This project has been abandoned in favor of Amazon's own DynamoDB testing solution, DynamoDB Local, where you can run DynamoDB on your local computer to imitate the real deal for testing purposes. If you're using Docker (you really should), then I recommend using this docker image in your docker-compose file to easily initiate the DB locally as part of your stack creation.
Special Thanks to Rick Rutt who continually contributes to this project and keeps it going.
( Works with V1 and V2 of DynamoDB )
THIS IS A WORK IN PROGRESS - BETA VERSION - SOME THINGS ARE NOT 100% - YOU MIGHT WANT TO TRY AMAZON'S OWN SOLUTION (not as easy to setup)
While working on a startup called Tivity, my co-worker, Thomas, and I found that testing simple functions with DynamoDB was a pain because it would take time to create testing tables and tear them back down. This would slow down our BDD approach to this project. Another nuisance was the cost that would incur when using DynamoDB from our local webapp or that we would hit our throughput limit and cause an error. Of course, this also means that you couldn't code things on the road because you needed an internet connect for Amazon Web Services.
To fix this, we've created a local data-store used for testing and development purposes by replicating DynamoDB's functionality. Our goal is to simplify the development and testing of DynamoDB specific functionality.
You can now add the dependency into your maven project with:
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.michelboudreau</groupId>
<artifactId>alternator</artifactId>
<version>0.12.0 <!-- subject to change, check sonatype repo --></version>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
To get started, you need 2 things: AlternatorDB (the service) and AlternatorDBClient (The client that calls the service). You can use DynamoDBMapper as long as the AlternatorDBClient is specified within it. The AlternatorDBClient is needed to circumvent the authentication process to AWS.
As a very simple example, you could do something like this in a test class:
import com.amazonaws.services.dynamodb.datamodeling.DynamoDBMapper;
import com.michelboudreau.alternator.AlternatorDB;
import com.michelboudreau.alternator.AlternatorDBClient;
public class AlternatorTest {
private AlternatorDBClient client;
private DynamoDBMapper mapper;
private AlternatorDB db;
@Before
public void setUp() throws Exception {
this.client = new AlternatorDBClient();
this.mapper = new DynamoDBMapper(this.client);
this.db = new AlternatorDB().start();
}
@After
public void tearDown() throws Exception {
this.db.stop();
}
@Test
public void test() {
// Add test here that uses the mapper or the client
}
}
The AlternatorDB service defaults to port 9090, but can be changed in the constructor. If you change the port for the service, you also need to change the port to the client by using the setEndpoint function.
Of course, it's not always possible to just create the client, mapper and service within the test. If you're using the mapper and client in other parts of the system, you need a way to test that piece of code as well while replacing the client with the new one. If you're injecting the client within your code, be sure to inject the interface AmazonDynamoDB
and not the implementation AmazonDynamoDBClient
to leave the client interchangeable. You then simply need to use the test context, here's ours:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:beans="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context
http://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context-3.1.xsd
http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans-3.1.xsd">
<bean id="dynamoDBClient" class="com.michelboudreau.alternator.AlternatorDBClient"/>
<bean id="dynamoDBMapper" class="com.amazonaws.services.dynamodb.datamodeling.DynamoDBMapper">
<constructor-arg index="0" ref="dynamoDBClient"/>
</bean>
</beans>
Then you only need to create the AlternatorDB service in your test and you're ready to test out your code. Hope this helps out. Please feel free to contribute or suggest ways to make the project better.
Anyone is able to contribute to this project and is encouraged to do so. For maven to be able to compile and run the unit tests however, you'll need to install maven2 (version 3 doesn't work) as well as Oracle's Java (not OpenJDK or any other open java projects). After these are installed, you should be able to easily build the project.
Amazon created a new specification for the DynamoDB API that is not backward compatible with the earlier version. The earlier version of the API is still supported but is deprecated.
The Alternator emulator allows both versions of the DynamoDB API.
Note However that only the features that were already available thru the original API version are supported.
When processing against the newer API protocol, Alternator simply maps the request objects to the original format and calls the pre-existing logic.
It then maps the result to the new API protocol format.
Any exceptions are also remapped from the dynamodb namespace to the dynamodbv2 namespace.
The original API was available for Java via the 1.3.33 version of the com.amazonaws aws-java-sdk maven package. It is still supported by the 1.4.2 version of the Maven package.
