In #37182 the in-memory-web-api module was moved into this repo. Copy the reamde into this repo with the following changes: * Removed Travis badges * Updated github links to point to Angular repo * Removed 'running tests' as it is no longer relevant Fixes #40190 PR Close #40203
		
			
				
	
	
		
			389 lines
		
	
	
		
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			389 lines
		
	
	
		
			15 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Markdown
		
	
	
	
	
	
# Angular in-memory-web-api
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An in-memory web api for Angular demos and tests
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that emulates CRUD operations over a RESTy API.
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It intercepts Angular `Http` and `HttpClient` requests that would otherwise go to the remote server and redirects them to an in-memory data store that you control.
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See [Austin McDaniel's article](https://medium.com/@amcdnl/mocking-with-angular-more-than-just-unit-testing-cbb7908c9fcc) 
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for a quick introduction.
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_This package used to live [in its own repository](https://github.com/angular/in-memory-web-api)._
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### _It used to work and now it doesn't :-(_
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Perhaps you installed a new version of this library? Check the 
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[CHANGELOG.md](https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/master/packages/misc/angular-in-memory-web-api/CHANGELOG.md) 
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for breaking changes that may have affected your app.
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If that doesn't explain it, create an 
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[issue on github](https://github.com/angular/angular/issues),
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preferably with a small repro.
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## Use cases
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* Demo apps that need to simulate CRUD data persistence operations without a real server.
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You won't have to build and start a test server.
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* Whip up prototypes and proofs of concept.
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* Share examples with the community in a web coding environment such as Plunker or CodePen.
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Create Angular issues and StackOverflow answers supported by live code.
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* Simulate operations against data collections that aren't yet implemented on your dev/test server. 
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You can pass requests thru to the dev/test server for collections that are supported.
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* Write unit test apps that read and write data.
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Avoid the hassle of intercepting multiple http calls and manufacturing sequences of responses.
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The in-memory data store resets for each test so there is no cross-test data pollution.
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* End-to-end tests. If you can toggle the app into test mode
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using the in-memory web api, you won't disturb the real database.
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This can be especially useful for CI (continuous integration) builds.
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>**LIMITATIONS**
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>
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>The _in-memory-web-api_ exists primarily to support the 
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[Angular documentation](https://angular.io/docs/ts/latest/ "Angular documentation web site").
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It is not supposed to emulate every possible real world web API and is not intended for production use.
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>
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>Most importantly, it is ***always experimental***. 
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We will make breaking changes and we won't feel bad about it 
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because this is a development tool, not a production product. 
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We do try to tell you about such changes in the `CHANGELOG.md`
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and we fix bugs as fast as we can.
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## HTTP request handling
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This in-memory web api service processes an HTTP request and 
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returns an `Observable` of HTTP `Response` object
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in the manner of a RESTy web api.
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It natively handles URI patterns in the form `:base/:collectionName/:id?`
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Examples:
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```ts
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  // for requests to an `api` base URL that gets heroes from a 'heroes' collection 
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  GET api/heroes          // all heroes
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  GET api/heroes/42       // the hero with id=42
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  GET api/heroes?name=^j  // 'j' is a regex; returns heroes whose name starting with 'j' or 'J'
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  GET api/heroes.json/42  // ignores the ".json"
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```
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The in-memory web api service processes these requests against a "database" - a set of named collections - that you define during setup.
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## Basic setup
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<a id="createDb"></a>
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Create an `InMemoryDataService` class that implements `InMemoryDbService`.
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At minimum it must implement `createDb` which 
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creates a "database" hash whose keys are collection names
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and whose values are arrays of collection objects to return or update.
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For example:
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```ts
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import { InMemoryDbService } from 'angular-in-memory-web-api';
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export class InMemHeroService implements InMemoryDbService {
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  createDb() {
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    let heroes = [
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      { id: 1, name: 'Windstorm' },
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      { id: 2, name: 'Bombasto' },
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      { id: 3, name: 'Magneta' },
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      { id: 4, name: 'Tornado' }
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    ];
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    return {heroes};
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  }
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}
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```
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**Notes**
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* The in-memory web api library _currently_ assumes that every collection has a primary key called `id`.
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* The `createDb` method can be synchronous or asynchronous.
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It would have to be asynchronous if you initialized your in-memory database service from a JSON file.
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Return the database _object_, an _observable_ of that object, or a _promise_ of that object. The tests include an example of all three.
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* The in-memory web api calls your `InMemoryDbService` data service class's  `createDb` method on two occasions.
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  1. when it handles the _first_ HTTP request 
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  1. when it receives a `resetdb` [command](#commands).
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  In the command case, the service passes in a `RequestInfo` object,
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  enabling the `createDb` logic to adjust its behavior per the client request. See the tests for examples.
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### Import the in-memory web api module
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Register your data store service implementation with the `HttpClientInMemoryWebApiModule`
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in your root `AppModule.imports`
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calling the `forRoot` static method with this service class and an optional configuration object:
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```ts
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import { HttpClientModule } from '@angular/common/http';
