By Matthias Noback
Writing configuration classes using the Symfony Config Component can be quite hard. To help you verify the validity of the resulting config node tree, this library provides a PHPUnit test case and some custom assertions.
Using Composer:
php composer.phar require --dev matthiasnoback/symfony-config-test
Create a test case and use the trait from Matthias\SymfonyConfigTest\PhpUnit\ConfigurationTestCaseTrait
.
Then implement getConfiguration()
:
<?php
class ConfigurationTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
{
use ConfigurationTestCaseTrait;
protected function getConfiguration()
{
return new Configuration();
}
}
Let's assume the Configuration
class you want to test looks like this:
<?php
use Symfony\Component\Config\Definition\Builder\TreeBuilder;
use Symfony\Component\Config\Definition\ConfigurationInterface;
class ConfigurationWithRequiredValue implements ConfigurationInterface
{
public function getConfigTreeBuilder()
{
$treeBuilder = new TreeBuilder();
$rootNode = $treeBuilder->root('root');
$rootNode
->isRequired()
->children()
->scalarNode('required_value')
->isRequired()
->end()
->end();
return $treeBuilder;
}
}
When you provide an empty array as the value for this configuration, you would expect an exception since the
required_value
node is required. You can assert that a given set of configuration values is invalid using the
assertConfigurationIsInvalid()
method:
<?php
class ConfigurationTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
{
use ConfigurationTestCaseTrait;
public function testValuesAreInvalidIfRequiredValueIsNotProvided()
{
$this->assertConfigurationIsInvalid(
array(
array() // no values at all
),
'required_value' // (part of) the expected exception message - optional
);
}
}
You may also want to verify that after processing an array of configuration values the result will be as expected:
<?php
class ConfigurationTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
{
use ConfigurationTestCaseTrait;
public function testProcessedValueContainsRequiredValue()
{
$this->assertProcessedConfigurationEquals(array(
array('required_value' => 'first value'),
array('required_value' => 'last value')
), array(
'required_value'=> 'last value'
));
}
}
Please note: the first argument of each of the assert*
methods is an array of arrays. The extra nesting level
allows you to test the merge process. See also the section Merging
options of the Config Component
documentation.
Using this library it's possible to test just one branch of your configuration tree. Consider the following node tree
definition, which contains the branches array_node_1
and array_node_2
:
<?php
use Symfony\Component\Config\Definition\Builder\TreeBuilder;
use Symfony\Component\Config\Definition\ConfigurationInterface;
class ConfigurationWithTwoBranches implements ConfigurationInterface
{
public function getConfigTreeBuilder()
{
$treeBuilder = new TreeBuilder();
$rootNode = $treeBuilder->root('root');
$rootNode
->children()
->arrayNode('array_node_1')
->isRequired()
->children()
->scalarNode('required_value_1')
->isRequired()
->end()
->end()
->end()
->arrayNode('array_node_2')
->isRequired()
->children()
->scalarNode('required_value_2')
->isRequired()
->end()
->end()
->end()
->end();
return $treeBuilder;
}
}
If you want to test, for instance, only the array_node_1
branch from the example below, and ignore the array_node_2
,
provide array_node_1
as the argument for the $breadcrumbPath
parameter of the test helper functions, for example:
/**
* @test
*/
public function processed_configuration_for_array_node_1()
{
$this->assertProcessedConfigurationEquals(
array(
array('array_node_1' => array('required_value_1' => 'original value')),
array('array_node_1' => array('required_value_1' => 'final value'))
),
array(
'array_node_1' => array(
'required_value_1' => 'final value'
)
),
// the path of the nodes you want to focus on in this test:
'array_node_1'
);
}
This would trigger no validation errors for any value in the array_node_2
branch.
Note that the $breadcrumbPath
can be even more specific, e.g. "doctrine.orm"
(which would skip configuration
processing for branch "doctrine.dbal"
, etc.).
Also note that you can only traverse over array nodes using the .
in the breadcrumb path. The last part of the breadcrumb path can be any other type of node.
You can traverse through prototype array nodes using *
as its name in the breadcrumb path.
<?php
use Symfony\Component\Config\Definition\Builder\TreeBuilder;
use Symfony\Component\Config\Definition\ConfigurationInterface;
class PrototypedConfiguration implements ConfigurationInterface
{
public function getConfigTreeBuilder()
{
$treeBuilder = new TreeBuilder();
$rootNode = $treeBuilder->root('root');
$rootNode
->children()
->arrayNode('array_node')
->useAttributeAsKey('name')
->prototype('array')
->children()
->scalarNode('default_value')->cannotBeEmpty()->defaultValue('foobar')->end()
->scalarNode('required_value')->isRequired()->end()
->end()
->end()
->end()
->end();
return $treeBuilder;
}
}
If you want to test whether default_value
is set to foobar
by default, but don't want the test to be affected by
requirements on required_value
node, you can define its path as array_node.*.default_value
, for example:
/**
* @test
*/
public function processed_configuration_for_array_node_1()
{
$this->assertProcessedConfigurationEquals(
array(
array('array_node' => array('prototype_name' => null)),
),
array(
'array_node' => array(
'prototype_name' => array(
'default_value' => 'foobar'
)
)
),
// the path of the nodes you want to focus on in this test:
'array_node.*.default_value'
);
}