24 KiB
Pact Consumer CDC — Framework Setup
Principle
When scaffolding a Pact.js consumer contract testing framework, align every artifact — directory layout, vitest config, package.json scripts, shell scripts, CI workflow, and test files — with the canonical @seontechnologies/pactjs-utils conventions. Consistency across repositories eliminates onboarding friction and ensures CI pipelines are copy-paste portable.
Rationale
The TEA framework workflow generates scaffolding for consumer-driven contract (CDC) testing. Without opinionated, battle-tested conventions, each project invents its own structure — different script names, different env var patterns, different CI step ordering — making cross-repo maintenance expensive. This fragment codifies the production-proven patterns from the pactjs-utils reference implementation so that every new project starts correctly.
Pattern Examples
Example 1: Directory Structure & File Naming
Context: Consumer contract test project layout using pactjs-utils conventions.
Implementation:
tests/contract/
├── consumer/
│ ├── get-filter-fields.pacttest.ts # Consumer test (one per endpoint group)
│ ├── filter-transactions.pacttest.ts
│ └── get-transaction-stats.pacttest.ts
└── support/
├── pact-config.ts # PactV4 factory (consumer/provider names, output dir)
├── provider-states.ts # Provider state factory functions
└── consumer-helpers.ts # Local shim (until pactjs-utils is published)
scripts/
├── env-setup.sh # Shared env loader (sourced by all broker scripts)
├── publish-pact.sh # Publish pact files to broker
├── can-i-deploy.sh # Deployment safety check
└── record-deployment.sh # Record deployment after merge
.github/
├── actions/
│ └── detect-breaking-change/
│ └── action.yml # PR checkbox-driven breaking change detection
└── workflows/
└── contract-test-consumer.yml # Consumer CDC CI workflow
Key Points:
- Consumer tests use
.pacttest.tsextension (not.pact.spec.tsor.contract.ts) - Support files live in
tests/contract/support/, not mixed with consumer tests - Shell scripts live in
scripts/at project root, not nested inside test directories - CI workflow named
contract-test-consumer.yml(notpact-consumer.ymlor other variants)
Example 2: Vitest Configuration for Pact
Context: Minimal vitest config dedicated to contract tests — do NOT copy settings from the project's main vitest.config.ts.
Implementation:
// vitest.config.pact.ts
import { defineConfig } from 'vitest/config';
export default defineConfig({
test: {
environment: 'node',
include: ['tests/contract/**/*.pacttest.ts'],
testTimeout: 30000,
},
});
Key Points:
- Do NOT add
pool,poolOptions,setupFiles,coverage, or other settings from the unit test config - Keep it minimal — Pact tests run in Node environment with extended timeout
- 30 second timeout accommodates Pact mock server startup and interaction verification
- Use a dedicated config file (
vitest.config.pact.ts), not the main vitest config
Example 3: Package.json Script Naming
Context: Colon-separated naming matching pactjs-utils exactly. Scripts source env-setup.sh inline.
Implementation:
{
"scripts": {
"test:pact:consumer": "vitest run --config vitest.config.pact.ts",
"publish:pact": ". ./scripts/env-setup.sh && ./scripts/publish-pact.sh",
"can:i:deploy:consumer": ". ./scripts/env-setup.sh && PACTICIPANT=<service-name> ./scripts/can-i-deploy.sh",
"record:consumer:deployment": ". ./scripts/env-setup.sh && PACTICIPANT=<service-name> ./scripts/record-deployment.sh"
}
}
Replace <service-name> with the consumer's pacticipant name (e.g., my-frontend-app).
Key Points:
- Use colon-separated naming:
test:pact:consumer, NOTtest:contractortest:contract:consumer - Broker scripts source
env-setup.shinline in package.json (. ./scripts/env-setup.sh && ...) PACTICIPANTis set per-script invocation, not globally- Do NOT use
npx pact-broker— usepact-brokerdirectly (installed as a dependency)
Example 4: Shell Scripts
Context: Reusable bash scripts aligned with pactjs-utils conventions.
