Skip to content
/ msw Public

Industry standard API mocking for JavaScript.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

mswjs/msw

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

b7d9ce4 · Feb 24, 2025
Dec 16, 2024
Oct 23, 2023
Dec 16, 2024
Sep 4, 2024
Oct 30, 2024
Feb 13, 2025
Oct 23, 2023
Oct 23, 2023
Feb 24, 2025
Feb 24, 2025
Mar 18, 2024
Aug 28, 2024
Oct 29, 2024
Dec 16, 2024
Nov 18, 2018
Sep 24, 2020
May 13, 2024
Nov 15, 2018
Feb 24, 2025
Oct 1, 2022
Jan 22, 2024
Feb 24, 2025
Dec 16, 2024
Oct 27, 2024
Jan 15, 2024
Nov 1, 2023
Nov 1, 2023
Dec 16, 2024
Oct 29, 2024

Repository files navigation


The Mock Service Worker logo

Mock Service Worker

Industry standard API mocking for JavaScript.

Package version Downloads per month Discord server



Features

  • Seamless. A dedicated layer of requests interception at your disposal. Keep your application's code and tests unaware of whether something is mocked or not.
  • Deviation-free. Request the same production resources and test the actual behavior of your app. Augment an existing API, or design it as you go when there is none.
  • Familiar & Powerful. Use Express-like routing syntax to intercept requests. Use parameters, wildcards, and regular expressions to match requests, and respond with necessary status codes, headers, cookies, delays, or completely custom resolvers.

"I found MSW and was thrilled that not only could I still see the mocked responses in my DevTools, but that the mocks didn't have to be written in a Service Worker and could instead live alongside the rest of my app. This made it silly easy to adopt. The fact that I can use it for testing as well makes MSW a huge productivity booster."

Kent C. Dodds

Documentation

This README will give you a brief overview of the library, but there's no better place to start with Mock Service Worker than its official documentation.

Examples

Courses

We've partnered with Egghead to bring you quality paid materials to learn the best practices of API mocking on the web. Please give them a shot! The royalties earned from them help sustain the project's development. Thank you.

Browser

How does it work?

In-browser usage is what sets Mock Service Worker apart from other tools. Utilizing the Service Worker API, which can intercept requests for the purpose of caching, Mock Service Worker responds to intercepted requests with your mock definition on the network level. This way your application knows nothing about the mocking.

Take a look at this quick presentation on how Mock Service Worker functions in a browser:

What is Mock Service Worker?

How is it different?

  • This library intercepts requests on the network level, which means after they have been performed and "left" your application. As a result, the entirety of your code runs, giving you more confidence when mocking;
  • Imagine your application as a box. Every API mocking library out there opens your box and removes the part that does the request, placing a blackbox in its stead. Mock Service Worker leaves your box intact, 1-1 as it is in production. Instead, MSW lives in a separate box next to yours;
  • No more stubbing of fetch, axios, react-query, you-name-it;
  • You can reuse the same mock definition for the unit, integration, and E2E testing. Did we mention local development and debugging? Yep. All running against the same network description without the need for adapters or bloated configurations.

Usage example

// 1. Import the library.
import { http, HttpResponse } from 'msw'
import { setupWorker } from 'msw/browser'

// 2. Describe network behavior with request handlers.
const worker = setupWorker(
  http.get('https://github.com/octocat', ({ request, params, cookies }) => {
    return HttpResponse.json(
      {
        message: 'Mocked response',
      },
      {
        status: 202,
        statusText: 'Mocked status',
      },
    )
  }),
)

// 3. Start mocking by starting the Service Worker.
await worker.start()

Performing a GET https://github.com/octocat request in your application will result into a mocked response that you can inspect in your browser's "Network" tab:

Chrome DevTools Network screenshot with the request mocked

Tip: Did you know that although Service Worker runs in a separate thread, your request handlers execute entirely on the client? This way you can use the same languages, like TypeScript, third-party libraries, and internal logic to create the mocks you need.

Node.js

How does it work?

There's no such thing as Service Workers in Node.js. Instead, MSW implements a low-level interception algorithm that can utilize the very same request handlers you have for the browser. This blends the boundary between environments, allowing you to focus on your network behaviors.

How is it different?

  • Does not stub fetch, axios, etc. As a result, your tests know nothing about mocking;
  • You can reuse the same request handlers for local development and debugging, as well as for testing. Truly a single source of truth for your network behavior across all environments and all tools.

Usage example

Here's an example of using Mock Service Worker while developing your Express server:

import express from 'express'
import { http, HttpResponse } from 'msw'
import { setupServer } from 'msw/node'

const app = express()
const server = setupServer()

app.get(
  '/checkout/session',
  server.boundary((req, res) => {
    // Describe the network for this Express route.
    server.use(
      http.get(
        'https://api.stripe.com/v1/checkout/sessions/:id',
        ({ params }) => {
          return HttpResponse.json({
            id: params.id,
            mode: 'payment',
            status: 'open',
          })
        },
      ),
    )

    // Continue with processing the checkout session.
    handleSession(req, res)
  }),
)

This example showcases server.boundary() to scope request interception to a particular closure, which is extremely handy!

Sponsors

Mock Service Worker is trusted by hundreds of thousands of engineers around the globe. It's used by companies like Google, Microsoft, Spotify, Amazon, Netflix, and countless others. Despite that, it remains a hobby project maintained in a spare time and has no opportunity to financially support even a single full-time contributor.

You can change that! Consider sponsoring the effort behind one of the most innovative approaches around API mocking. Raise a topic of open source sponsorships with your boss and colleagues. Let's build sustainable open source together!

Golden sponsors

Become our golden sponsor and get featured right here, enjoying other perks like issue prioritization and a personal consulting session with us.

Learn more on our GitHub Sponsors profile.


GitHub Codacy Workleap Chromatic
StackBlitz

Silver sponsors

Become our silver sponsor and get your profile image and link featured right here.

Learn more on our GitHub Sponsors profile.


Replay Codemod Ryan Magoon

Bronze sponsors

Become our bronze sponsor and get your profile image and link featured in this section.

Learn more on our GitHub Sponsors profile.


Materialize Trigger.dev Vital

Awards & mentions

We've been extremely humbled to receive awards and mentions from the community for all the innovation and reach Mock Service Worker brings to the JavaScript ecosystem.

Technology Radar

Solution Worth Pursuing

Technology Radar (2020–2021)

Open Source Awards 2020

The Most Exciting Use of Technology

Open Source Awards (2020)