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.. index::
   single: Tests

Testing

Whenever you write a new line of code, you also potentially add new bugs. To build better and more reliable applications, you should test your code using both functional and unit tests.

The PHPUnit Testing Framework

Symfony integrates with an independent library - called PHPUnit - to give you a rich testing framework. This article won't cover PHPUnit itself, but it has its own excellent documentation.

Note

It's recommended to use the latest stable PHPUnit version, installed as PHAR.

Each test - whether it's a unit test or a functional test - is a PHP class that should live in the tests/ directory of your application. If you follow this rule, then you can run all of your application's tests with the following command:

$ phpunit

PHPunit is configured by the phpunit.xml.dist file in the root of your Symfony application.

Tip

Code coverage can be generated with the --coverage-* options, see the help information that is shown when using --help for more information.

.. index::
   single: Tests; Unit tests

Unit Tests

A unit test is a test against a single PHP class, also called a unit. If you want to test the overall behavior of your application, see the section about Functional Tests.

Writing Symfony unit tests is no different from writing standard PHPUnit unit tests. Suppose, for example, that you have an incredibly simple class called Calculator in the Util/ directory of the app bundle:

// src/AppBundle/Util/Calculator.php
namespace AppBundle\Util;

class Calculator
{
    public function add($a, $b)
    {
        return $a + $b;
    }
}

To test this, create a CalculatorTest file in the tests/AppBundle/Util directory of your application:

// tests/AppBundle/Util/CalculatorTest.php
namespace Tests\AppBundle\Util;

use AppBundle\Util\Calculator;

class CalculatorTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
{
    public function testAdd()
    {
        $calc = new Calculator();
        $result = $calc->add(30, 12);

        // assert that your calculator added the numbers correctly!
        $this->assertEquals(42, $result);
    }
}

Note

By convention, the tests/AppBundle directory should replicate the directory of your bundle for unit tests. So, if you're testing a class in the src/AppBundle/Util/ directory, put the test in the tests/AppBundle/Util/ directory.

Just like in your real application - autoloading is automatically enabled via the app/autoload.php file (as configured by default in the phpunit.xml.dist file).

Running tests for a given file or directory is also very easy:

# run all tests of the application
$ phpunit

# run all tests in the Util directory
$ phpunit tests/AppBundle/Util

# run tests for the Calculator class
$ phpunit tests/AppBundle/Util/CalculatorTest.php

# run all tests for the entire Bundle
$ phpunit tests/AppBundle/
.. index::
   single: Tests; Functional tests

Functional Tests

Functional tests check the integration of the different layers of an application (from the routing to the views). They are no different from unit tests as far as PHPUnit is concerned, but they have a very specific workflow:

  • Make a request;
  • Test the response;
  • Click on a link or submit a form;
  • Test the response;
  • Rinse and repeat.

Your First Functional Test

Functional tests are simple PHP files that typically live in the tests/AppBundle/Controller directory for your bundle. If you want to test the pages handled by your PostController class, start by creating a new PostControllerTest.php file that extends a special WebTestCase class.

As an example, a test could look like this:

// tests/AppBundle/Controller/PostControllerTest.php
namespace Tests\AppBundle\Controller;

use Symfony\Bundle\FrameworkBundle\Test\WebTestCase;

class PostControllerTest extends WebTestCase
{
    public function testShowPost()
    {
        $client = static::createClient();

        $crawler = $client->request('GET', '/post/hello-world');

        $this->assertGreaterThan(
            0,
            $crawler->filter('html:contains("Hello World")')->count()
        );
    }
}

Tip

To run your functional tests, the WebTestCase class bootstraps the kernel of your application. In most cases, this happens automatically. However, if your kernel is in a non-standard directory, you'll need to modify your phpunit.xml.dist file to set the KERNEL_DIR environment variable to the directory of your kernel:

<?xml version="1.0" charset="utf-8" ?>
<phpunit>
    <php>
        <server name="KERNEL_DIR" value="/path/to/your/app/" />
    </php>
    <!-- ... -->
</phpunit>

The createClient() method returns a client, which is like a browser that you'll use to crawl your site:

$crawler = $client->request('GET', '/post/hello-world');

The request() method (read :ref:`more about the request method <testing-request-method-sidebar>`) returns a :class:`Symfony\\Component\\DomCrawler\\Crawler` object which can be used to select elements in the response, click on links and submit forms.

Tip

The Crawler only works when the response is an XML or an HTML document. To get the raw content response, call $client->getResponse()->getContent().

