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?ltima actualizaci¨®n : Nov 07, 2016
NO EN LA EDICI?N ACTUAL
Este blip no est¨¢ en la edici¨®n actual del Radar. Si ha aparecido en una de las ¨²ltimas ediciones, es probable que siga siendo relevante. Si es m¨¢s antiguo, es posible que ya no sea relevante y que nuestra valoraci¨®n sea diferente hoy en d¨ªa. Desgraciadamente, no tenemos el ancho de banda necesario para revisar continuamente los anuncios de ediciones anteriores del Radar. Entender m¨¢s
Nov 2016
Adoptar ?

We¡¯ve decided to bring consumer-driven contract testing back from the archive for this edition even though we had allowed it to fade in the past. The concept isn¡¯t new, but with the mainstream acceptance of microservices, we need to remind people that are an essential part of a mature portfolio, enabling independent service deployments. But in addition, we want to point out that consumer-driven contract testing is a technique and an attitude that requires no special tool to implement. We love frameworks like because they make proper contract tests easier to implement in certain contexts. But we have noticed a tendency for teams to focus on the framework rather than on the general practice. Writing Pact tests is not a guarantee that you are creating consumer-driven contracts; likewise, in many situations you should be creating good consumer-driven contracts even where no pre-built testing tool exists.

Nov 2015
Adoptar ?

When two independently developed services are collaborating, changes to the supplier¡¯s API can cause failures for all its consumers. Consuming services usually cannot test against live suppliers since such tests are slow and , so it¡¯s best to use , leading to the danger that the test doubles get out of sync with the real supplier service. Consumer teams can protect themselves from these failures by using ¨C tests that compare actual service responses with test values. While such contract tests are valuable, they are even more useful when consuming services provide these tests to the supplier, who can then run all their consumers¡¯ contract tests to determine if their changes are likely to cause problems ¨C adopting . Such consumer-driven contract tests are an essential part of a mature portfolio.

May 2015
Adoptar ?
Publicado : May 05, 2015

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