When you are working on a new test case class, you might want to begin by writing empty test methods such as:
public function testSomething() { }
to keep track of the tests that you have to write. The
problem with empty test methods is that they are interpreted as a
success by the PHPUnit framework. This misinterpretation leads to the
test reports being useless -- you cannot see whether a test is actually
successful or just not yet implemented. Calling
$this->fail()
in the unimplemented test method
does not help either, since then the test will be interpreted as a
failure. This would be just as wrong as interpreting an unimplemented
test as a success.
If we think of a successful test as a green light and a test failure
as a red light, we need an additional yellow light to mark a test
as being incomplete or not yet implemented.
PHPUnit_Framework_IncompleteTest
is a marker
interface for marking an exception that is raised by a test method as
the result of the test being incomplete or currently not implemented.
PHPUnit_Framework_IncompleteTestError
is the
standard implementation of this interface.
Example 7.1
shows a test case class, SampleTest
, that contains one test
method, testSomething()
. By calling the convenience
method markTestIncomplete()
(which automatically
raises an PHPUnit_Framework_IncompleteTestError
exception) in the test method, we mark the test as being incomplete.
Example 7.1: Marking a test as incomplete
<?php class SampleTest extends PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase { public function testSomething() { // Optional: Test anything here, if you want. $this->assertTrue(TRUE, 'This should already work.'); // Stop here and mark this test as incomplete. $this->markTestIncomplete( 'This test has not been implemented yet.' ); } } ?>
An incomplete test is denoted by an I
in the output
of the PHPUnit command-line test runner, as shown in the following
example:
phpunit --verbose SampleTest
PHPUnit 4.2.0 by Sebastian Bergmann.
I
Time: 0 seconds, Memory: 3.95Mb
There was 1 incomplete test:
1) SampleTest::testSomething
This test has not been implemented yet.
/home/sb/SampleTest.php:12
OK, but incomplete or skipped tests!
Tests: 1, Assertions: 1, Incomplete: 1.
Table 7.1 shows the API for marking tests as incomplete.
Table 7.1. API for Incomplete Tests
Method | Meaning |
---|---|
void markTestIncomplete() | Marks the current test as incomplete. |
void markTestIncomplete(string $message) | Marks the current test as incomplete using $message as an explanatory message. |
Not all tests can be run in every environment. Consider, for instance, a database abstraction layer that has several drivers for the different database systems it supports. The tests for the MySQL driver can of course only be run if a MySQL server is available.
Example 7.2
shows a test case class, DatabaseTest
, that contains one test
method, testConnection()
. In the test case class'
setUp()
template method we check whether the MySQLi
extension is available and use the markTestSkipped()
method to skip the test if it is not.
Example 7.2: Skipping a test
<?php class DatabaseTest extends PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase { protected function setUp() { if (!extension_loaded('mysqli')) { $this->markTestSkipped( 'The MySQLi extension is not available.' ); } } public function testConnection() { // ... } } ?>
A test that has been skipped is denoted by an S
in
the output of the PHPUnit command-line test runner, as shown in the
following example:
phpunit --verbose DatabaseTest
PHPUnit 4.2.0 by Sebastian Bergmann.
S
Time: 0 seconds, Memory: 3.95Mb
There was 1 skipped test:
1) DatabaseTest::testConnection
The MySQLi extension is not available.
/home/sb/DatabaseTest.php:9
OK, but incomplete or skipped tests!
Tests: 1, Assertions: 0, Skipped: 1.
Table 7.2 shows the API for skipping tests.
Table 7.2. API for Skipping Tests
Method | Meaning |
---|---|
void markTestSkipped() | Marks the current test as skipped. |
void markTestSkipped(string $message) | Marks the current test as skipped using $message as an explanatory message. |
In addition to the above methods it is also possible to use the
@requires
annotation to express common preconditions for a test case.
Table 7.3. Possible @requires usages
Type | Possible Values | Examples | Another example |
---|---|---|---|
PHP | Any PHP version identifier | @requires PHP 5.3.3 | @requires PHP 5.4-dev |
PHPUnit | Any PHPUnit version identifier | @requires PHPUnit 3.6.3 | @requires PHPUnit 4.2 |
OS | A regexp matching PHP_OS | @requires OS Linux | @requires OS WIN32|WINNT |
function | Any valid parameter to function_exists | @requires function imap_open | @requires function ReflectionMethod::setAccessible |
extension | Any extension name | @requires extension mysqli | @requires extension curl |
Example 7.3: Skipping test cases using @requires
<?php /** * @requires extension mysqli */ class DatabaseTest extends PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase { /** * @requires PHP 5.3 */ public function testConnection() { // Test requires the mysqli extension and PHP >= 5.3 } // ... All other tests require the mysqli extension } ?>
If you are using syntax that doesn't compile with a certain PHP Version look into the xml configuration for version dependent includes in the section called “Test Suites”