I'm using Passport.js for authentication (local strategy) and testing with Mocha and Supertest.
How can I create a session and make authenticated requests with Supertest?
As zeMirco points out, the underlying superagent
module supports sessions, automatically maintaining cookies for you. However, it is possible to use the superagent.agent()
functionality from supertest
, through an undocumented feature.
Simply use require('supertest').agent('url')
instead of require('supertest')('url')
:
var request = require('supertest');
var server = request.agent('http://localhost:3000');
describe('GET /api/getDir', function(){
it('login', loginUser());
it('uri that requires user to be logged in', function(done){
server
.get('/api/getDir')
.expect(200)
.end(function(err, res){
if (err) return done(err);
console.log(res.body);
done()
});
});
});
function loginUser() {
return function(done) {
server
.post('/login')
.send({ username: 'admin', password: 'admin' })
.expect(302)
.expect('Location', '/')
.end(onResponse);
function onResponse(err, res) {
if (err) return done(err);
return done();
}
};
};
You should use superagent for that. It is lower level module and used by supertest
. Take a look at the section Persisting an agent:
var request = require('superagent');
var user1 = request.agent();
user1
.post('http://localhost:4000/signin')
.send({ user: '[email protected]', password: 'password' })
.end(function(err, res) {
// user1 will manage its own cookies
// res.redirects contains an Array of redirects
});
Now you can use user1
to make authenticated requests.
Try this,
var request=require('supertest');
var cookie;
request(app)
.post('/login')
.send({ email: "[email protected]", password:'password' })
.end(function(err,res){
res.should.have.status(200);
cookie = res.headers['set-cookie'];
done();
});
//
// and use the cookie on the next request
request(app)
.get('/v1/your/path')
.set('cookie', cookie)
.end(function(err,res){
res.should.have.status(200);
done();
});
As an addendum to Andy's answer, in order to have Supertest startup your server for you, you can do it like this:
var request = require('supertest');
/**
* `../server` should point to your main server bootstrap file,
* which has your express app exported. For example:
*
* var app = express();
* module.exports = app;
*/
var server = require('../server');
// Using request.agent() is the key
var agent = request.agent(server);
describe('Sessions', function() {
it('Should create a session', function(done) {
agent.post('/api/session')
.send({ username: 'user', password: 'pass' })
.end(function(err, res) {
expect(req.status).to.equal(201);
done();
});
});
it('Should return the current session', function(done) {
agent.get('/api/session').end(function(err, res) {
expect(req.status).to.equal(200);
done();
});
});
});
I'm sorry, but neither of suggested solutions doesn't work for me.
With supertest.agent()
I can't use the app
instance, I'm required to run the server beforehand and specify the http://127.0.0.1:port
and moreover I can't use supertest's expectations (assertions), I can't use the supertest-as-promised
lib and so on...
The cookies
case won't work for me at all.
So, my solution is:
If you are using Passport.js, it utilizes the "Bearer token" mechanism and you can use the following examples in your specs:
var request = require('supertest');
var should = require('should');
var app = require('../server/app.js'); // your server.js file
describe('Some auth-required API', function () {
var token;
before(function (done) {
request(app)
.post('/auth/local')
.send({
email: '[email protected]',
password: 'the secret'
})
.end(function (err, res) {
if (err) {
return done(err);
}
res.body.should.to.have.property('token');
token = res.body.token;
done();
});
});
it('should respond with status code 200 and so on...', function (done) {
request(app)
.get('/api/v2/blah-blah')
.set('authorization', 'Bearer ' + token) // 1) using the authorization header
.expect(200)
.expect('Content-Type', /json/)
.end(function (err, res) {
if (err) {
return done(err);
}
// some `res.body` assertions...
done();
});
});
it('should respond with status code 200 and so on...', function (done) {
request(app)
.get('/api/v2/blah-blah')
.query({access_token: token}) // 2) using the query string
.expect(200)
.expect('Content-Type', /json/)
.end(function (err, res) {
if (err) {
return done(err);
}
// some `res.body` assertions...
done();
});
});
});
You may want to have a helper function to authenticate users:
test/auth-helper.js
'use strict';
var request = require('supertest');
var app = require('app.js');
/**
* Authenticate a test user.
*
* @param {User} user
* @param {function(err:Error, token:String)} callback
*/
exports.authenticate = function (user, callback) {
request(app)
.post('/auth/local')
.send({
email: user.email,
password: user.password
})
.end(function (err, res) {
if (err) {
return callback(err);
}
callback(null, res.body.token);
});
};
Have a productive day!
I'm going to assume that you're using the CookieSession middleware.
As grub mentioned, your goal is to get a cookie value to pass to your request. However, for whatever reason (at least in my testing), supertest won't fire 2 requests in the same test. So, we have to reverse engineer how to get the right cookie value. First, you'll need to require the modules for constructing your cookie:
var Cookie = require("express/node_modules/connect/lib/middleware/session/cookie")
, cookieSignature = require("express/node_modules/cookie-signature")
Yes, that's ugly. I put those at the top of my test file.
