Introduction
vcr
Record your test suite's HTTP interactions and replay them during future test runs for fast, deterministic, accurate tests.
Help Wanted
We're looking for more maintainers. If you'd like to help maintain a well-used gem please spend some time reviewing pull requests, issues, or participating in discussions.
Usage
Run this test once, and VCR will record the HTTP request to fixtures/vcr_cassettes/synopsis.yml
. Run it again, and VCR will replay the response from iana.org when the HTTP request is made. This test is now fast (no real HTTP requests are made anymore), deterministic (the test will continue to pass, even if you are offline, or iana.org goes down for maintenance) and accurate (the response will contain the same headers and body you get from a real request). You can use a different cassette library directory (e.g., "test/vcr_cassettes").
NOTE: To avoid storing any sensitive information in cassettes, check out Filter Sensitive Data in the documentation.
Rails and Minitest: Do not use 'test/fixtures' as the directory if you're using Rails and Minitest (Rails will instead transitively load any files in that directory as models).
Features
Automatically records and replays your HTTP interactions with minimal setup/configuration code.
Supports multiple HTTP libraries:
Patron (when using WebMock)
Curb (when using WebMock -- only supports Curl::Easy at the moment)
HTTPClient (when using WebMock)
em-http-request (when using WebMock)
Net::HTTP (when using WebMock)
Typhoeus (Typhoeus::Hydra, but not Typhoeus::Easy or Typhoeus::Multi)
And of course any library built on Net::HTTP, such as Mechanize, HTTParty or Rest Client.
Request matching is configurable based on HTTP method, URI, host, path, body and headers, or you can easily implement a custom request matcher to handle any need.
The same request can receive different responses in different tests--just use different cassettes.
The recorded requests and responses are stored on disk in a serialization format of your choice (currently YAML and JSON are built in, and you can easily implement your own custom serializer) and can easily be inspected and edited.
Dynamic responses are supported using ERB.
Optionally re-records cassettes on a configurable regular interval to keep them fresh and current.
Disables all HTTP requests that you don't explicitly allow.
Simple Cucumber integration is provided using tags.
Includes convenient RSpec macros and integration with RSpec 2 metadata.
Known to work well with many popular Ruby libraries including RSpec 1 & 2, Cucumber, Test::Unit, Capybara, Mechanize, Rest Client and HTTParty.
Includes Rack and Faraday middleware.
Supports filtering sensitive data from the response body
The docs come in two flavors:
The relish docs contain example-based documentation (VCR's Cucumber suite, in fact). It's a good place to look when you are first getting started with VCR, or if you want to see an example of how to use a feature.
The rubydoc.info docs contain API documentation. The API docs contain detailed info about all of VCR's public API.
See the CHANGELOG doc for info about what's new and changed.
There is also a Railscast (from 2011), which will get you up and running in no-time http://railscasts.com/episodes/291-testing-with-vcr.
Release Policy
VCR follows the principles of semantic versioning. The API documentation defines VCR's public API. Patch level releases contain only bug fixes. Minor releases contain backward-compatible new features. Major new releases contain backwards-incompatible changes to the public API.
Ruby Interpreter Compatibility
VCR versions 6.x are tested on the following ruby interpreters:
MRI 2.4
MRI 2.5
MRI 2.6
Note that as of VCR 6, only 2.3+ is explicitly supported.
Development
Source hosted on GitHub.
Direct questions and discussions on GitHub Issues.
Report bugs/issues on GitHub Issues.
Pull requests are very welcome! Please include spec and/or feature coverage for every patch,
and create a topic branch for every separate change you make.
See the Contributing
guide for instructions on running the specs and features.
Code quality metrics are checked by Code Climate.
Documentation is generated with YARD (cheat sheet).
To generate while developing:
Ports in Other Languages
Betamax (Python)
VCR.py (Python)
Betamax (Go)
DVR (Go)
Go VCR (Go)
Betamax (Clojure)
vcr-clj (Clojure)
scotch (C#/.NET)
Betamax.NET (C#/.NET)
ExVCR (Elixir)
HAVCR (Haskell)
Mimic (PHP/Kohana)
PHP-VCR (PHP)
Nock-VCR (JavaScript/Node)
Sepia (JavaScript/Node)
VCR.js (JavaScript)
yakbak (JavaScript/Node)
NSURLConnectionVCR (Objective-C)
VCRURLConnection (Objective-C)
DVR (Swift)
VHS (Erlang)
Betamax (Java)
http_replayer (Rust)
OkReplay (Java/Android)
vcr (R)
Related Projects
Mr. Video (Rails engine for managing VCR cassettes and episodes)
Similar Libraries in Ruby
Credits
Aslak Hellesøy for Cucumber.
Bartosz Blimke for WebMock.
Chris Kampmeier for FakeWeb.
Chris Young for NetRecorder,
the inspiration for VCR.
David Balatero and Hans Hasselberg
for help with Typhoeus support.
Wesley Beary for help with Excon
support.
Jacob Green for help with ongoing VCR
maintenance.
for improvements to thread-safety.
Thanks also to the following people who have contributed patches or helpful suggestions:
Backers
Support us with a monthly donation and help us continue our activities. [Become a backer]
Sponsors
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