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Project: VideoStoreAPI

Due: EOD Friday May 11

The goal of this project is to create a system that a video store (remember those?) could use to track their inventory of rental videos and their list of customers.

We will use Rails to construct a RESTful API. The purpose of this API is to quickly serve information about the store's video collection, customer information, and to update rental status. This repository provides two JSON datafiles to serve as the initial seeds for this system.

This is a pair project. You and your partner should use all the techniques we've learned so far to keep yourselves organized and on track, and ensure that no requirements slip through the cracks.

Learning Goals

Upon completing this project, students should be able to:

  • Build an ERD and set up ActiveRecord models for a given dataset / use-case
  • Expose database contents through a web API
  • Respond reasonably to bad user data in the context of an API
  • Verify the correctness of an API using controller tests

This is a stage 2 project.

Success Criteria

Your project will be evaluated against the following requirements:

  • API conformance
    • The provided smoke tests should pass (see the subfolder)
    • Bad data sent to the API should result in an appropriate status code and helpful error
  • Test coverage
    • Models: All relations, validations, and custom model methods should include at least one positive and one negative test case
    • Controllers: Every API endpoint should include at least one positive and one negative test case
  • Style and Organization
    • Everything we've learned so far about how to design and build a Rails app still applies!

Project Baseline

  • Read the API Requirements below and create a pseudo-code "routes" file that specifies
    • The endpoints your API will need
    • The HTTP verbs each endpoint will use
    • Any data that must be provided to the endpoint in order for it to do its work
  • Read the Seed Data description below and, bearing in mind the API Requirements, create an ERD for your database that specifies
    • The models your database will require
    • The attributes for each model
    • Any relationships between models
  • Create a new Rails app to serve as the API
    • Create the rails app with: $ rails _5.1.6_ new . --api
  • Create a route that responds to /zomg that serves a json-encoded "it works!"

Wave 1: Database Models, Tables, & Seeds

  • Generate Rails models and associations to match your ERD
  • Use the provided seed script db/seeds.rb to import the provided JSON data into your database

In the past, many students have spent lots of time writing and testing validations for these models. Because project time is limited and validations are not an important learning objective this week, we do not recommend this. Instead, validate only those fields that, if they are absent, will break your API.

Seed Data

movies.json contains information about the videos available to rent at the store. The data is presented as an array of objects, with each object having the following key-value pairs:

Field Datatype Description
title string The title of the film
overview string A short plot synopsis
release_date date YYYY-MM-DD, Day the film was originally released
inventory integer How many copies of the film the video store owns

customers.json contains information about the customers that have rented with the store in the past. The data is presented as, you guessed it, an array of objects, with each object have the following key-value pairs:

Field Datatype Description
name string The customer's name
registered_at datetime Wed, 29 Apr 2015 07:54:14 -0700, When the customer first visited the store
address string Street address
city string  
state string  
postal_code string  
phone string Primary contact phone number

Testing

As with all Rails projects, model testing is a requirement. You should have at least one positive and one negative test case for each relation, validation, and custom function you add to your models.

Use good TDD practices, and test before you code. Remember: red-green-refactor.

Waves 2 and 3: Coding The API

In this wave, you will implement the API described below. The endpoints are described more-or-less in order of complexity, and we recommend you build them in that order. Every endpoint must serve JSON data, and must use HTTP response codes to indicate the status of the request.

The schema of your database and the structure of your rails app are completely up to you, so long as the API conforms to the description and provided script.

Error Handling

If something goes wrong, your API should return an appropriate HTTP status code, as well as a list of errors. The list should be formatted like this:

{
  "errors": {
    "title": ["Movie 'Revenge of the Gnomes' not found"]
  }
}

All errors your API can return should be covered by at least one test case.

Testing

Because APIs are often open to the public, thorough testing is essential. For a Rails API, that means controller testing.

For each API endpoint, you should have at least:

  • A basic test with no parameters, if applicable
  • Positive and negative tests for any URI parameters (user ID, movie title)
  • Testing around any data in the request body

Use good TDD practices, and test before you code. Remember: red-green-refactor.

Smoke Tests

Because this API will be used as the backend for a future project, there are strict requirements about how it should be structured. To this end, we have provided a set of smoke tests written in Postman to exercise all the endpoints.

The smoke tests will verify that your API looks correct to the outside world, by sending actual HTTP requests to your running server and checking the results. They test things like:

  • Did I get a success response for a valid request?
  • Did the API return JSON?
  • Does the JSON contain the expected property names?