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import { HttpClientInMemoryWebApiModule } from 'angular-in-memory-web-api';
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import { InMemHeroService } from '../app/hero.service';
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@NgModule({
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 imports: [
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   HttpClientModule,
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   HttpClientInMemoryWebApiModule.forRoot(InMemHeroService),
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   ...
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 ],
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 ...
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})
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export class AppModule { ... }
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```
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**_Notes_**
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* Always import the `HttpClientInMemoryWebApiModule` _after_ the `HttpClientModule` 
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to ensure that the in-memory backend provider supersedes the Angular version.
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* You can setup the in-memory web api within a lazy loaded feature module by calling the `.forFeature` method as you would `.forRoot`.
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* In production, you want HTTP requests to go to the real server and probably have no need for the _in-memory_ provider.
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CLI-based apps can exclude the provider in production builds like this:
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  ```ts
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  imports: [
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    HttpClientModule,
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    environment.production ?
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      [] : HttpClientInMemoryWebApiModule.forRoot(InMemHeroService)
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    ...
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  ]
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  ```
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# Examples
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The [tests](https://github.com/angular/angular/blob/master/packages/misc/angular-in-memory-web-api/test)
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are a good place to learn how to setup and use this in-memory web api library.
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See also the example source code in the official Angular.io documentation such as the
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[HttpClient](https://angular.io/guide/http) guide and the
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[Tour of Heroes](https://angular.io/tutorial/toh-pt6). 
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# Advanced Features
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Some features are not readily apparent in the basic usage described above.
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## Configuration arguments
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The `InMemoryBackendConfigArgs` defines a set of options. Add them as the second `forRoot` argument:
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```ts
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  InMemoryWebApiModule.forRoot(InMemHeroService, { delay: 500 }),
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```
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**Read the `InMemoryBackendConfigArgs` interface to learn about these options**.
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## Request evaluation order
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This service can evaluate requests in multiple ways depending upon the configuration.
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Here's how it reasons:
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1. If it looks like a [command](#commands), process as a command.
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2. If the [HTTP method is overridden](#method-override), try the override.
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3. If the resource name (after the api base path) matches one of the configured collections, process that.
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4. If not but the `Config.passThruUnknownUrl` flag is `true`, try to [pass the request along to a real _XHR_](#passthru).
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5. Return a 404.
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See the `handleRequest` method implementation for details.
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## Default delayed response
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By default this service adds a 500ms delay 
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to all data requests to simulate round-trip latency.
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>[Command requests](#commands) have zero added delay as they concern 
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in-memory service configuration and do not emulate real data requests.
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You can change or eliminate the latency by setting a different `delay` value:
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```ts
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  InMemoryWebApiModule.forRoot(InMemHeroService, { delay: 0 }),    // no delay
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  InMemoryWebApiModule.forRoot(InMemHeroService, { delay: 1500 }), // 1.5 second delay
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```
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## Simple query strings
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Pass custom filters as a regex pattern via query string. 
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The query string defines which property and value to match.
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Format: `/app/heroes/?propertyName=regexPattern`
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The following example matches all names that start with the letter 'j' or 'J' in the heroes collection.
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`/app/heroes/?name=^j`
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>Search pattern matches are case insensitive by default. 
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Set `config.caseSensitiveSearch = true` if needed.
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<a id="passthru"></a>
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## Pass thru to a live server
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If an existing, running remote server should handle requests for collections 
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that are not in the in-memory database, set `Config.passThruUnknownUrl: true`.
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Then this service will forward unrecognized requests to the remote server
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via the Angular default `XHR` backend (it depends on whether your using `Http` or `HttpClient`).
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<a id="commands"></a>
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## Commands
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The client may issue a command request to get configuration state
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from the in-memory web api service, reconfigure it, 
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or reset the in-memory database.
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When the last segment of the _api base path_ is "commands", the `collectionName` is treated as the _command_.
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Example URLs:
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```sh
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  commands/resetdb   // Reset the "database" to its original state
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  commands/config    // Get or update this service's config object
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```
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Usage:
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```sh
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  http.post('commands/resetdb', undefined);
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  http.get('commands/config');
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  http.post('commands/config', '{"delay":1000}');
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```
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Command requests do not simulate real remote data access.
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They ignore the latency delay and respond as quickly as possible.
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The `resetDb` command
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calls your `InMemoryDbService` data service's  [`createDb` method](#createDb) with the `RequestInfo` object,
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enabling the `createDb` logic to adjust its behavior per the client request.
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In the following example, the client includes a reset option in the command request body:
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```ts
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http
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  // Reset the database collections with the `clear` option
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  .post('commands/resetDb', { clear: true }))
