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This tutorial guides you through writing a consumer test from scratch. To start, the consumer tests are written using [`jest-pact`](https://github.com/pact-foundation/jest-pact) that builds on top of [`pact-js`](https://github.com/pact-foundation/pact-js). This tutorial shows you how to write a consumer test for the `/discussions.json` REST API endpoint, which is actually `/:namespace_name/:project_name/-/merge_requests/:id/discussions.json`. For an example of a GraphQL consumer test, see [`spec/contracts/consumer/specs/project/pipeline/show.spec.js`](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/tree/master/spec/contracts/consumer/specs/project/pipeline/show.spec.js).
Start by creating the skeleton of a consumer test. Create a file under `spec/contracts/consumer/specs/project/merge_request` called `discussions.spec.js`.
To learn more about how the contract test directory is structured, see the contract testing [test suite folder structure](index.md#test-suite-folder-structure).
`PactOptions` with `jest-pact` introduces [additional options](https://github.com/pact-foundation/jest-pact/blob/dce370c1ab4b7cb5dff12c4b62246dc229c53d0e/README.md#defaults) that build on top of the ones [provided in `pact-js`](https://github.com/pact-foundation/pact-js#constructor). In most cases, you define the `consumer`, `provider`, `log`, and `dir` options for these tests.
The `PactFn` is where your tests are defined. This is where you set up the mock provider and where you can use the standard Jest methods like [`Jest.describe`](https://jestjs.io/docs/api#describename-fn), [`Jest.beforeEach`](https://jestjs.io/docs/api#beforeeachfn-timeout), and [`Jest.it`](https://jestjs.io/docs/api#testname-fn-timeout). For more information, see [https://jestjs.io/docs/api](https://jestjs.io/docs/api).
Before you run your test, set up the mock provider that handles the specified requests and returns a specified response. To do that, define the state and the expected request and response in an [`Interaction`](https://github.com/pact-foundation/pact-js/blob/master/src/dsl/interaction.ts).
For this tutorial, define four attributes for the `Interaction`:
1.`state`: A description of what the prerequisite state is before the request is made.
1.`uponReceiving`: A description of what kind of request this `Interaction` is handling.
1.`withRequest`: Where you define the request specifications. It contains the request `method`, `path`, and any `headers`, `body`, or `query`.
1.`willRespondWith`: Where you define the expected response. It contains the response `status`, `headers`, and `body`.
After you define the `Interaction`, add that interaction to the mock provider by calling `addInteraction`.
Notice how we use `Matchers` in the `body` of the expected response. This allows us to be flexible enough to accept different values but still be strict enough to distinguish between valid and invalid values. We must ensure that we have a tight definition that is neither too strict nor too lax. Read more about the [different types of `Matchers`](https://github.com/pact-foundation/pact-js/blob/master/docs/matching.md). We are currently using the V2 matching rules.
First, set up the client that makes the API request. To do that, create `spec/contracts/consumer/resources/api/project/merge_requests.js` and add the following API request. If the endpoint is a GraphQL, then we create it under `spec/contracts/consumer/resources/graphql` instead.
There we have it! The consumer test is now set up. You can now try [running this test](index.md#run-the-consumer-tests).
## Improve test readability
As you may have noticed, the request and response definitions can get large. This results in the test being difficult to read, with a lot of scrolling to find what you want. You can make the test easier to read by extracting these out to a `fixture`.
Create a file under `spec/contracts/consumer/fixtures/project/merge_request` called `discussions.fixture.js` where you will place the `request` and `response` definitions.