scripts/env-setup.sh — Shared Environment Loader
#!/bin/bash
# -e: exit on error -u: error on undefined vars (catches typos/missing env vars in CI)
set -eu
if [ -f .env ]; then
set -a
source .env
set +a
fi
export GITHUB_SHA="${GITHUB_SHA:-$(git rev-parse --short HEAD)}"
export GITHUB_BRANCH="${GITHUB_BRANCH:-$(git rev-parse --abbrev-ref HEAD)}"
scripts/publish-pact.sh — Publish Pacts to Broker
#!/bin/bash
# Publish generated pact files to PactFlow/Pact Broker
#
# Requires: PACT_BROKER_BASE_URL, PACT_BROKER_TOKEN, GITHUB_SHA, GITHUB_BRANCH
# -e: exit on error -u: error on undefined vars -o pipefail: fail if any pipe segment fails
set -euo pipefail
. ./scripts/env-setup.sh
PACT_DIR="./pacts"
pact-broker publish "$PACT_DIR" \
--consumer-app-version="$GITHUB_SHA" \
--branch="$GITHUB_BRANCH" \
--broker-base-url="$PACT_BROKER_BASE_URL" \
--broker-token="$PACT_BROKER_TOKEN"
scripts/can-i-deploy.sh — Deployment Safety Check
#!/bin/bash
# Check if a pacticipant version can be safely deployed
#
# Requires: PACTICIPANT (set by caller), PACT_BROKER_BASE_URL, PACT_BROKER_TOKEN, GITHUB_SHA
# -e: exit on error -u: error on undefined vars -o pipefail: fail if any pipe segment fails
set -euo pipefail
. ./scripts/env-setup.sh
PACTICIPANT="${PACTICIPANT:?PACTICIPANT env var is required}"
ENVIRONMENT="${ENVIRONMENT:-dev}"
pact-broker can-i-deploy \
--pacticipant "$PACTICIPANT" \
--version="$GITHUB_SHA" \
--to-environment "$ENVIRONMENT" \
--retry-while-unknown=10 \
--retry-interval=30
scripts/record-deployment.sh — Record Deployment
#!/bin/bash
# Record a deployment to an environment in Pact Broker
# Only records on main/master branch (skips feature branches)
#
# Requires: PACTICIPANT, PACT_BROKER_BASE_URL, PACT_BROKER_TOKEN, GITHUB_SHA, GITHUB_BRANCH
# -e: exit on error -u: error on undefined vars -o pipefail: fail if any pipe segment fails
set -euo pipefail
. ./scripts/env-setup.sh
PACTICIPANT="${PACTICIPANT:?PACTICIPANT env var is required}"
if [ "$GITHUB_BRANCH" = "main" ] || [ "$GITHUB_BRANCH" = "master" ]; then
pact-broker record-deployment \
--pacticipant "$PACTICIPANT" \
--version "$GITHUB_SHA" \
--environment "${npm_config_env:-dev}"
else
echo "Skipping record-deployment: not on main branch (current: $GITHUB_BRANCH)"
fi
Key Points:
env-setup.shusesset -eu(no pipefail — it only sources.env, no pipes); broker scripts useset -euo pipefail- Use
pact-brokerdirectly, NOTnpx pact-broker - Use
PACTICIPANTenv var (required via${PACTICIPANT:?...}), not hardcoded service names can-i-deployincludes--retry-while-unknown=10 --retry-interval=30(waits for provider verification)record-deploymenthas branch guard (only records on main/master)- Do NOT invent custom env vars like
PACT_CONSUMER_VERSIONorPACT_BREAKING_CHANGEin scripts — those are handled byenv-setup.shand the CI detect-breaking-change action respectively
Example 5: CI Workflow (contract-test-consumer.yml)
Context: GitHub Actions workflow for consumer CDC, matching pactjs-utils structure exactly.
Implementation:
name: Contract Test - Consumer
on:
pull_request:
types: [opened, synchronize, reopened, edited]
push:
branches: [main]
env:
PACT_BROKER_BASE_URL: ${{ secrets.PACT_BROKER_BASE_URL }}
PACT_BROKER_TOKEN: ${{ secrets.PACT_BROKER_TOKEN }}
GITHUB_SHA: ${{ github.sha }}
GITHUB_BRANCH: ${{ github.head_ref || github.ref_name }}
concurrency:
group: ${{ github.workflow }}-${{ github.head_ref || github.ref }}
cancel-in-progress: true
jobs:
consumer-contract-test:
if: github.actor != 'dependabot[bot]'
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- uses: actions/checkout@v6
- uses: actions/setup-node@v6
with:
node-version-file: '.nvmrc'
cache: 'npm'