The Java Doc pages for both API versions reside here:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSJavaSDK/latest/javadoc/index.html
Focus on the Package com.amazonaws.services.dynamodb package namespace tree for the original API methods.
Focus on the Package com.amazonaws.services.dynamodbv2 package namespace tree for the new API methods.
The overall documentation for the Node.js AWS-SDK resides here:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSJavaScriptSDK/latest/frames.html
The section for DynamoDB has two sub-sections.
The original API documentation is at http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSJavaScriptSDK/latest/AWS/DynamoDB_20111205.html
The new API documentation is at http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSJavaScriptSDK/latest/AWS/DynamoDB_20120810.html
The Node.js NPM package for the AWS-SDK client support either API version can be obtained with this entry in your package.json
"dependencies": {
"aws-sdk": "1.0.0"
},
By default this client will use the newer '2012-08-10' API protocol, corresponding to the com.amazonaws.services.dynamodbv2 namespaces. You can revert to the earlier '2011-12-05' API protocol by using an optional parameter in the constructor:
var dynamodb = new AWS.DynamoDB({apiVersion: '2011-12-05'});
The earlier 0.9.-pre.# versions of the NPM package always assume the original '2011-12-05' API protocol.
"dependencies": {
"aws-sdk": "0.9.2-pre.3"
},
You can test Java code that uses the revised API protocol by importing from the v2 package namespaces:
import com.amazonaws.services.dynamodbv2.datamodeling.DynamoDBMapper;
import com.michelboudreau.alternator.AlternatorDB;
import com.michelboudreau.alternatorv2.AlternatorDBClientV2;
public class AlternatorTest {
private AlternatorDBClientV2 client;
private DynamoDBMapper mapper;
private AlternatorDB db;
@Before
public void setUp() throws Exception {
this.client = new AlternatorDBClientV2();
this.mapper = new DynamoDBMapper(this.client);
this.db = new AlternatorDB().start();
}
@After
public void tearDown() throws Exception {
this.db.stop();
}
@Test
public void test() {
// Add test here that uses the mapper or the client
}
}
For unit tests using the new "v2" client, here is the applicationContext.xml file:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<beans xmlns="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xmlns:context="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context"
xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
xmlns:beans="http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans"
xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.springframework.org/schema/context
http://www.springframework.org/schema/context/spring-context-3.1.xsd
http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans
http://www.springframework.org/schema/beans/spring-beans-3.1.xsd">
<!-- Turn on post-processing (Exception translation, etc) -->
<context:annotation-config/>
<bean id="dynamoDBClient" class="com.michelboudreau.alternator.AlternatorDBClient"/>
<bean id="dynamoDBMapper" class="com.amazonaws.services.dynamodb.datamodeling.DynamoDBMapper">
<constructor-arg index="0" ref="dynamoDBClient"/>
</bean>
<bean id="dynamoDBClientV2" class="com.michelboudreau.alternatorv2.AlternatorDBClientV2"/>
<bean id="dynamoDBMapperV2" class="com.amazonaws.services.dynamodbv2.datamodeling.DynamoDBMapper">
<constructor-arg index="0" ref="dynamoDBClientV2"/>
</bean>
</beans>
An optional Maven profile named "standalone" includes all third-party dependencies into a self-contained executable JAR file. This allows the Alternator emulator to run in its own process. This is particularly useful when developing DynamoDB client applications in technologies other than Java.
The standalone executable JAR file is excluded from the default Maven profile install target since the file is about 16 MB due to inclusion of the required 3rd-party dependency libraries. To obtain a copy of this JAR file, clone the Alternator GitHub repository to your local workstation and run the following Maven command:
git clone https://github.com/mboudreau/Alternator.git
cd Alternator
mvn clean install -DskipTests -Pstandalone
The desired executable JAR file will be present in the ./target sub-folder, as well as in your local Maven repository in this folder tree:
Windows:
%USERPROFILE%\.m2\repository\com\michelboudreau\alternator\
Linux or MacOSX:
~/.m2/repository/com/michelboudreau/alternator/
Note that none of the files in this folder need to be deployed to a server. These files are intended for local use on a developer workstation.
