A mockery-like DSL to replace static methods in tests.
$mock = StaticMock::mock('FooService');
$mock
->shouldReceive('find')
->with(1)
->once()
->andReturn('Something');
$mock->assert();
Mockery (https://github.com/padraic/mockery) provides nice interfaces to create mock objects. But as for static methods, Mockery needs an alias class and we can't create a mock object in one shot with his easy DSL.
StaticMock provides Mockery-like DSL for static methods. StaticMock depends on runkit7 extension or uopz extension and rewrites static methods temporarily at run-time.
- PHP 7.3 and runkit7/runkit7 1.0.11
- PHP >= 7.3 and runkit7/runkit7 >= 4.0.0a3
- PHP >= 7.3 and krakjoe/uopz
Please note that the extension name differs depending on the version of runkit7. In the past it was extension=runkit.so
, but nowadays it is extension=runkit7.so
composer.json
{
"require-dev": {
"tototoshi/staticmock": "4.0.2"
}
}
Imagine that you are writing tests for User
class such as this.
class User
{
private $email;
public function __construct($email)
{
$this->email = $email;
}
public function getFeed()
{
$g_feed = GooglePlusClient::getFeed($this->email, 1);
$f_feed = FacebookClient::getFeed($this->email, 1);
return array_merge($g_feed, $f_feed);
}
}
class GooglePlusClient
{
public static function getFeed($email, $limit)
{
// send a request to Google
}
}
class FacebookClient
{
public static function getFeed($email, $limit)
{
// send a request to Facebook
}
}
User
class has a getFeed
method. This method aggregates user's feeds from Google+ and Facebook. It depends on GooglePlusClient
and FacebookClient
to fetch feeds from their API. We sometimes want stubs for GooglePlusClient
and FacebookClient
to write tests for the User
class. Our goal is only to ensure that User
class can correctly aggregate feeds from APIs. The behavior of GooglePlusClient
and FacebookClient
is out of our heads now.
The problem is GooglePlusClient::getFeed
and FacebookClient::getFeed
are static methods. If they were instance methods, we could manage their dependencies and inject stubs of them to User
class. But since they are static methods, we can't do that.
StaticMock
solved the problem by replacing the methods temporarily at run-time. It provides an easy DSL for replacing methods. All you need to learn is only a few methods.
- Declare the methods we want to replace with
StaticMock::mock
andshouldReceive
. - The return value of the method is defined with
andReturn
.
See below. In this example, GooglePlusClient::getFeed
and FacebookClient::getFeed
are changed to return array("From Google+")
and array("From Facebook")
.
class UserTest extends \PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase
{
public function testGetFeed()
{
$gmock = StaticMock::mock('GooglePlusClient');
$fmock = StaticMock::mock('FacebookClient');
$gmock->shouldReceive('getFeed')->andReturn(array("From Google+"));
$fmock->shouldReceive('getFeed')->andReturn(array("From Facebook"));
$user = new User('foo@example.com');
$this->assertEquals(array('From Google+', 'From Facebook'), $user->getFeed());
}
}
StaticMock
also has some methods to act as mock objects.
never()
,once()
,twice()
andtimes($times)
are used to check how many times they are called.with
andwithNthArg
are used to check what arguments are passed when they are called.
class UserTest extends \PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase
{
public function testGetFeed()
{
$user = new User('foo@example.com');
$gmock = StaticMock::mock('GooglePlusClient');
$fmock = StaticMock::mock('FacebookClient');
$gmock
->shouldReceive('getFeed')
->once()
->with('foo@example.com', 1)
->andReturn(array("From Google+"));
$fmock
->shouldReceive('getFeed')
->once()
->with('foo@example.co', 1)
->andReturn(array("From Facebook"));
$this->assertEquals(array('From Google+', 'From Facebook'), $user->getFeed());
$gmock->assert();
$fmock->assert();
}
}
Assigning a mock variable ($mock = StaticMock::mock('MyClass')
) is required since StaticMock is implemented with constructor and destructor magic.
The methods are replaced when the instance of Mock
class is created by StaticMock::mock
and reverted when the instance goes out of scope.
So, the following code doesn't work as you expect.
class UserTest extends \PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase
{
public function testGetFeed()
{
StaticMock::mock('GooglePlusClient')
->shouldReceive('getFeed')
->andReturn(array("From Google+"));
StaticMock::mock('FacebookClient::getFeed')
->andReturn(array("From Facebook"));
$user = new User('foo@example.com');
$this->assertEquals(array('From Google+', 'From Facebook'), $user->getFeed());
}
}
andImplement
is useful to change the behavior of the method.
See below again. We are writing a test for User::register
this time but we don't want to send an email every time running the test.
class User
{
private $email;
public function __construct($email)
{
$this->email = $email;
}
public function register()
{
$this->save();
Mailer::send($this->email, 'Welcome to StaticMock');
}
private function save()
{
echo 'save!';
}
}
class Mailer
{
public static function send($email, $body)
{
// send mail
}
}
Pass an anonymous function like below. The Email will not be sent and only a short line will be printed on your console.
class UserTest extends \PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase
{
public function testRegister()
{
$mock = StaticMock::mock('Mailer');
$mock->shouldReceive('send')->andImplement(function () {
echo "send email";
});
$user = new User('foo@example.com');
$user->register();
}
}
You can easily define custom PHPUnit assertion. See below.
use StaticMock\Mock;
use StaticMock\PHPUnit\StaticMockConstraint;
class WithPHPUnitTest extends \PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase
{
public function assertStaticMock(Mock $mock)
{
$this->assertThat($mock, new StaticMockConstraint);
}
}
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