Click on a link by first selecting it with the crawler using either an XPath expression or a CSS selector, then use the client to click on it. For example:

$link = $crawler
    ->filter('a:contains("Greet")') // find all links with the text "Greet"
    ->eq(1) // select the second link in the list
    ->link()
;

// and click it
$crawler = $client->click($link);

Submitting a form is very similar: select a form button, optionally override some form values and submit the corresponding form:

$form = $crawler->selectButton('submit')->form();

// set some values
$form['name'] = 'Lucas';
$form['form_name[subject]'] = 'Hey there!';

// submit the form
$crawler = $client->submit($form);

Tip

The form can also handle uploads and contains methods to fill in different types of form fields (e.g. select() and tick()). For details, see the Forms section below.

Now that you can easily navigate through an application, use assertions to test that it actually does what you expect it to. Use the Crawler to make assertions on the DOM:

// Assert that the response matches a given CSS selector.
$this->assertGreaterThan(0, $crawler->filter('h1')->count());

Or test against the response content directly if you just want to assert that the content contains some text or in case that the response is not an XML/HTML document:

$this->assertContains(
    'Hello World',
    $client->getResponse()->getContent()
);
.. index::
   single: Tests; Assertions

Useful Assertions

To get you started faster, here is a list of the most common and useful test assertions:

use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response;

// ...

// Assert that there is at least one h2 tag
// with the class "subtitle"
$this->assertGreaterThan(
    0,
    $crawler->filter('h2.subtitle')->count()
);

// Assert that there are exactly 4 h2 tags on the page
$this->assertCount(4, $crawler->filter('h2'));

// Assert that the "Content-Type" header is "application/json"
$this->assertTrue(
    $client->getResponse()->headers->contains(
        'Content-Type',
        'application/json'
    ),
    'the "Content-Type" header is "application/json"' // optional message shown on failure
);

// Assert that the response content contains a string
$this->assertContains('foo', $client->getResponse()->getContent());
// ...or matches a regex
$this->assertRegExp('/foo(bar)?/', $client->getResponse()->getContent());

// Assert that the response status code is 2xx
$this->assertTrue($client->getResponse()->isSuccessful(), 'response status is 2xx');
// Assert that the response status code is 404
$this->assertTrue($client->getResponse()->isNotFound());
// Assert a specific 200 status code
$this->assertEquals(
    200, // or Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\Response::HTTP_OK
    $client->getResponse()->getStatusCode()
);

// Assert that the response is a redirect to /demo/contact
$this->assertTrue(
    $client->getResponse()->isRedirect('/demo/contact'),
    'response is a redirect to /demo/contact'
);
// ...or simply check that the response is a redirect to any URL
$this->assertTrue($client->getResponse()->isRedirect());
.. index::
   single: Tests; Client

Working with the Test Client

The test client simulates an HTTP client like a browser and makes requests into your Symfony application:

$crawler = $client->request('GET', '/post/hello-world');

The request() method takes the HTTP method and a URL as arguments and returns a Crawler instance.

Tip

Hardcoding the request URLs is a best practice for functional tests. If the test generates URLs using the Symfony router, it won't detect any change made to the application URLs which may impact the end users.

More about the request() Method:

The full signature of the request() method is:

request(
    $method,
    $uri,
    array $parameters = array(),
    array $files = array(),
    array $server = array(),
    $content = null,
    $changeHistory = true
)

The server array is the raw values that you'd expect to normally find in the PHP $_SERVER superglobal. For example, to set the Content-Type, Referer and X-Requested-With HTTP headers, you'd pass the following (mind the HTTP_ prefix for non standard headers):

$client->request(
    'GET',
    '/post/hello-world',
    array(),
    array(),
    array(
        'CONTENT_TYPE'          => 'application/json',
        'HTTP_REFERER'          => '/foo/bar',
        'HTTP_X-Requested-With' => 'XMLHttpRequest',
    )
);

Use the crawler to find DOM elements in the response. These elements can then be used to click on links and submit forms:

$link = $crawler->selectLink('Go elsewhere...')->link();
$crawler = $client->click($link);

$form = $crawler->selectButton('validate')->form();
$crawler = $client->submit($form, array('name' => 'Fabien'));

The click() and submit() methods both return a Crawler object. These methods are the best way to browse your application as it takes care of a lot of things for you, like detecting the HTTP method from a form and giving you a nice API for uploading files.

Tip

You will learn more about the Link and Form objects in the :ref:`Crawler <testing-crawler>` section below.

