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Writing API Tests with Karate

Writing API Tests with Karate

By : Benjamin Bischoff
5 (8)
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Writing API Tests with Karate

Writing API Tests with Karate

5 (8)
By: Benjamin Bischoff

Overview of this book

Software in recent years is moving away from centralized systems and monoliths to smaller, scalable components that communicate with each other through APIs. Testing these communication interfaces is becoming increasingly important to ensure the security, performance, and extensibility of the software. A powerful tool to achieve safe and robust applications is Karate, an easy-to-use, and powerful software testing framework. In this book, you’ll work with different modules of karate to get tailored solutions for modern test challenges. You’ll be exploring interface testing, UI testing as well as performance testing. By the end of this book, you’ll be able to use the Karate framework in your software development lifecycle to make your APIs and applications robust and trustworthy.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
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1
Part 1:Karate Basics
7
Part 2:Advanced Karate Functionalities

Karate in Docker and CI/CD pipelines

As we have seen in the previous chapters, Karate is very powerful for API testing. However, so far, we have only run tests on our local systems. Also, these tests were run by us on an ad hoc basis. These are very helpful while developing applications or running tests when we want some information about the current state of APIs.

In many cases, this is not enough. Instead, these tests should be run automatically within build pipelines that typically pull the current application code and build and deploy it to a test server, test it, and continue deployment until this reaches live instances to be used in production. This process is called continuous integration/continuous deployment (CI/CD), with the goal of a completely automated build and test flow.

In any case, this must be all triggered by automation, so we don’t forget to run tests at the appropriate time. This does not mean, though, that we should not be informed about the test...

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