Skip to content

Mock built-in PHP functions (e.g. time()) with Prophecy (phpspec).

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

php-mock/php-mock-prophecy

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

43 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Mock PHP built-in functions with Prophecy

This package integrates the function mock library PHP-Mock with Prophecy.

Installation

Use Composer:

composer require --dev php-mock/php-mock-prophecy

Usage

Build a new PHPProphet and create function prophecies for a given namespace with PHPProphet::prophesize():

namespace foo;

use phpmock\prophecy\PHPProphet;

$prophet = new PHPProphet();

$prophecy = $prophet->prophesize(__NAMESPACE__);
$prophecy->time()->willReturn(123);
$prophecy->reveal();

assert(123 == time());
$prophet->checkPredictions();

Restrictions

This library comes with the same restrictions as the underlying php-mock:

  • Only unqualified function calls in a namespace context can be prophesized. E.g. a call for time() in the namespace foo is prophesizable, a call for \time() is not.

  • The mock has to be defined before the first call to the unqualified function in the tested class. This is documented in Bug #68541. In most cases you can ignore this restriction. But if you happen to run into this issue you can call PHPProphet::define() before that first call. This would define a side effectless namespaced function.

  • Additionally it shares restrictions from Prophecy as well: Prophecy doesn't support pass-by-reference. If you need pass-by-reference in prophecies, consider using another framework (e.g. php-mock-phpunit).

License and authors

This project is free and under the WTFPL. Responsable for this project is Markus Malkusch markus@malkusch.de.

Donations

If you like this project and feel generous donate a few Bitcoins here: 1335STSwu9hST4vcMRppEPgENMHD2r1REK