The smoke tests are not a substitute for writing your own tests!!!!! They do not check that the content is correct, nor do they cover any negative or edge cases. Verifying correctness in these cases is your responsibility.

The smoke tests live in the file test/VideoStoreAPI_smoke_tests.postman_collection.json. To run them:

  1. Open Postman
  2. Click Import in the top left
  3. Drag-and-drop the file into the box
  4. In the left sidebar, click on the Collections tab
  5. There should now be an entry for the smoke tests. Hover over it and click the > icon for a detail view. You will notice they are in the format {{url}}/movies. {{url}} is a key which you can give a value on your computer.
  6. To do so go to the Gearbox in the top-right and select Manage Environments Manage Environments
  7. Then Select Add add button
  8. Lastly add a key url and value http://localhost:3000 Key & Value
  9. Click the blue Run button. This will launch the collection runner.
  10. In the collection runner, scroll down in the center pane and click the blue Start Test button

API Description

Wave 2: Customers and Movies

GET /customers

List all customers

Fields to return:

  • id
  • name
  • registered_at
  • postal_code
  • phone
  • movies_checked_out_count
    • This will be 0 until you've completed wave 3

GET /movies

List all movies

Fields to return:

  • id
  • title
  • release_date

GET /movies/:id

Look a movie up by id

URI parameters:

  • id: Movie identifier

Fields to return:

  • title
  • overview
  • release_date
  • inventory (total)
  • available_inventory (not currently checked-out to a customer)

POST /movies

Create a new movie in the video store inventory.

Upon success, this request should return the id of the movie created.

Request body:

Field Datatype Description
title string Title of the movie
overview string Descriptive summary of the movie
release_date string YYYY-MM-DD Date the movie was released
inventory integer Quantity available in the video store

Wave 3: Rentals

Wave 2 focused on working with customers and movies. With these endpoints you can extend the functionality of your API to allow managing the rental process.

POST /rentals/check-out

Check out one of the movie's inventory to the customer. The rental's check-out date should be set to today, and the due date should be set to a week from today.

Note: Some of the fields from wave 2 should now have interesting values. Good thing you wrote tests for them, right... right?

Request body:

Field Datatype Description
customer_id integer ID of the customer checking out this film
movie_id integer ID of the movie to be checked out

POST /rentals/check-in

Check in one of a customer's rentals

Request body:

Field Datatype Description
customer_id integer ID of the customer checking in this film
movie_id integer ID of the movie to be checked in

Optional Enhancements

These really are optional - if you've gotten here and you have time left, that means you're moving speedy fast!

Query Parameters

Any endpoint that returns a list should accept 3 optional query parameters:

Name Value Description
sort string Sort objects by this field, in ascending order
n integer Number of responses to return per page
p integer Page of responses to return

So, for an API endpoint like GET /customers, the following requests should be valid:

  • GET /customers: All customers, sorted by ID
  • GET /customers?sort=name: All customers, sorted by name
  • GET /customers?n=10&p=2: Customers 10-19, sorted by ID
  • GET /customers?sort=name&n=10&p=2: Customers 10-19, sorted by name

Of course, adding new features means you should be adding new controller tests to verify them.

Things to note:

  • Sorting by ID is the rails default
  • Possible sort fields:
    • Customers can be sorted by name, registered_at and postal_code
    • Movies can be sorted by title and release_date
    • Overdue rentals can be sorted by title, name, checkout_date and due_date
  • If the client requests both sorting and pagination, pagination should be relative to the sorted order
  • Check out the will_paginate gem

More Endpoints: Inventory Management

All these endpoints should support all 3 query parameters. All fields are sortable.

GET /rentals/overdue

List all customers with overdue movies

Fields to return:

  • movie_id
  • title
  • customer_id
  • name
  • postal_code
  • checkout_date
  • due_date

GET /movies/:id/current

List customers that have currently checked out a copy of the film

URI parameters:

  • id: Movie identifier

Fields to return:

  • customer_id
  • name
  • postal_code
  • checkout_date
  • due_date

GET /movies/:id/history

List customers that have checked out a copy of the film in the past

URI parameters:

  • id: Movie identifier

Fields to return:

  • customer_id
  • name
  • postal_code
  • checkout_date
  • due_date

GET /customers/:id/current

List the movies a customer currently has checked out

URI parameters:

  • id: Customer ID

Fields to return:

  • title
  • checkout_date
  • due_date

GET /customers/:id/history

List the movies a customer has checked out in the past

URI parameters:

  • id: Customer ID

Fields to return:

  • title
  • checkout_date
  • due_date

Reference

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