-
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 5.2k
Commit
This commit does not belong to any branch on this repository, and may belong to a fork outside of the repository.
- Loading branch information
Showing
4 changed files
with
252 additions
and
1 deletion.
There are no files selected for viewing
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
This file contains bidirectional Unicode text that may be interpreted or compiled differently than what appears below. To review, open the file in an editor that reveals hidden Unicode characters.
Learn more about bidirectional Unicode characters
Original file line number | Diff line number | Diff line change |
---|---|---|
@@ -0,0 +1,246 @@ | ||
.. index:: | ||
single: PHPUnitBridge | ||
single: Components; PHPUnitBridge | ||
|
||
The PHPUnit Bridge | ||
================== | ||
|
||
The PHPUnit Bridge provides utilities to report legacy tests and usage of | ||
deprecated code and a helper for time-sensitive tests. | ||
|
||
It comes with the following features: | ||
|
||
* Forces the tests to use a consistent locale (``C``); | ||
|
||
* Auto-register ``class_exists`` to load Doctrine annotations (when used); | ||
|
||
* It displays the whole list of deprecated features used in the application; | ||
|
||
* Displays the stack trace of a deprecation on-demand; | ||
|
||
* Provides a ``ClockMock`` helper class for time-sensitive tests. | ||
|
||
.. versionadded:: 2.7 | ||
The PHPUnit Bridge was introduced in Symfony 2.7. It is however possible to | ||
install the bridge in any Symfony application (even 2.3). | ||
|
||
Installation | ||
------------ | ||
|
||
You can install the component in 2 different ways: | ||
|
||
* :doc:`Install it via Composer </components/using_components>` | ||
(``symfony/phpunit-bridge`` on `Packagist`_); as a dev dependency; | ||
|
||
* Use the official Git repository (https://github.com/symfony/phpunit-bridge). | ||
|
||
.. include:: /components/require_autoload.rst.inc | ||
|
||
Usage | ||
----- | ||
|
||
Once the component installed, it automatically registers a | ||
`PHPUnit event listener`_ which in turn registers a `PHP error handler`_ | ||
called :class:`Symfony\\Bridge\\PhpUnit\\DeprecationErrorHandler`. After | ||
running your PHPUnit tests, you will get a report similar to this one: | ||
|
||
.. image:: /images/components/phpunit_bridge/report.png | ||
|
||
The summary includes: | ||
|
||
**Unsilenced** | ||
Reports deprecation notices that were triggered without the recommended | ||
`@-silencing operator`_. | ||
|
||
**Legacy** | ||
Deprecation notices denote tests that explicitly test some legacy features. | ||
|
||
**Remaining/Other** | ||
Deprecation notices are all other (non-legacy) notices, grouped by message, | ||
test class and method. | ||
|
||
Trigger Deprecation Notices | ||
--------------------------- | ||
|
||
Deprecation notices can be triggered by using:: | ||
|
||
@trigger_error('Your deprecation message', E_USER_DEPRECATED); | ||
|
||
Without the `@-silencing operator`_, users would need to opt-out from deprecation | ||
notices. Silencing by default swaps this behavior and allows users to opt-in | ||
when they are ready to cope with them (by adding a custom error handler like the | ||
one provided by this bridge). When not silenced, deprecation notices will appear | ||
in the **Unsilenced** section of the deprecation report. | ||
|
||
Mark Tests as Legacy | ||
-------------------- | ||
|
||
There are four ways to mark a test as legacy: | ||
|
||
* (**Recommended**) Add the ``@group legacy`` annotation to its class or method; | ||
|
||
* Make its class name start with the ``Legacy`` prefix; | ||
|
||
* Make its method name start with ``testLegacy`` instead of ``test``; | ||
|
||
* Make its data provider start with ``provideLegacy`` or ``getLegacy``. | ||
|
||
Configuration | ||
------------- | ||
|
||
In case you need to inspect the stack trace of a particular deprecation | ||
triggered by your unit tests, you can set the ``SYMFONY_DEPRECATIONS_HELPER`` | ||
`environment variable`_ to a regular expression that matches this deprecation's | ||
message, enclosed with ``/``. For example, with: | ||
|
||
.. code-block:: xml | ||
<!-- http://phpunit.de/manual/4.1/en/appendixes.configuration.html --> | ||
<phpunit xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" | ||
xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="http://schema.phpunit.de/4.1/phpunit.xsd" | ||
> | ||
<!-- ... --> | ||
<php> | ||
<server name="KERNEL_DIR" value="app/" /> | ||
<env name="SYMFONY_DEPRECATIONS_HELPER" value="/foobar/" /> | ||
</php> | ||
</phpunit> | ||
PHPUnit_ will stop your test suite once a deprecation notice is triggered whose | ||
message contains the ``"foobar"`` string. | ||
|
||
Making Tests Fail | ||
----------------- | ||
|
||
By default, any non-legacy-tagged or any non-`@-silenced`_ deprecation notices will | ||
make tests fail. Alternatively, setting ``SYMFONY_DEPRECATIONS_HELPER`` to an | ||
arbitrary value (ex: ``320``) will make the tests fails only if a higher number | ||