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  // when command finishes, get heroes
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  .concatMap(
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    ()=> http.get<Data>('api/heroes')
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        .map(data => data.data as Hero[])
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  )
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  // execute the request sequence and 
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  // do something with the heroes
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  .subscribe(...)
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```
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See the tests for other examples.
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## _parseRequestUrl_
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The `parseRequestUrl` parses the request URL into a `ParsedRequestUrl` object.
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`ParsedRequestUrl` is a public interface whose properties guide the in-memory web api
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as it processes the request.
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### Default _parseRequestUrl_
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Default parsing depends upon certain values of `config`: `apiBase`, `host`, and `urlRoot`.
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Read the source code for the complete story.
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Configuring the `apiBase` yields the most interesting changes to `parseRequestUrl` behavior:
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* For `apiBase=undefined` and `url='http://localhost/api/customers/42'`
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    ```ts
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    {apiBase: 'api/', collectionName: 'customers', id: '42', ...}
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    ```
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*  For `apiBase='some/api/root/'` and `url='http://localhost/some/api/root/customers'`
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    ```ts
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    { apiBase: 'some/api/root/', collectionName: 'customers', id: undefined, ... }
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    ```
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*  For `apiBase='/'` and `url='http://localhost/customers'`
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    ```ts
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    { apiBase: '/', collectionName: 'customers', id: undefined, ... }
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    ```
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**The actual api base segment values are ignored**. Only the number of segments matters.
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The following api base strings are considered identical: 'a/b' ~ 'some/api/' ~ `two/segments'
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This means that URLs that work with the in-memory web api may be rejected by the real server.
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### Custom _parseRequestUrl_
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You can override the default parser by implementing a `parseRequestUrl` method in your `InMemoryDbService`.
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The service calls your method with two arguments.
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1. `url` - the request URL string
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1. `requestInfoUtils` - utility methods in a `RequestInfoUtilities` object, including the default parser.
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Note that some values have not yet been set as they depend on the outcome of parsing.
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Your method must either return a `ParsedRequestUrl` object or `null`|`undefined`,
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in which case the service uses the default parser.
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In this way you can intercept and parse some URLs and leave the others to the default parser.
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## Custom _genId_
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Collection items are presumed to have a primary key property called `id`.
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You can specify the `id` while adding a new item. 
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The service will blindly use that `id`; it does not check for uniqueness.
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If you do not specify the `id`, the service generates one via the `genId` method.
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You can override the default id generator with a method called `genId` in your `InMemoryDbService`.
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Your method receives the new item's collection and collection name. 
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It should return the generated id.
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If your generator returns `null`|`undefined`, the service uses the default generator. 
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## _responseInterceptor_
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You can change the response returned by the service's default HTTP methods.
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A typical reason to intercept is to add a header that your application is expecting.
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To intercept responses, add a `responseInterceptor` method to your `InMemoryDbService` class. 
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The service calls your interceptor like this:
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```ts
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responseOptions = this.responseInterceptor(responseOptions, requestInfo);
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```
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<a id="method-override"></a>
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## HTTP method interceptors
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You may have HTTP requests that the in-memory web api can't handle properly.
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You can override any HTTP method by implementing a method 
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of that name in your `InMemoryDbService`.
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Your method's name must be the same as the HTTP method name but **all lowercase**.
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The in-memory web api calls it with a `RequestInfo` object that contains request data and utility methods.
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For example, if you implemented a `get` method, the web api would be called like this:
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`yourInMemDbService["get"](requestInfo)`.
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Your custom HTTP method must return either:
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* `Observable<Response>` - you handled the request and the response is available from this
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observable.  It _should be "cold"_.
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* `null`/`undefined` - you decided not to intervene, 
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perhaps because you wish to intercept only certain paths for the given HTTP method.
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The service continues with its default processing of the HTTP request.
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The `RequestInfo` is an interface defined in `src/in-mem/interfaces.ts`. 
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Its members include:
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```ts
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req: Request;           // the request object from the client
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collectionName: string; // calculated from the request url
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collection: any[];      // the corresponding collection (if found)
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id: any;                // the item `id` (if specified)
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url: string;            // the url in the request
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utils: RequestInfoUtilities; // helper functions
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```
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The functions in `utils` can help you analyze the request
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and compose a response.
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## In-memory Web Api Examples
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The [test fixtures](https://github.com/angular/angular/tree/master/packages/misc/angular-in-memory-web-api/test/fixtures)
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demonstrates library usage with tested examples.
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The `HeroInMemDataService` class (in `test/fixtures/hero-in-mem-data-service.ts`) is a Hero-oriented `InMemoryDbService`
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such as you might see in an HTTP sample in the Angular documentation.
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The `HeroInMemDataOverrideService` class (in `test/fixtures/hero-in-mem-data-override-service.ts`)
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demonstrates a few ways to override methods of the base `HeroInMemDataService`.
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