMap]` — spread with `...` into `.given()`
- - `params` values are automatically converted to JsonMap-compatible types
- - Works identically with HTTP (`PactV3`) and message (`MessageConsumerPact`) pacts
-
- ### Example 2: Complex Parameters with toJsonMap
-
- ```typescript
- import { toJsonMap } from '@seontechnologies/pactjs-utils';
-
- // toJsonMap conversion rules:
- // - string, number, boolean → passed through
- // - null → "null" (string)
- // - undefined → "null" (string, same as null)
- // - Date → ISO string (e.g., "2025-01-15T10:00:00.000Z")
- // - nested object → JSON string
- // - array → comma-separated string via String() (e.g., [1,2,3] → "1,2,3")
-
- const params = toJsonMap({
- id: 42,
- name: 'John Doe',
- active: true,
- score: null,
- createdAt: new Date('2025-01-15T10:00:00Z'),
- metadata: { role: 'admin', permissions: ['read', 'write'] },
- });
-
- // Result:
- // {
- // id: 42,
- // name: "John Doe",
- // active: true,
- // score: "null",
- // createdAt: "2025-01-15T10:00:00.000Z",
- // metadata: '{"role":"admin","permissions":["read","write"]}'
- // }
- ```
-
- **Key Points**:
-
- - `toJsonMap` is called internally by `createProviderState` — you rarely need it directly
- - Use it when you need explicit control over parameter conversion outside of provider states
- - Conversion rules are deterministic: same input always produces same output
-
- ### Example 3: Provider State Without Parameters
-
- ```typescript
- import { createProviderState } from '@seontechnologies/pactjs-utils';
-
- // State without params — second tuple element is empty object
- const emptyState = createProviderState({ name: 'no movies exist', params: {} });
- // Returns: ['no movies exist', {}]
-
- await provider
- .given(...emptyState)
- .uponReceiving('a request when no movies exist')
- .withRequest({ method: 'GET', path: '/movies' })
- .willRespondWith({ status: 200, body: [] })
- .executeTest(async (mockServer) => {
- const res = await fetch(`${mockServer.url}/movies`);
- const movies = await res.json();
- expect(movies).toEqual([]);
- });
- ```
-
- ### Example 4: Multiple Provider States
-
- ```typescript
- import { createProviderState } from '@seontechnologies/pactjs-utils';
-
- // Some interactions require multiple provider states
- // Call .given() multiple times with different states
- await provider
- .given(...createProviderState({ name: 'user is authenticated', params: { userId: 1 } }))
- .given(...createProviderState({ name: 'movie with id 5 exists', params: { id: 5 } }))
- .uponReceiving('an authenticated request for movie 5')
- .withRequest({
- method: 'GET',
- path: '/movies/5',
- headers: { Authorization: MatchersV3.like('Bearer token') },
- })
- .willRespondWith({ status: 200, body: MatchersV3.like({ id: 5 }) })
- .executeTest(async (mockServer) => {
- // test implementation
- });
- ```
-
- ### Example 5: When to Use setJsonBody vs setJsonContent
-
- ```typescript
- import { MatchersV3 } from '@pact-foundation/pact';
- import { setJsonBody, setJsonContent } from '@seontechnologies/pactjs-utils';
-
- const { integer, string } = MatchersV3;
-
- await pact
- .addInteraction()
- .given('movie exists')
- .uponReceiving('a request to get movie by name')
- .withRequest(
- 'GET',
- '/movies',
- setJsonContent({
- query: { name: 'Inception' },
- headers: { Accept: 'application/json' },
- }),
- )
- .willRespondWith(
- 200,
- setJsonBody({
- status: 200,
- data: { id: integer(1), name: string('Inception') },
- }),
- );
- ```
-
- **Key Points**:
-
- - Use `setJsonContent` when the interaction needs `query`, `headers`, and/or `body` in one callback (most request builders)
- - Use `setJsonBody` when you only need `jsonBody` and want the shorter `.willRespondWith(status, setJsonBody(...))` form
- - `setJsonBody` is equivalent to `setJsonContent({ body: ... })`
-
- ### Example 6: One `addInteraction()` per `it()` Block (PactV4 Determinism Rule)
-
- **Context**: PactV4's `pact.addInteraction()` feeds the Rust FFI layer that writes interactions to the pact JSON. Chaining multiple `.addInteraction()...executeTest()` blocks inside a single `it()` — or otherwise registering multiple interactions before a single `executeTest` — causes the FFI to **non-deterministically drop whole interactions** (not individual fields) in roughly 1 out of N runs. The pattern passes locally, then fails intermittently in CI or at publish time with `Cannot change pact content for already published pact` once the dropped interaction reappears on a re-run.
