FUnit is a testing microframework for PHP 5.3+, partially inspired by QUnit. FUnit was created by Ed Finkler for Fictive Kin.
If you can code PHP, you can write tests with FUnit.
- Simple to write tests and get output – start writing tests fast
- Short, straightforward syntax
- Can be run from the CLI – no web server required
- Fancy colored output in terminal
<?php
require __DIR__ . '/FUnit.php';
use \FUnit as fu; // note the alias to "fu" for terseness
fu::test("this is a test", function() {
fu::ok(1, "the integer '1' is okay");
fu::ok(0, "the integer '0' is not okay"); // this will fail!
});
$exit_code = fu::run();
exit($exit_code);
Will output:
> php example_standalone.php
Running test 'this is a test...'
RESULTS:
--------------------------------------------
TEST: this is a test (1/2):
* PASS ok() the integer '1' is okay
* FAIL ok() the integer '0' is not okay
ERRORS/EXCEPTIONS: 0
TOTAL ASSERTIONS: 1 pass, 1 fail, 0 expected fail, 2 total
TESTS: 1 run, 0 pass, 1 total
See the example_standalone.php
file for more, or try running it with php example_standalone.php
Alternately, if you load standalone_example.php
in a web browser, it will output a very simple HTML version of the text report. If you're running PHP 5.4 or above, you can use the dev server to view it like so:
php -S 0.0.0.0:8000 example_standalone.php
And then open http://0.0.0.0:8000 in a web browser.
-
FUnit::test($name, \Closure $test)
Add a test with the name $name and an anonymous function $test. $test would contain various assertions, likeFUnit::ok()
-
FUnit::run($report = true, $filter = null, $report_format = 'text')
Runs the registered tests.$report
(boolean): Iffalse
is passed, the report output is suppressed.$filter
(string): If this is passed, only tests that contain the$filter
string will be run.$report_format
(string): Default is 'text'. Also accepts 'xunit'.
-
FUnit::setup(\Closure $setup)
Register a function to run at the start of each test. SeeFUnit::fixture()
-
FUnit::teardown(\Closure $setup)
Register a function to run at the end of each test. SeeFUnit::fixture()
andFUnit::reset_fixtures()
-
FUnit::fixture($key, [$val])
Retrieve or register a fixture. Use this in FUnit::setup() to assign fixtures to keys, and retrieve those fixtures in your tests -
FUnit::reset_fixtures()
Clears out all fixtures in the FUnit::$fixtures array. This doesn't guarantee clean shutdown/close
-
FUnit::ok($a, $msg = null)
Assert that $a is truthy. Optional $msg describes the test -
FUnit::not_ok($a, $msg = null)
Assert that $a is not truthy. Optional $msg describes the test -
FUnit::equal($a, $b, $msg = null)
Assert that $a == $b. Optional $msg describes the test -
FUnit::not_equal($a, $b, $msg = null)
Assert that $a != $b. Optional $msg describes the test -
FUnit::strict_equal($a, $b, $msg = null)
Assert that $a === $b. Optional $msg describes the test -
FUnit::not_strict_equal($a, $b, $msg = null)
Assert that $a !== $b. Optional $msg describes the test -
FUnit::has($needle, $haystack, $msg = null)
Assert that an array or object ($haystack
) has a key or property ($needle
) -
FUnit::not_has($needle, $haystack, $msg = null)
Assert that an array or object ($haystack
) does not have a key or property ($needle
). Forgive my grammar. -
FUnit::fail($msg = null, [$expected = null])
Force a failed assertion. If$expected === true
, it's marked as an expected failure -
FUnit::expect_fail($msg = null)
Assets an expected failure. Equivalent toFUnit::fail('msg', true)
-
FUnit::pass($msg = null)
Force a successful assertion. -
FUnit::throws($callback, $params, $exception = null, $msg = null)
Assert that$callback
throws an exception of type$exception
.$callback
must be a callable -
FUnit::all_ok($a, $callback, $msg = null)
Iterate over all the items in$a
and pass each to$callback
. If the callback returnstrue
for all, it passes -- otherwise it fails.$callback
must be a callable
-
FUnit::report($format = 'text')
Output the test report. If you've suppressed reporting output previously, you can use this to output the report manually. -
FUnit::exit_code()
Retrieve the exit code. If any test fails, the exit code will be set to1
. Otherwise0
. You can use this value to return a success or failure result with the PHP functionexit()
.
-
FUnit::set_disable_reporting($state)
If passedtrue
, report will not be output after test runs finish. Re-enable by passingfalse
. -
FUnit::set_debug($state)
If passedtrue
, extra debugging info (including timing and details about assertion failures) will be output. Disable by passingfalse
. -
FUnit::set_silence($state)
If passedtrue
, only the report will be output -- no progress, debugging info, etc. Disable by passingfalse
.
By default, FUnit outputs a colorful text
output, formatted for the terminal. You can also output reports in xunit
-style xml.
The report format is the third parameter of FUnit::run()
:
Example:
// Outputs a colored text report. This is the default format.
FUnit::run(true, null, 'text');
// Outputs xUnit-style xml
FUnit::run(true, null, 'xunit');
The standard text
report format will output as very simple HTML if the test file is loaded up through a web server. You can test this with the dev server if you're running PHP 5.4+:
php -S 0.0.0.0:8000 test_file.php
And then open http://0.0.0.0:8000 in a web browser.
FUnit was designed to not require a separate test runner tool, but it does come with one at bin/fu
(or vendor/bin/fu
if you've installed via Composer). fu
allows you to run tests in a single file, a group of files in a directory, and filter what tests are run.
Examples:
-
fu --help
Get detailed help and information on all options -
fu ./tests
Scan the directory./tests
for files that have "test(s)" in their names, and run those tests -
fu tests.php
Execute tests intests.php
-
fu -d tests.php
Execute tests intests.php
with additional debugging info -
fu --filter="API" tests.php
Execute only the tests in tests.php that have "API" in the name -
fu -s tests.php
Execute the tests tests.php, but suppress all output other than the report
Note: When fu
loads multiple test files, it require
s each one. That means all the code within each is executed. Calls to FUnit::run()
are suppressed, but non-FUnit code (like exit()
calls or require
statements) could cause issues.
If you're using Composer to manage dependencies, you can add FUnit with it.
{
"require": {
"funkatron/funit": "dev-master"
}
}
Note that FUnit has not yet reached 1.0! That means BC may break!
If you install via Composer, you can use the auto-generated autoloader to load FUnit, like so:
<?php
require "vendor/autoload.php"
use \FUnit as fu;
fu::test("this is a test", function() {
fu::ok(1, "the integer '1' is okay");
fu::ok(0, "the integer '0' is not okay"); // this will fail!
});
fu::run();
To install the source code:
git clone git://github.com/funkatron/FUnit.git
And include it in your scripts:
require_once '/path/to/FUnit/FUnit.php';
Alternatively, you can fetch a tarball or zipball:
$ curl https://github.com/funkatron/FUnit/tarball/master | tar xzv
(or)
$ wget https://github.com/funkatron/FUnit/tarball/master -O - | tar xzv
If you're using a class loader (e.g., Symfony Class Loader) for PSR-0-style class loading:
$loader->registerNamespace('FUnit', 'path/to/vendor/FUnit');
If you're using a version older than 0.5, the namespace/class name changed to follow PSR-0 autoloader standards. The base class is now \FUnit
, not \FUnit\fu
. You can still call all your methods with fu::XXX()
by aliasing the namespace like so:
use \FUnit as fu