Skip to content

PHPUnit extension that uses runkit to mock PHP functions (both user-defined and system) or static methods and use mockobject-style invocation matchers, parameter constraints and all that magic.

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

erikahlswede/phpunit-mockfunction

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

16 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Introduction

MockFunction is a PHPUnit extension that uses runkit to mock PHP functions (both user-defined and system) or static methods and use mockobject-style invocation matchers, parameter constraints and all that magic.

To use this extension, you have to install runkit first (PECL package). For a working version see https://github.com/zenovich/runkit/

To be able to mock system function (not user-defined ones), you need to turn on runkit.internal_override in the PHP config.

Usage

Assuming you are in a PHPUnit test.

// Back to the future:
$flux_capacitor = new PHPUnit_Extensions_MockFunction( 'time', $this->object );
$einsteins_clock = time() + 60;
$flux_capacitor->expects( $this->atLeastOnce() )->will( $this->returnValue( $einsteins_clock ) );

Where $flux_capacitor is the stub function. It can be set up with the same fluent interface as a MockObject (excluding method, of course).

The 2nd parameter of the constructor ($this->object) is the object where we expect the function to be called. The "mocking" only takes effect from here, from all the other sources it will execute the "normal" function (see next line).

Variable $einsteins_clock contains the value that we will return instead of the "regular" value (we add 1 minute for the current time).

In the next line we set up the mock function with the fluent interface of a mock object.

The mocked function is active for the test object instance until $flux_capacitor->restore(); is called. If you happen to forget this in the end of the test case, normally it is not a problem, because you will test anew instance of your tested class with each test case.

To mock static methods, you can use PHPUnit_Extensions_MockStaticMethod class. It work int the same way as with functions:

$mocked_static = new PHPUnit_Extensions_MockStaticMethod( 'MyClass::myMethod', $this->object );

Advanced mocking

You can use all invocation matchers, constraints and stub returns, for example:

// This will execute the original function at the end, but will test 
// the number of exections ( $this->once() ) and the correct parameter ( $this->equalTo() ).
$mocked_strrev = new PHPUnit_Extensions_MockFunction( 'strrev', $this->object );
$mocked_strrev->expects( $this->once() )->with( $this->equalTo( 'abc' ) )->will( $this->returnCallback( 'strrev' ) );


// This object cannot execute shell_exec.
$mocked_shell = new PHPUnit_Extensions_MockFunction( 'shell_exec', $this->object );
$mocked_shell->expects( $this->never() );


// Expecting to check the existence of 2 file, returning true for both.
$mocked_file_exists = new PHPUnit_Extensions_MockFunction( 'file_exists', $this->object );
$mocked_file_exists->expects( $this->exactly( 2 ) )
    ->with(
        $this->logicalOr(
            $this->equalTo( '/tmp/file1.exe' ),
            $this->equalTo( '/tmp/file2.exe' )
        )
    )->will( $this->returnValue( true ) );

For further information see http://www.phpunit.de/manual/3.0/en/mock-objects.html

About

PHPUnit extension that uses runkit to mock PHP functions (both user-defined and system) or static methods and use mockobject-style invocation matchers, parameter constraints and all that magic.

Resources

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published