# Testing Every application should be well tested and. Actix provides the tools to perform unit and integration tests. ## Unit tests For unit testing actix provides request builder type and simple handler runner. [*TestRequest*](../actix_web/test/struct.TestRequest.html) implements builder-like pattern. You can generate `HttpRequest` instance with `finish()` method or you can run your handler with `run()` or `run_async()` methods. ```rust # extern crate http; # extern crate actix_web; use http::{header, StatusCode}; use actix_web::*; use actix_web::test::TestRequest; fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse { if let Some(hdr) = req.headers().get(header::CONTENT_TYPE) { if let Ok(s) = hdr.to_str() { return httpcodes::HTTPOk.into() } } httpcodes::HTTPBadRequest.into() } fn main() { let resp = TestRequest::with_header("content-type", "text/plain") .run(index) .unwrap(); assert_eq!(resp.status(), StatusCode::OK); let resp = TestRequest::default() .run(index) .unwrap(); assert_eq!(resp.status(), StatusCode::BAD_REQUEST); } ``` ## Integration tests There are several methods how you can test your application. Actix provides [*TestServer*](../actix_web/test/struct.TestServer.html) server that could be used to run whole application of just specific handlers in real http server. At the moment it is required to use third-party libraries to make actual requests, libraries like [reqwest](https://crates.io/crates/reqwest). In simple form *TestServer* could be configured to use handler. *TestServer::new* method accepts configuration function, only argument for this function is *test application* instance. You can check [api documentation](../actix_web/test/struct.TestApp.html) for more information. ```rust # extern crate actix_web; extern crate reqwest; use actix_web::*; use actix_web::test::TestServer; fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse { httpcodes::HTTPOk.into() } fn main() { let srv = TestServer::new(|app| app.handler(index)); // <- Start new test server let url = srv.url("/"); // <- get handler url assert!(reqwest::get(&url).unwrap().status().is_success()); // <- make request } ``` Other option is to use application factory. In this case you need to pass factory function same as you use for real http server configuration. ```rust # extern crate actix_web; extern crate reqwest; use actix_web::*; use actix_web::test::TestServer; fn index(req: HttpRequest) -> HttpResponse { httpcodes::HTTPOk.into() } /// This function get called by http server. fn create_app() -> Application { Application::new() .resource("/test", |r| r.h(index)) } fn main() { let srv = TestServer::with_factory(create_app); // <- Start new test server let url = srv.url("/test"); // <- get handler url assert!(reqwest::get(&url).unwrap().status().is_success()); // <- make request } ``` ## WebSocket server tests It is possible to register *handler* with `TestApp::handler()` method that initiate web socket connection. *TestServer* provides `ws()` which connects to websocket server and returns ws reader and writer objects. *TestServer* also provides `execute()` method which runs future object to completion and returns result of the future computation. Here is simple example, that shows how to test server websocket handler. ```rust # extern crate actix; # extern crate actix_web; # extern crate futures; # extern crate http; # extern crate bytes; use actix_web::*; use futures::Stream; # use actix::prelude::*; struct Ws; // <- WebSocket actor impl Actor for Ws { type Context = ws::WebsocketContext; } impl Handler for Ws { type Result = (); fn handle(&mut self, msg: ws::Message, ctx: &mut Self::Context) { match msg { ws::Message::Text(text) => ctx.text(text), _ => (), } } } fn main() { let mut srv = test::TestServer::new( // <- start our server with ws handler |app| app.handler(|req| ws::start(req, Ws))); let (reader, mut writer) = srv.ws().unwrap(); // <- connect to ws server writer.text("text"); // <- send message to server let (item, reader) = srv.execute(reader.into_future()).unwrap(); // <- wait for one message assert_eq!(item, Some(ws::Message::Text("text".to_owned()))); } ```