Next, we need to construct the cookie value. I put this into a beforeEach
for the tests that would require an authenticated user:
var cookie = new Cookie()
, session = {
passport: {
user: Test.user.id
}
}
var val = "j:" + JSON.stringify(session)
val = 's:' + cookieSignature.sign(val, App.config.cookieSecret)
Test.cookie = cookie.serialize("session",val)
Test.user.id
was previously defined in the portion of my beforeEach
chain that defined the user I was going to "login". The structure of session
is how Passport (at least currently) inserts the current user information into your session.
The var val
lines with "j:"
and "s:"
are ripped out of the Connect CookieSession middleware that Passport will fallback on if you're using cookie-based sessions. Lastly, we serialize the cookie. I put "session"
in there, because that's how I configured my cookie session middleware. Also, App.config.cookieSecret
is defined elsewhere, and it must be the secret that you pass to your Express/Connect CookieSession middleware. I stash it into Test.cookie
so that I can access it later.
Now, in the actual test, you need to use that cookie. For example, I have the following test:
it("should logout a user", function(done) {
r = request(App.app)
.del(App.Test.versionedPath("/logout"))
.set("cookie", Test.cookie)
// ... other sets and expectations and your .end
}
Notice the call to set
with "cookie"
and Test.cookie
. That will cause the request to use the cookie we constructed.
And now you've faked your app into thinking that user is logged in, and you don't have to keep an actual server running.
Here is a neat approach which has the added benefit of being reusable.
const chai = require("chai")
const chaiHttp = require("chai-http")
const request = require("supertest")
const app = require("../api/app.js")
const should = chai.should()
chai.use(chaiHttp)
describe("a mocha test for an expressjs mongoose setup", () => {
// A reusable function to wrap your tests requiring auth.
const signUpThenLogIn = (credentials, testCallBack) => {
// Signs up...
chai
.request(app)
.post("/auth/wizard/signup")
.send({
name: "Wizard",
...credentials,
})
.set("Content-Type", "application/json")
.set("Accept", "application/json")
.end((err, res) => {
// ...then Logs in...
chai
.request(app)
.post("/auth/wizard/login")
.send(credentials)
.set("Content-Type", "application/json")
.set("Accept", "application/json")
.end((err, res) => {
should.not.exist(err)
res.should.have.status(200)
res.body.token.should.include("Bearer ")
// ...then passes the token back into the test
// callBack function.
testCallBack(res.body.token)
})
})
}
it.only("flipping works", done => {
// "Wrap" our test in the signUpThenLogIn function.
signUpLogIn(
// The credential parameter.
{
username: "wizard",
password: "youSHALLpass",
},
// The test wrapped in a callback function which expects
/// the token passed back from when signUpLogIn is done.
token => {
// Now we can use this token to run a test...
/// e.g. create an apprentice.
chai
.request(app)
.post("/apprentice")
.send({ name: "Apprentice 20, innit" })
// Using the token to auth!
.set("Authorization", token)
.end((err, res) => {
should.not.exist(err)
res.should.have.status(201)
// Yep. apprentice created using the token.
res.body.name.should.be.equal("Apprentice 20, innit")
done()
})
}
)
})
})
BONUS MATERIAL
To make it even more reusable, put the function into a file called "myMochaSuite.js" which you can replace "describe" with when testing your api server. Be a wizard and put all your before/after stuff in this "suite". e.g.:
// tests/myMochaSuite.js
module.exports = (testDescription, testsCallBack) => {
describe(testDescription, () => {
const signUpThenLogIn = (credentials, testCallBack) => {
// The signUpThenLogIn function from above
}
before(async () => {
//before stuff like setting up the app and mongoose server.
})
beforeEach(async () => {
//beforeEach stuff clearing out the db
})
after(async () => {
//after stuff like shutting down the app and mongoose server.
})
// IMPORTANT: We pass signUpLogIn back through "testsCallBack" function.
testsCallBack(signUpThenLogIn)
})
}
// tests/my.api.test.js
// chai, supertest, etc, imports +
const myMochaSuite = require("./myMochaSuite")
// NB: signUpThenLogIn coming back into the tests.
myMochaSuite("my test description", signUpThenLogIn => {
it("just works baby", done => {
signUpThenLogIn(
{username: "wizard", password: "youSHALLpass"},
token => {
chai
.request(app)
.get("/apprentices/20")
// Using the incoming token passed when signUpThenLogIn callsback.
.set("Authorization", token)
.end((err, res) => {
res.body.name.equals("Apprentice 20, innit")
done()
})
}
)
})
})
Now you have a even more reusable suite "wrapper" for all your tests, leaving them uncluttered.
GraphQl full Example:
const adminLogin = async (agent) => {
const userAdmin = await User.findOne({rol:"admin"}).exec();
if(!userAdmin) return new Promise.reject('Admin not found')
return agent.post('/graphql').send({
query: ` mutation { ${loginQuery(userAdmin.email)} }`
})//.end((err, {body:{data}}) => {})
}
test("Login Admin", async (done) => {
const agent = request.agent(app);
await adminLogin(agent);
agent
.post("/graphql")
.send({query: `{ getGuests { ${GuestInput.join(' ')} } }`})
.set("Accept", "application/json")
.expect("Content-Type", /json/)
.expect(200)
.end((err, {body:{data}}) => {
if (err) return done(err);
expect(data).toBeInstanceOf(Object);
const {getGuests} = data;
expect(getGuests).toBeInstanceOf(Array);
getGuests.map(user => GuestInput.map(checkFields(user)))
done();
});
})