Using Mock API Templates#
This guide explains how to run an API template after you've downloaded the JSON file from the library page.
WireMock standalone JAR#
- Create a folder called
mappings
if one doesn't already exist in the directory containing the standalone JAR file. - Copy the downloaded JSON file into the
mappings
directory then e.g. - The JSON will be automatically loaded at startup, via the command line
See this page for general details on running WireMock standalone.
In WireMock Docker#
- Create a folder with a subfolder inside called
mappings
. - Copy the JSON file into the
mappings
folder. - Start the Docker container, mounting the parent folder e.g. assuming the current directory contains
mappings
:
docker run -it --rm \
-p 8080:8080 \
--name wiremock \
-v $PWD:/home/wiremock \
wiremock/wiremock:3.3.1
See this page for general details on running WireMock Docker.
Plain Java#
If you're running WireMock embedded in a Java program or test suite
you can place the JSON file in a folder called mappings
then set its parent as the WireMock server's root at startup.
WireMockServer wm =
new WireMockServer(wireMockConfig()
.withRootDirectory("path/to/root") // The parent folder of mappings
);
See this for general details on running WireMock in embedded Java.
JUnit#
To do the same thing using the JUnit Jupiter extension:
@RegisterExtension
static WireMockExtension wm1 = WireMockExtension.newInstance()
.options(wireMockConfig().withRootDirectory("path/to/root"))
.build();
See this for general details on running WireMock with JUnit 5+ Jupiter.
Pushing to a remotely running WireMock server#
The mock API JSON can be pushed to a remotely running WireMock server via its Admin API.
For instance if the WireMock server is running on wiremock.dev.mycompany.com
port 8080, you can POST the JSON file to it e.g.