-
- **Rule**: Exactly one `pact.addInteraction()` per `it()` block. For N interactions, write N `it()` blocks, or use `it.each(...)`.
-
- ```typescript
- // ❌ WRONG — two addInteraction() inside one it() — FFI non-deterministically drops one
- it('handles movie lookup scenarios', async () => {
- await pact
- .addInteraction()
- .given('movie exists')
- .uponReceiving('a request to get movie by id')
- .withRequest('GET', '/movies/1')
- .willRespondWith(200, setJsonBody({ id: integer(1), name: string('The Matrix') }))
- .executeTest(async (mockServer) => {
- /* ... */
- });
-
- // Sometimes this second interaction never makes it to the pact JSON:
- await pact
- .addInteraction()
- .given('no movies exist')
- .uponReceiving('a request for an empty list')
- .withRequest('GET', '/movies')
- .willRespondWith(200, setJsonBody([]))
- .executeTest(async (mockServer) => {
- /* ... */
- });
- });
-
- // ✅ RIGHT — one addInteraction() per it()
- it('gets a movie by id', async () => {
- await pact
- .addInteraction()
- .given('movie exists')
- .uponReceiving('a request to get movie by id')
- .withRequest('GET', '/movies/1')
- .willRespondWith(200, setJsonBody({ id: integer(1), name: string('The Matrix') }))
- .executeTest(async (mockServer) => {
- /* ... */
- });
- });
-
- it('returns empty list when no movies exist', async () => {
- await pact
- .addInteraction()
- .given('no movies exist')
- .uponReceiving('a request for an empty list')
- .withRequest('GET', '/movies')
- .willRespondWith(200, setJsonBody([]))
- .executeTest(async (mockServer) => {
- /* ... */
- });
- });
-
- // ✅ RIGHT — parameterized via it.each for data-driven coverage
- it.each([
- { id: 1, name: 'The Matrix' },
- { id: 2, name: 'Inception' },
- ])('gets movie $id', async ({ id, name }) => {
- await pact
- .addInteraction()
- .given('movie exists', { id, name })
- .uponReceiving(`a request to get movie ${id}`)
- .withRequest('GET', `/movies/${id}`)
- .willRespondWith(200, setJsonBody({ id: integer(id), name: string(name) }))
- .executeTest(async (mockServer) => {
- /* ... */
- });
- });
- ```
-
- **Key Points**:
-
- - **This rule stacks with two other MANDATORY vitest settings**: `fileParallelism: false` AND `pool: 'forks'` with `poolOptions.forks.singleFork: true`. All three are required and address different failure modes — `fileParallelism: false` prevents parallel workers from racing on the shared pact JSON; `pool: 'forks'` + `singleFork: true` prevents the Pact Rust FFI from leaking state across files (manifests as "request was expected but not received" flakes on Linux CI only); one-interaction-per-`it()` prevents the FFI from dropping interactions within a single test body.
- - Symptom of violating this rule: the pact file is byte-different between otherwise-identical runs; `scripts/check-pact-determinism.sh` flags drift; PactFlow rejects a republish with `Cannot change pact content`.
- - The rule applies to both HTTP consumer pacts (`PactV4`) and message consumer pacts (`MessageConsumerPact`).
- - See `pact-consumer-framework-setup.md` Example 10 for the determinism gate that automatically catches violations of this rule.
-
- ## Key Points
-
- - **Spread pattern**: Always use `...createProviderState()` — the tuple spreads into `.given(stateName, params)`
- - **Type safety**: TypeScript enforces `{ name: string, params: Record<string, unknown> }` input (both fields required)
- - **Null handling**: `null` becomes `"null"` string in JsonMap (Pact requirement)
- - **Date handling**: Date objects become ISO 8601 strings
- - **No nested objects in JsonMap**: Nested objects are JSON-stringified — provider state handlers must parse them
- - **Array serialization is lossy**: Arrays are converted via `String()` (e.g., `[1,2,3]` → `"1,2,3"`) — prefer passing arrays as JSON-stringified objects for round-trip safety
- - **Message pacts**: Works identically with `MessageConsumerPact` — same `.given()` API
- - **Builder reuse**: `setJsonContent` works for both `.withRequest(...)` and `.willRespondWith(...)` callbacks (query is ignored on response builders)
- - **Body shorthand**: `setJsonBody` keeps body-only responses concise and readable
- - **Matchers check type, not value**: `string('My movie')` means "any string", `integer(1)` means "any integer". The example values are arbitrary — the provider can return different values and verification still passes as long as the type matches. Use matchers only in `.willRespondWith()` (responses), never in `.withRequest()` (requests) — Postel's Law applies.
