A lightweight connect/express middleware that plugs chaotic http behaviour into your server
Chaotic is intended for anyone who needs to test scenarios where his server might become flaky in the best case, non-responsive in the worst case and anything between. It enables to plug (in a configurable fashion) random http errors and timeouts into any node server that uses connect/express (or connect/express like) HTTP server framework.
By default Chaotic will run in the optimistic
mode that for 99% of requests to your server, will do nothing special for successful responses (http 2xx codes) and http 3xx responses. 1% of your server requests will be "hijacked" by the Chaotic middleware and will randomly generate error responses (http 4xx or 5xx codes) or a timed out (successful) response. For other, more "interesting" ;) modes, see the Configuration section.
npm install connect-chaotic-response --save
const express = require('connect');
// get the Chaotic response module
const ChaoticResponse = require('connect-chaotic-response');
const app = connect();
// Create a new chaoticResponse, optionaly with options
const chaoticResponse = new ChaoticResponse(options);
// wire your app with the Chaoutic middleware
app.use(chaoticResponse.middleware);
app.listen(3000);
Chaotic supports these modes:
optimistic
- 99% - normal, 0.5% - 401, 0.1% - 429, 0.1% - 500, 0.1% - 503, 0.1% - 504, 0.1% - 7 seconds (by default) timeoutpessimistic
- 50% - normal, 5% - 401, 5% - 429, 10% - 500, 10% - 503, 10% - 504, 10% - 7 seconds (by default) timeouttimeout
- 1% - normal, 1% - 401, 6% - 429, 1% - 500, 1% - 503, 10% - 504, 80% - 7 seconds (by default) timeoutfailure
- 1% - normal, 1% - 401, 5% - 429, 40% - 500, 40% - 503, 10% - 504, 3% - 7 seconds (by default) timeout
To set a specific mode:
// Create a new chaoticResponse, with the 'pessimistic' mode
const chaoticResponse = new ChaoticResponse({mode: 'pessimistic'});
// wire your app with the Chaoutic middleware
app.use(chaoticResponse.middleware);
You could also change the mode sometime later in your program by calling ChaoticResponse.setMode(mode);
.
The chaoticResponse
constructor accepts an optional object with these options:
mode
- As explained above. Supports optimistic, pessimistic, timeout, failuretimeout
- The timeout in milliseconds for timed out responsescustomMode
- Enables to create a personal chaotic mode that consists of any (allowed) http responses and their related weights.customMode
accepts an object of two arrays:responses
andweights
that represent the desired mix of the server's flaky behaviour. For a the full list of allowed http codes see the responses list. If thecustomMode
option is provided together with themode
option, Chaotic will ignore themode
option and use thecustomMode
behaviour.
An example of using customMode
+ changing default timeout:
// Set a custom mode and a 10 seconds timeout
const options = {
customMode: {
responses: [200, 201, 409, 500, 0],
weights: [5, 5, 2, 2, 1]
},
timeout: 10000
};
// Create a new chaoticResponse, with the above options
const chaoticResponse = new ChaoticResponse(options);
// wire your app with the Chaoutic middleware
app.use(chaoticResponse.middleware);
By default the middleware doesn't call next()
for an error response and simply returns an error. If you require to
run a function that is fired whenever an error occurs, you can add you callback function by setting the ChaoticResponse.callbackOnError
.
- Fork it
- Install dependencies
npm install
- Ensure
npm test
andnpm run lint
run successfully - Submit a pull request