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application/json and gzip #787
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Related to #815 |
Could there be an option for hoverctl export to decompress the gzip content ? I agree that decompressing should be out of the proxy functionality, |
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The original captured GitHub API responses were gzip encoded, which made them unreadable (without manually decoding them). There is a feature request to have Hoverfly to do this translation automatically when exporting captured simulations, but it is not available yet[1]. So this commit has manually placed the decoded JSON in the simulated responses. [1] SpectoLabs/hoverfly#787
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The original captured GitHub API responses were gzip encoded, which made them unreadable (without manually decoding them). There is a feature request to have Hoverfly to do this translation automatically when exporting captured simulations, but it is not available yet[1]. So this commit has manually placed the decoded JSON in the simulated responses. [1] SpectoLabs/hoverfly#787
johnboyes
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Jul 16, 2020
The original captured GitHub API responses were gzip encoded, which made them unreadable (without manually decoding them). There is a feature request to have Hoverfly to do this translation automatically when exporting captured simulations, but it is not available yet[1]. So this commit has manually placed the decoded JSON in the simulated responses. [1] SpectoLabs/hoverfly#787
johnboyes
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Jul 16, 2020
The original captured GitHub API responses were gzip encoded, which made them unreadable (without manually decoding them). There is a feature request to have Hoverfly to do this translation automatically when exporting captured simulations, but it is not available yet[1]. So this commit has manually placed the decoded JSON in the simulated responses. [1] SpectoLabs/hoverfly#787
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Jul 20, 2020
* Move temporary test files to a temporary directory This ensures that if/when we have a need to store test data permanently in the `testdata` directory (e.g. for mocks), the `testdata` directory won't be inadvertently deleted. * Enable tests to run without a GitHub token This means that we no longer need to provide a GitHub `INPUT_REPO_TOKEN` environment variable when running the tests (fixes #85). The tests now use Hoverfly[1] by default, which proxies the calls to the GitHub API and returns simulated responses[2] instead. Also used Hoverfly to capture[3] these simulated responses. The tests can also be run with an -integration flag, which means they will make calls to the real GitHub API, requring a GitHub `INPUT_REPO_TOKEN` environment variable to have been set. Steps to install Hoverfly locally (you must do this on your local machine before you can run the tests): 1. Install Hoverfly[4] 2. Download the Hoverfly default cert[5] 3. Add and trust the Hoverfly default cert[6] (how to add and trust a cert)[7] [1] https://docs.hoverfly.io/ [2] https://docs.hoverfly.io/en/latest/pages/keyconcepts/simulations/simulations.html [3] https://docs.hoverfly.io/en/latest/pages/keyconcepts/modes/capture.html [4] https://docs.hoverfly.io/en/latest/pages/introduction/downloadinstallation.html [5] https://raw.githubusercontent.com/SpectoLabs/hoverfly/master/core/cert.pem [6] https://docs.hoverfly.io/en/latest/pages/tutorials/advanced/configuressl/configuressl.html [7] https://manuals.gfi.com/en/kerio/connect/content/server-configuration/ssl-certificates/adding-trusted-root-certificates-to-the-server-1605.html * Use JSON simulated GitHub responses, not gzip The original captured GitHub API responses were gzip encoded, which made them unreadable (without manually decoding them). There is a feature request to have Hoverfly to do this translation automatically when exporting captured simulations, but it is not available yet[1]. So this commit has manually placed the decoded JSON in the simulated responses. [1] SpectoLabs/hoverfly#787 * Run default and integration tests on commit Update the GitHub Action to run the tests in both default mode (with virtualised service calls), and integration mode (with calls to the real GitHub API). * Install Hoverfly on devcontainer for virtual tests Also added and trusted the Hoverfly default certificate[1], so that Hoverfly https calls work And also set the tests to run in verbose mode in Visual Studio Code, so we get more informative output when running them. [1] https://raw.githubusercontent.com/SpectoLabs/hoverfly/master/core/cert.pem https://hoverfly.readthedocs.io/ * Add contributing guidelines https://docs.github.com/en/github/building-a-strong-community/setting-guidelines-for-repository-contributors Closes #78, #85
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When a captured response has Content-Type: application/json and Content-Encoding: gzip it is encoded in Base64 in the simulation file.
Uncompressing this response to normal JSON text in the simulation file would enhance readability and understanding, make editing and versioning easier.
In simulate mode such a response could or should be compressed again to be closer to the actual API.
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