- name: Detect Pact breaking change
uses: ./.github/actions/detect-breaking-change
- name: Install dependencies
run: npm ci
# (1) Generate pact files
- name: Run consumer contract tests
run: npm run test:pact:consumer
# (2) Publish pacts to broker
- name: Publish pacts to PactFlow
run: npm run publish:pact
# After publish, PactFlow fires a webhook that triggers
# the provider's contract-test-provider.yml workflow.
# can-i-deploy retries while waiting for provider verification.
# (4) Check deployment safety (main only — on PRs, local verification is the gate)
- name: Can I deploy consumer? (main only)
if: github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' && env.PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE != 'true'
run: npm run can:i:deploy:consumer
# (5) Record deployment (main only)
- name: Record consumer deployment (main only)
if: github.ref == 'refs/heads/main'
run: npm run record:consumer:deployment --env=dev
Key Points:
- Workflow-level
envblock for broker secrets and git vars — not per-step detect-breaking-changestep runs before install to setPACT_BREAKING_CHANGEenv var- Step numbering skips (3) — step 3 is the webhook-triggered provider verification (happens externally)
- can-i-deploy condition:
github.ref == 'refs/heads/main' && env.PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE != 'true' - Comment on (4): "on PRs, local verification is the gate"
- No upload-artifact step — the broker is the source of truth for pact files
dependabot[bot]skip on the job (contract tests don't run for dependency updates)- PR types include
edited— needed for breaking change checkbox detection in PR body GITHUB_BRANCHuses${{ github.head_ref || github.ref_name }}—head_reffor PRs,ref_namefor pushes
Example 6: Detect Breaking Change Composite Action
Context: GitHub composite action that reads a [x] Pact breaking change checkbox from the PR body.
Implementation:
Create .github/actions/detect-breaking-change/action.yml:
name: 'Detect Pact Breaking Change'
description: 'Reads the PR template checkbox to determine if this change is a Pact breaking change. Sets PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE env var.'
outputs:
is_breaking_change:
description: 'Whether the change is a breaking change (true/false)'
value: ${{ steps.result.outputs.is_breaking_change }}
runs:
using: 'composite'
steps:
# PR event path: read checkbox directly from current PR body.
- name: Set PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE from PR description (PR only)
if: github.event_name == 'pull_request'
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
const prBody = context.payload.pull_request.body || '';
const breakingChangePattern = /\[\s*[xX]\s*\]\s*Pact breaking change/i;
const isBreakingChange = breakingChangePattern.test(prBody);
core.exportVariable('PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE', isBreakingChange ? 'true' : 'false');
console.log(`PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE=${isBreakingChange ? 'true' : 'false'} (from PR description checkbox).`);
# Push-to-main path: resolve the merged PR and read the same checkbox.
- name: Set PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE from merged PR (push to main)
if: github.event_name == 'push' && github.ref == 'refs/heads/main'
uses: actions/github-script@v7
with:
script: |
const { data: prs } = await github.rest.repos.listPullRequestsAssociatedWithCommit({
owner: context.repo.owner,
repo: context.repo.repo,
commit_sha: context.sha,
});
const merged = prs.find(pr => pr.merged_at);
const mergedBody = merged?.body || '';
const breakingChangePattern = /\[\s*[xX]\s*\]\s*Pact breaking change/i;
const isBreakingChange = breakingChangePattern.test(mergedBody);
core.exportVariable('PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE', isBreakingChange ? 'true' : 'false');
console.log(`PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE=${isBreakingChange ? 'true' : 'false'} (from merged PR lookup).`);
- name: Export result
id: result
shell: bash
run: echo "is_breaking_change=${PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE:-false}" >> "$GITHUB_OUTPUT"
Key Points:
- Two separate conditional steps (better CI log readability than single if/else)
- PR path: reads checkbox directly from PR body
- Push-to-main path: resolves merged PR via GitHub API, reads same checkbox
- Exports
PACT_BREAKING_CHANGEenv var for downstream steps outputs.is_breaking_changeavailable for consuming workflows- Uses a case-insensitive checkbox regex (
/\[\s*[xX]\s*\]\s*Pact breaking change/i) to detect checked states robustly
Example 7: Consumer Test Using PactV4 Builder
Context: Consumer pact test using PactV4 addInteraction() builder pattern. The test MUST call real consumer code (your actual API client/service functions) against the mock server — not raw fetch(). Using fetch() directly defeats the purpose of CDC testing because it doesn't verify your actual consumer code works with the contract.
Implementation:
The consumer code must expose a way to inject the base URL (e.g., setApiUrl(), constructor parameter, or environment variable). This is a prerequisite for contract testing.