of deprecation notices is reached (``0`` is the default value). You can also set | ||
the value ``"weak"`` which will make the bridge ignore any deprecation notices. | ||
This is useful to projects that must use deprecated interfaces for backward | ||
compatibility reasons. | ||
|
||
Time-sensitive Tests | ||
-------------------- | ||
|
||
Use Case | ||
~~~~~~~~ | ||
|
||
If you have this kind of time-related tests:: | ||
|
||
use Symfony\Component\Stopwatch\Stopwatch; | ||
|
||
class MyTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase | ||
{ | ||
public function testSomething() | ||
{ | ||
$stopwatch = new Stopwatch(); | ||
|
||
$stopwatch->start(); | ||
sleep(10); | ||
$duration = $stopwatch->stop(); | ||
|
||
$this->assertEquals(10, $duration); | ||
} | ||
} | ||
|
||
You used the :doc:`Symfony Stopwatch Component </components/stopwatch>` to | ||
calculate the duration time of your process, here 10 seconds. However, depending | ||
on the load of the server your the processes running on your local machine, the | ||
``$duration`` could for example be `10.000023s` instead of `10s`. | ||
|
||
This kind of tests are called transient tests: they are failing randomly | ||
depending on spurious and external circumstances. They are often cause trouble | ||
when using public continuous integration services like `Travis CI`_. | ||
|
||
Clock Mocking | ||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
|
||
The :class:`Symfony\\Bridge\\PhpUnit\\ClockMock` class provided by this bridge | ||
allows you to mock the PHP's built-in time functions ``time()``, | ||
``microtime()``, ``sleep()`` and ``usleep()``. | ||
|
||
To use the ``ClockMock`` class in your test, you can: | ||
|
||
* (**Recommended**) Add the ``@group time-sensitive`` annotation to its class or | ||
method; | ||
|
||
* Register it manually by calling ``ClockMock::register(__CLASS__)`` and | ||
``ClockMock::withClockMock(true)`` before the test and | ||
``ClockMock::withClockMock(false)`` after the test. | ||
|
||
As a result, the following is guarenteed to work and is no longer a transient | ||
test:: | ||
|
||
use Symfony\Component\Stopwatch\Stopwatch; | ||
|
||
/** | ||
* @group time-sensitive | ||
*/ | ||
class MyTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase | ||
{ | ||
public function testSomething() | ||
{ | ||
$stopwatch = new Stopwatch(); | ||
|
||
$stopwatch->start(); | ||
sleep(10); | ||
$duration = $stopwatch->stop(); | ||
|
||
$this->assertEquals(10, $duration); | ||
} | ||
} | ||
|
||
And that's all! | ||
|
||
.. tip:: | ||
|
||
An added bonus of using the ``ClockMock`` class is that time passes | ||
instantly. Using PHP's ``sleep(10)`` will make your test wait for 10 | ||
actual seconds (more or less). In contrast, the ``ClockMock`` class | ||
advances the internal clock the given number of seconds without actually | ||
waiting that time, so your test will execute 10 seconds faster. | ||
|
||
Troubleshooting | ||
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | ||
|
||
The ``@group time-sensitive`` works "by convention" and assumes that the | ||
namespace of the tested class can be obtained just by removing the ``\Tests\`` | ||
part from the test namespace. I.e. that if the your test case fully-qualified | ||
class name (FQCN) is ``App\Tests\Watch\DummyWatchTest``, it assumes the tested | ||
class FQCN is ``App\Watch\DummyWatch``. | ||
|
||
If this convention doesn't work for your application, you can also configure | ||
the mocked namespaces in the ``phpunit.xml`` file, as done for example in the | ||
:doc:`HttpKernel Component </components/http_kernel/introduction>`: | ||
|
||
.. code-block:: xml | ||
<!-- http://phpunit.de/manual/4.1/en/appendixes.configuration.html --> | ||
<phpunit xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" | ||
xsi:noNamespaceSchemaLocation="http://schema.phpunit.de/4.1/phpunit.xsd" | ||
> | ||
<!-- ... --> | ||
<listeners> | ||
<listener class="Symfony\Bridge\PhpUnit\SymfonyTestsListener"> | ||
<arguments> | ||
<array> | ||
<element><string>Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation</string></element> | ||
</array> | ||
</arguments> | ||
</listener> | ||
</listeners> | ||
</phpunit> | ||
.. _PHPUnit: https://phpunit.de | ||
.. _`PHPUnit event listener`: https://phpunit.de/manual/current/en/extending-phpunit.html#extending-phpunit.PHPUnit_Framework_TestListener | ||
.. _`PHP error handler`: http://php.net/manual/en/book.errorfunc.php | ||
.. _`environment variable`: https://phpunit.de/manual/current/en/appendixes.configuration.html#appendixes.configuration.php-ini-constants-variables | ||
.. _Packagist: https://packagist.org/packages/symfony/phpunit-bridge | ||
.. _`@-silencing operator`: http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.errorcontrol.php | ||
.. _`@-silenced`: http://php.net/manual/en/language.operators.errorcontrol.php | ||
.. _`Travis CI`: https://travis-ci.com/ |
Loading
Sorry, something went wrong. Reload?
Sorry, we cannot display this file.
Sorry, this file is invalid so it cannot be displayed.