- - **Reuse test values across files**: Interactions are uniquely identified by `uponReceiving` + `.given()`, not by placeholder values. Two test files can both use `testId: 100` without conflicting. On the provider side, shared values simplify state handlers — idempotent handlers (check if exists, create if not) only need to ensure one record exists. Use different values only when testing different states of the same entity type (e.g., `movieExists(100)` for happy paths vs. `movieNotFound(999)` for error paths).
- - **One `addInteraction()` per `it()` block (MANDATORY for PactV4)**: Multiple interactions inside one `it()` cause the Rust FFI to non-deterministically drop interactions. Use one `it()` per interaction or `it.each(...)` for parameterized cases. See Example 6 and the determinism gate in `pact-consumer-framework-setup.md` Example 10.
-
- ## Related Fragments
-
- - `pactjs-utils-overview.md` — installation, decision tree, design philosophy
- - `pactjs-utils-provider-verifier.md` — provider-side state handler implementation; same `pool: 'forks'` + `singleFork: true` rule as consumer
- - `pact-consumer-framework-setup.md` — Vitest `fileParallelism: false` + `pool: 'forks'` + `singleFork: true` config, determinism gate (Example 10), and CI wiring
- - `contract-testing.md` — foundational patterns with raw Pact.js
-
- ## Anti-Patterns
-
- ### Wrong: Manual JsonMap assembly
-
- ```typescript
- // ❌ Manual casting — verbose, error-prone, no type safety
- provider.given('user exists', {
- id: 1 as unknown as string,
- createdAt: new Date().toISOString(),
- metadata: JSON.stringify({ role: 'admin' }),
- } as JsonMap);
- ```
-
- ### Right: Use createProviderState
-
- ```typescript
- // ✅ Automatic conversion with type safety
- provider.given(
- ...createProviderState({
- name: 'user exists',
- params: { id: 1, createdAt: new Date(), metadata: { role: 'admin' } },
- }),
- );
- ```
-
- ### Wrong: Inline state names without helper
-
- ```typescript
- // ❌ Duplicated state names between consumer and provider — easy to mismatch
- provider.given('a user with id 1 exists', { id: '1' });
- // Later in provider: 'user with id 1 exists' — different string!
- ```
-
- ### Right: Share state constants
-
- ```typescript
- // ✅ Define state names as constants shared between consumer and provider
- const STATES = {
- USER_EXISTS: 'user with id exists',
- NO_USERS: 'no users exist',
- } as const;
-
- provider.given(...createProviderState({ name: STATES.USER_EXISTS, params: { id: 1 } }));
- ```
-
- ### Wrong: Repeating inline builder lambdas everywhere
-
- ```typescript
- // ❌ Repetitive callback boilerplate in every interaction
- .willRespondWith(200, (builder) => {
- builder.jsonBody({ status: 200 });
- });
- ```
-
- ### Right: Use setJsonBody / setJsonContent
-
- ```typescript
- // ✅ Reusable callbacks with less boilerplate
- .withRequest('GET', '/movies', setJsonContent({ query: { name: 'Inception' } }))
- .willRespondWith(200, setJsonBody({ status: 200 }));
- ```
-
- ### Wrong: Multiple `addInteraction()` in a single `it()`
-
- ```typescript
- // ❌ PactV4 FFI non-deterministically drops one of these interactions ~1/N runs
- it('handles both success and empty list', async () => {
- await pact.addInteraction().uponReceiving('get movie').withRequest(/* ... */).executeTest(/* ... */);
- await pact.addInteraction().uponReceiving('empty list').withRequest(/* ... */).executeTest(/* ... */);
- });
- ```
-
- ### Right: One `addInteraction()` per `it()` (or use `it.each`)
-
- ```typescript
- // ✅ Deterministic pact JSON — FFI receives one interaction per test
- it('gets a movie', async () => {
- await pact
- .addInteraction() /* ... */
- .executeTest(/* ... */);
- });
- it('returns empty list', async () => {
- await pact
- .addInteraction() /* ... */
- .executeTest(/* ... */);
- });
- ```
-
- See Example 6 above for the full rationale and the determinism gate that enforces this rule.
-
- _Source: @seontechnologies/pactjs-utils consumer-helpers module, pactjs-utils sample-app consumer tests_
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