// src/api/movie-client.ts — The REAL consumer code (already exists in your project)
import axios from 'axios';
const axiosInstance = axios.create({
baseURL: process.env.API_URL || 'http://localhost:3001',
});
// Expose a way to override the base URL for Pact testing
export const setApiUrl = (url: string) => {
axiosInstance.defaults.baseURL = url;
};
export const getMovies = async () => {
const res = await axiosInstance.get('/movies');
return res.data;
};
export const getMovieById = async (id: number) => {
const res = await axiosInstance.get(`/movies/${id}`);
return res.data;
};
// tests/contract/consumer/get-movies.pacttest.ts
import { MatchersV3 } from '@pact-foundation/pact';
import type { V3MockServer } from '@pact-foundation/pact';
import { createProviderState, setJsonBody, setJsonContent } from '../support/consumer-helpers';
import { movieExists } from '../support/provider-states';
import { createPact } from '../support/pact-config';
// Import REAL consumer code — this is what we're actually testing
import { getMovies, getMovieById, setApiUrl } from '../../../src/api/movie-client';
const { like, integer, string } = MatchersV3;
const pact = createPact();
describe('Movies API Consumer Contract', () => {
const movieWithId = { id: 1, name: 'The Matrix', year: 1999, rating: 8.7, director: 'Wachowskis' };
it('should get a movie by ID', async () => {
const [stateName, stateParams] = createProviderState(movieExists(movieWithId));
await pact
.addInteraction()
.given(stateName, stateParams)
.uponReceiving('a request to get movie by ID')
.withRequest(
'GET',
'/movies/1',
setJsonContent({
headers: { Accept: 'application/json' },
}),
)
.willRespondWith(
200,
setJsonBody(
like({
id: integer(1),
name: string('The Matrix'),
year: integer(1999),
rating: like(8.7),
director: string('Wachowskis'),
}),
),
)
.executeTest(async (mockServer: V3MockServer) => {
// Inject mock server URL into the REAL consumer code
setApiUrl(mockServer.url);
// Call the REAL consumer function — this is what CDC testing validates
const movie = await getMovieById(1);
expect(movie.id).toBe(1);
expect(movie.name).toBe('The Matrix');
});
});
it('should handle movie not found', async () => {
await pact
.addInteraction()
.given('No movies exist')
.uponReceiving('a request for a non-existent movie')
.withRequest('GET', '/movies/999')
.willRespondWith(404, setJsonBody({ error: 'Movie not found' }))
.executeTest(async (mockServer: V3MockServer) => {
setApiUrl(mockServer.url);
await expect(getMovieById(999)).rejects.toThrow();
});
});
});
Key Points:
- CRITICAL: Always test your REAL consumer code — import and call actual API client functions, never raw
fetch() - Using
fetch()directly only tests that Pact's mock server works, which is meaningless - Consumer code MUST expose a URL injection mechanism:
setApiUrl(), env var override, or constructor parameter - If the consumer code doesn't support URL injection, add it — this is a design prerequisite for CDC testing
- Use PactV4
addInteraction()builder (not PactV3 fluent API withwithRequest({...})object) - Interaction naming convention: Use the pattern
"a request to <action> <resource> [<condition>]"foruponReceiving(). Examples:"a request to get a movie by ID","a request to delete a non-existing movie","a request to create a movie that already exists". These names appear in Pact Broker UI and verification logs — keep them descriptive and unique within the consumer-provider pair. - Use
setJsonContentfor request/response builder callbacks with query/header/body concerns; usesetJsonBodyfor body-only response callbacks - Provider state factory functions (
movieExists) returnProviderStateInputobjects createProviderStateconverts to[stateName, stateParams]tuple for.given()
Common URL injection patterns (pick whichever fits your consumer architecture):
| Pattern | Example | Best For |
|---|---|---|
setApiUrl(url) |
Mutates axios instance baseURL |
Singleton HTTP client |
| Constructor param | new ApiClient({ baseUrl: mockServer.url }) |
Class-based clients |
| Environment variable | process.env.API_URL = mockServer.url |
Config-driven apps |
| Factory function | createApi({ baseUrl: mockServer.url }) |
Functional patterns |
Example 8: Support Files
Pact Config Factory
// tests/contract/support/pact-config.ts
import path from 'node:path';
import { PactV4 } from '@pact-foundation/pact';
export const createPact = (overrides?: { consumer?: string; provider?: string }) =>
new PactV4({
dir: path.resolve(process.cwd(), 'pacts'),
consumer: overrides?.consumer ?? 'MyConsumerApp',
provider: overrides?.provider ?? 'MyProviderAPI',
logLevel: 'warn',
});
Provider State Factories
// tests/contract/support/provider-states.ts
import type { ProviderStateInput } from './consumer-helpers';
export const movieExists = (movie: { id: number; name: string; year: number; rating: number; director: string }): ProviderStateInput => ({
name: 'An existing movie exists',
params: movie,
});
export const hasMovieWithId = (id: number): ProviderStateInput => ({
name: 'Has a movie with a specific ID',
params: { id },
});
Local Consumer Helpers Shim
// tests/contract/support/consumer-helpers.ts
// TODO(temporary scaffolding): Replace local TemplateHeaders/TemplateQuery types
// with '@seontechnologies/pactjs-utils' exports when available.
