Clone and push to git repository test fixtures over HTTP or SSH.
It is similar to git-http-server but designed for test cases only.
It uses copy-on-write so that pushing to the repo doesn't actually alter the repo.
Run in a directory full of bare git repositories, git-http-mock-server will serve those repos using the
native git-http-backend process built into git (which needs to be installed on the machine).
You can then:
- run tests that clone or push to those git repositories (regardless of whether Github is down 😉).
- run those tests in parallel without them interfering with each other.
Git hooks such as hooks/update and hooks/post-receive are automatically supported.
It also supports HTTP Basic Auth password protection of repos so you can test how your code handles 401 errors.
Using isomorphic-git and testing things from browsers? Fear not, git-http-mock-server includes appropriate CORS headers.
git-ssh-mock-server is similar, but because authentication happens before the client can say which repo
they are interested in, the authentication can't be customized per repository.
By default it allows anonymous SSH access. You can disable anonymous access and activate password authentication by setting the GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_PASSWORD evironment variable.
(When password auth is activated, any username will work as long as the password matches the environment variable.)
Alternatively, you can set the GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_PUBKEY environment variable to true to disable anonymous access and activate Public Key authentication. What key to use is explained in detail later in this document.
npm install --save-dev git-http-mock-serverNow cd to a directory in which you have some bare git repos and run this server:
> cd __fixtures__
> ls
test-repo1.git test-repo2.git imaginatively-named-repo.git
> git-http-mock-serverNow in another shell, clone and push away...
> git clone http://localhost:8174/test-repo1.git
> git clone http://localhost:8174/test-repo2.git
> git clone http://localhost:8174/imaginatively-named-repo.gitTo do the same thing but with SSH
> cd __fixtures__
> ls
test-repo1.git test-repo2.git imaginatively-named-repo.git
> git-ssh-mock-serverNow in another shell,
> git clone ssh://localhost:2222/imaginatively-named-repo.gitIf you want to reuse the same shell (as part of a shell script, for example) you can run the server as a daemon in the background:
> git-http-mock-server start
> # do stuff
> git-http-mock-server stopJust be sure to run start and stop from the same working directory.
(The start command writes the PID of the server to ./git-http-mock-server.pid so that the stop command knows what process to kill.)
Same thing for SSH:
> git-ssh-mock-server start
> # do stuff
> git-ssh-mock-server stopGIT_HTTP_MOCK_SERVER_PORTdefault is 8174 (to be compatible with git-http-server)GIT_HTTP_MOCK_SERVER_ROUTEdefault is/GIT_HTTP_MOCK_SERVER_ROOTdefault isprocess.cwd()GIT_HTTP_MOCK_SERVER_ALLOW_ORIGINdefault is*(used for CORS)GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_PORTdefault is 2222GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_ROUTEdefault is/GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_ROOTdefault isprocess.cwd()GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_PASSWORDactivate Password Authentication and use this password (leave blank to allow anonymous SSH access.)GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_PUBKEYactivate PubKey Authentication using the self-generated keypair (leave blank to allow anonymous SSH access.)
You can place an Apache-style .htpasswd file in a bare repo to protect it with Basic Authentication.
> cd __fixtures__/test-repo1.git
> htpasswd -cb .htpasswd testuser testpassword
Adding password for user testuser.
> cat .htpasswd
testuser:$apr1$BRdvH4Mu$3HrpeyBrWiS88GcSPidgq/If you don't have htpasswd on your machine, you can use htpasswd which is
a cross-platform Node implementation of htpasswd.
git-ssh-mock-server generates its own keypair using the system's native ssh-keygen the first time it's run,
in order to create encrypted SSH connections.
This key can be used to authenticate with the server as well!
- Run
GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_PUBKEY=true git-ssh-mock-server - Try cloning (e.g.
git clone ssh://localhost:2222/imaginatively-named-repo.git). It shouldn't work. - Run
git-ssh-mock-server exportKeyswhich will copy the key files to./id_rsaand./id_rsa.pubin the working directory with the correct file permissions (600). - Run
ssh-add ./id_rsa - Now try cloning. It works!
- To clear the key from the ssh-agent, use
ssh-add -d ./id_rsa
You can use GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_PUBKEY and GIT_SSH_MOCK_SERVER_PASSWORD together, but using either one disables anonymous SSH access.
- basic-auth: node.js basic auth parser
- buffer-equal-constant-time: Constant-time comparison of Buffers
- chalk: Terminal string styling done right
- fixturez: Easily create and maintain test fixtures in the file system
- git-http-backend: serve a git repository over http
- htpasswd-js: Pure JS htpasswd authentication
- ssh2: SSH2 client and server modules written in pure JavaScript for node.js
originally inspired by 'git-http-server'
MIT
1.2.0 - add SSH server 1.1.0 - support running in background and CORS headers 1.0.0 - Initial release