To start the Alternator emulator process, use the following commands in a command prompt or terminal window:
Windows:
set ALTERNATOR_VERSION=0.6.5-SNAPSHOT
set ALTERNATOR_HOME=%USERPROFILE%\.m2\repository\com\michelboudreau\alternator\%ALTERNATOR_VERSION%
java -jar "%ALTERNATOR_HOME%\alternator-%ALTERNATOR_VERSION%-jar-with-dependencies.jar" Alternator.db
Linux or MacOSX:
ALTERNATOR_VERSION=0.6.5-SNAPSHOT
ALTERNATOR_HOME=~/.m2/repository/com/michelboudreau/alternator/${ALTERNATOR_VERSION}
java -jar "${ALTERNATOR_HOME}/alternator-${ALTERNATOR_VERSION}-jar-with-dependencies.jar" Alternator.db
These command sequences are available in a .bat (for Windows) and .sh (Linux or MacOSX) script in the scripts folder beneath the root of this Git repository.
A Maven command provides another option for starting Alternator in its own Java process. From the root folder of your local clone of the Git repository, enter this Maven command:
mvn exec:java
Note the following message that appears after the program initializes:
Press the Enter key to exit gracefully and save data to file:
(folder-name)\Alternator.db
Use Control-C to force exit (without saving data changes):
If you press Enter, the emulator stops and saves its memory database to the indicated file, which will be reloaded the next time you run the emulator with the same filename argument.
If you press Control-C, the process is "hard-killed" and the memory data is discarded.
If you elect to save the data to Alternator.db, you can examine the JSON text with any text editor (set to word wrap). The next time the emulator is started using the executable JAR file it will reload the saved data into memory.
To start an emulator session with an empty database, simply delete the Alternator.db file (or rename it out of the way). You can also save copies of the Alternator.db file for use in repeatable integration testing for your application.
Use the The Amazon Web Services SDK for .NET and include a reference in your Visual Studio project.
Here is an example class to obtain an AmazonDynamoDB client reference pointing to the emulator process rather than an actual DynamoDB server. Note that live Amazon credentials are needed for the initial constructor; however, these credentials are not used for the remainder of the usage of the emulator client.
using System;
using System.Configuration;
using Amazon.DynamoDB;
using Amazon.SecurityToken;
using Amazon.Runtime;
namespace CSharpDynamoDbApplication
{
public class AlternatorExample
{
public const String DefaultAlternatorEndpoint = "http://localhost:9090/";
public AmazonDynamoDB GetEmulatorClient()
{
// Divert the web service calls from the real DynamoDB to the Alternator mock server,
// which must be running in a separate process via the executable JAR file.
var config = new AmazonDynamoDBConfig
{
ServiceURL = DefaultAlternatorEndpoint
};
var accessKey = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["AWSAccessKey"];
var secretKey = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings["AWSSecretKey"];
var mockClient = new AmazonDynamoDBClient(accessKey, secretKey, config);
return mockClient;
}
}
}
Use NPM to install the aws-sdk package version "0.9.1-pre.2" (or higher).
Here is an example Node JavaScript module to obtain an AmazonDynamoDB client reference pointing to the emulator process rather than an actual DynamoDB server. Note that live Amazon credentials are not needed for the Node.js client when working with the Alternator emulator process.
// AWS client home: http://aws.amazon.com/sdkfornodejs/
// API doc: http://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSJavaScriptSDK/latest/frames.html
var awssdk = require('aws-sdk');
var awsDbClient = null;
exports.awsDbClient = awsDbClient;
// Configure this module prior to use.
// settings (required) A settings object with a .dynamodb
// sub-object with appropriate configuration properties.
// callback = function(err, endpoint)
// err returns null on success, or an error message on failure.
// endpoint returns null on failure,
// or a string indicating the active DynamoDB endpoint on success.
exports.configure =
function (settings, callback) {
var defaultAlternatorEndpoint = "http://localhost:9090/";
var credentialsPath = settings.dynamodb.awsCredentialsPath;
awssdk.config.loadFromPath(credentialsPath);
var options = {};
if (settings.dynamodb.useEmulator) {
options.endpoint = defaultAlternatorEndpoint;
}
var service = new awssdk.DynamoDB(options);
awsDbClient = service.client;
var endpoint = awsDbClient.config.endpoint;
if (!endpoint) {
endpoint = awsDbClient.config.region;
}
callback(null, endpoint);
};