type TemplateHeaders = Record<string, string | number | boolean>;
type TemplateQueryValue = string | number | boolean | Array<string | number | boolean>;
type TemplateQuery = Record<string, TemplateQueryValue>;
export type ProviderStateInput = {
name: string;
params: Record<string, unknown>;
};
type JsonMap = { [key: string]: boolean | number | string | null | JsonMap | Array<unknown> };
type JsonContentBuilder = {
headers: (headers: TemplateHeaders) => unknown;
jsonBody: (body: unknown) => unknown;
query?: (query: TemplateQuery) => unknown;
};
export type JsonContentInput = {
body?: unknown;
headers?: TemplateHeaders;
query?: TemplateQuery;
};
export const toJsonMap = (obj: Record<string, unknown>): JsonMap =>
Object.fromEntries(
Object.entries(obj).map(([key, value]) => {
if (value === null || value === undefined) return [key, 'null'];
if (typeof value === 'object' && !(value instanceof Date) && !Array.isArray(value)) return [key, JSON.stringify(value)];
if (typeof value === 'number' || typeof value === 'boolean') return [key, value];
if (value instanceof Date) return [key, value.toISOString()];
return [key, String(value)];
}),
);
export const createProviderState = ({ name, params }: ProviderStateInput): [string, JsonMap] => [name, toJsonMap(params)];
export const setJsonContent =
({ body, headers, query }: JsonContentInput) =>
(builder: JsonContentBuilder): void => {
if (query && builder.query) {
builder.query(query);
}
if (headers) {
builder.headers(headers);
}
if (body !== undefined) {
builder.jsonBody(body);
}
};
export const setJsonBody = (body: unknown) => setJsonContent({ body });
Key Points:
- If
@seontechnologies/pactjs-utilsis not yet installed, create a local shim that mirrors the API - Add a TODO comment noting to swap for the published package when available
- The shim exports
createProviderState,toJsonMap,setJsonContent,setJsonBody, and helper input types - Keep shim types local (or sourced from public exports only); do not import from internal Pact paths like
@pact-foundation/pact/src/*
Example 9: .gitignore Entries
Context: Pact-specific entries to add to .gitignore.
# Pact contract testing artifacts
/pacts/
pact-logs/
Validation Checklist
Before presenting the consumer CDC framework to the user, verify:
vitest.config.pact.tsis minimal (no pool/coverage/setup copied from unit config)- Script names match pactjs-utils (
test:pact:consumer,publish:pact,can:i:deploy:consumer,record:consumer:deployment) - Scripts source
env-setup.shinline in package.json - Shell scripts use
pact-brokernotnpx pact-broker - Shell scripts use
PACTICIPANTenv var pattern can-i-deploy.shhas--retry-while-unknown=10 --retry-interval=30record-deployment.shhas branch guardenv-setup.shusesset -eu; broker scripts useset -euo pipefail— each with explanatory comment- CI workflow named
contract-test-consumer.yml - CI has workflow-level env block (not per-step)
- CI has
detect-breaking-changestep before install - CI step numbering skips (3) — webhook-triggered provider verification
- CI can-i-deploy has
PACT_BREAKING_CHANGE != 'true'condition - CI has NO upload-artifact step
.github/actions/detect-breaking-change/action.ymlexists- Consumer tests use
.pacttest.tsextension - Consumer tests use PactV4
addInteraction()builder uponReceiving()names follow"a request to <action> <resource> [<condition>]"pattern and are unique within the consumer-provider pair- Interaction callbacks use
setJsonContentfor query/header/body andsetJsonBodyfor body-only responses - Request bodies use exact values (no
like()wrapper) — Postel's Law: be strict in what you send like(),eachLike(),string(),integer()matchers are only used inwillRespondWith(responses), not inwithRequest(requests) — matchers check type/shape, not exact values- Consumer tests call REAL consumer code (actual API client functions), NOT raw
fetch() - Consumer code exposes URL injection mechanism (
setApiUrl(), env var, or constructor param) - Local consumer-helpers shim present if pactjs-utils not installed
.gitignoreincludes/pacts/andpact-logs/
Related Fragments
pactjs-utils-overview.md— Library decision tree and installationpactjs-utils-consumer-helpers.md—createProviderState,toJsonMap,setJsonContent, andsetJsonBodyAPI detailspactjs-utils-provider-verifier.md— Provider-side verification patternspactjs-utils-request-filter.md— Auth injection for provider verificationcontract-testing.md— Foundational CDC patterns and resilience coverage