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You're reading from  Building Enterprise JavaScript Applications

Product typeBook
Published inSep 2018
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781788477321
Edition1st Edition
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Author (1)
Daniel Li
Daniel Li
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Daniel Li

Daniel Li is a full-stack JavaScript developer at Nexmo. Previously, he was also the Managing Director of Brew, a digital agency in Hong Kong that specializes in MeteorJS. A proponent of knowledge-sharing and open source, Daniel has written over 100 blog posts and in-depth tutorials, helping hundreds of thousands of readers navigate the world of JavaScript and the web.
Read more about Daniel Li

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Querying Elasticsearch from E2E tests


We now have all the required knowledge in Elasticsearch to implement our last undefined step definition, which reads from the database to see if our user document has been indexed correctly. We will be using the JavaScript client, which is merely a wrapper around the REST API, with a one-to-one mapping to its endpoints. So first, let's install it:

$ yarn add elasticsearch

Next, import the package into our spec/cucumber/steps/index.js file and create an instance of elasticsearch.Client:

const client = new elasticsearch.Client({
  host: `${process.env.ELASTICSEARCH_PROTOCOL}://${process.env.ELASTICSEARCH_HOSTNAME}:${process.env.ELASTICSEARCH_PORT}`,
});

By default, Elasticsearch runs on port 9200. However, to avoid hard-coded values, we have explicitly passed in an options object, specifying the host option, which takes its value from the environment variables. To make this work, add these environment variables to our .env and .env.example files:

ELASTICSEARCH_PROTOCOL...
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Building Enterprise JavaScript Applications
Published in: Sep 2018Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781788477321

Author (1)

author image
Daniel Li

Daniel Li is a full-stack JavaScript developer at Nexmo. Previously, he was also the Managing Director of Brew, a digital agency in Hong Kong that specializes in MeteorJS. A proponent of knowledge-sharing and open source, Daniel has written over 100 blog posts and in-depth tutorials, helping hundreds of thousands of readers navigate the world of JavaScript and the web.
Read more about Daniel Li