I've changed the domain to one that doesn't exist on t'interweb so I can be sure the test code is using the mocked data and not going off and fetching a fresh page.
Sooner or later, a troll will register the domain. Better either use a domain that you control, or use one of the domains reserved for purposes like this (see RFC2606):
Reserved Top-Level Domains (Quoting RFC2606):
- ".test" is recommended for use in testing of current or new DNS related code.
- ".example" is recommended for use in documentation or as examples.
- ".invalid" is intended for use in online construction of domain names that are sure to be invalid and which it is obvious at a glance are invalid.
- The ".localhost" TLD has traditionally been statically defined in host DNS implementations as having an A record pointing to the loop back IP address and is reserved for such use. Any other use would conflict with widely deployed code which assumes this use.
Reserved Second-Level Domains (again quoting RFC2606):
- example.com
- example.net
- example.org
RFC6761 updates RFC2606 with best practices.
If you fake a domain data, you should probably use the .test or .invalid TLDs. If you have no better idea, use something like bod-example-1.test, bod-example-2.test, and so on. Probably, you may want to name your domains to match your tests, e.g. working-host.invalid, wrong-cert.invalid, and so on.
Alexander
--
Today I will gladly share my knowledge and experience, for there are no sweeter words than "I told you so". ;-)
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