The request() method can also be used to simulate form submissions directly or perform more complex requests. Some useful examples:

// Directly submit a form (but using the Crawler is easier!)
$client->request('POST', '/submit', array('name' => 'Fabien'));

// Submit a raw JSON string in the request body
$client->request(
    'POST',
    '/submit',
    array(),
    array(),
    array('CONTENT_TYPE' => 'application/json'),
    '{"name":"Fabien"}'
);

// Form submission with a file upload
use Symfony\Component\HttpFoundation\File\UploadedFile;

$photo = new UploadedFile(
    '/path/to/photo.jpg',
    'photo.jpg',
    'image/jpeg',
    123
);
$client->request(
    'POST',
    '/submit',
    array('name' => 'Fabien'),
    array('photo' => $photo)
);

// Perform a DELETE request and pass HTTP headers
$client->request(
    'DELETE',
    '/post/12',
    array(),
    array(),
    array('PHP_AUTH_USER' => 'username', 'PHP_AUTH_PW' => 'pa$$word')
);

Last but not least, you can force each request to be executed in its own PHP process to avoid any side-effects when working with several clients in the same script:

$client->insulate();

Browsing

The Client supports many operations that can be done in a real browser:

$client->back();
$client->forward();
$client->reload();

// Clears all cookies and the history
$client->restart();

Accessing Internal Objects

If you use the client to test your application, you might want to access the client's internal objects:

$history = $client->getHistory();
$cookieJar = $client->getCookieJar();

You can also get the objects related to the latest request:

// the HttpKernel request instance
$request = $client->getRequest();

// the BrowserKit request instance
$request = $client->getInternalRequest();

// the HttpKernel response instance
$response = $client->getResponse();

// the BrowserKit response instance
$response = $client->getInternalResponse();

$crawler = $client->getCrawler();

Accessing the Container

It's highly recommended that a functional test only tests the response. But under certain very rare circumstances, you might want to access some internal objects to write assertions. In such cases, you can access the Dependency Injection Container:

// will be the same container used in your test, unless you're using
// $client->insulate() or using real HTTP requests to test your application
$container = $client->getContainer();

For a list of services available in your application, use the debug:container command.

Tip

If the information you need to check is available from the profiler, use it instead.

Accessing the Profiler Data

On each request, you can enable the Symfony profiler to collect data about the internal handling of that request. For example, the profiler could be used to verify that a given page executes less than a certain number of database queries when loading.

To get the Profiler for the last request, do the following:

// enable the profiler for the very next request
$client->enableProfiler();

$crawler = $client->request('GET', '/profiler');

// get the profile
$profile = $client->getProfile();

For specific details on using the profiler inside a test, see the :doc:`/testing/profiling` article.

Redirecting

When a request returns a redirect response, the client does not follow it automatically. You can examine the response and force a redirection afterwards with the followRedirect() method:

$crawler = $client->followRedirect();

If you want the client to automatically follow all redirects, you can force them by calling the followRedirects() method before performing the request:

$client->followRedirects();

If you pass false to the followRedirects() method, the redirects will no longer be followed:

$client->followRedirects(false);
.. index::
   single: Tests; Crawler

The Crawler

A Crawler instance is returned each time you make a request with the Client. It allows you to traverse HTML documents, select nodes, find links and forms.

Traversing

Like jQuery, the Crawler has methods to traverse the DOM of an HTML/XML document. For example, the following finds all input[type=submit] elements, selects the last one on the page, and then selects its immediate parent element:

$newCrawler = $crawler->filter('input[type=submit]')
    ->last()
    ->parents()
    ->first()
;

Many other methods are also available:

filter('h1.title')
Nodes that match the CSS selector.
filterXpath('h1')
Nodes that match the XPath expression.
eq(1)
Node for the specified index.
first()
First node.
last()
Last node.
siblings()
Siblings.
nextAll()
All following siblings.
previousAll()
All preceding siblings.
parents()
Returns the parent nodes.
children()
Returns children nodes.
reduce($lambda)
Nodes for which the callable does not return false.

Since each of these methods returns a new Crawler instance, you can narrow down your node selection by chaining the method calls:

$crawler
    ->filter('h1')
    ->reduce(function ($node, $i) {
        if (!$node->getAttribute('class')) {
            return false;
        }
    })
    ->first()
;

Tip

Use the count() function to get the number of nodes stored in a Crawler: count($crawler)

Extracting Information

The Crawler can extract information from the nodes:

// Returns the attribute value for the first node
$crawler->attr('class');

// Returns the node value for the first node
$crawler->text();

// Extracts an array of attributes for all nodes
// (_text returns the node value)
// returns an array for each element in crawler,
// each with the value and href
$info = $crawler->extract(array('_text', 'href'));

// Executes a lambda for each node and return an array of results
$data = $crawler->each(function ($node, $i) {
    return $node->attr('href');
});

Links

To select links, you can use the traversing methods above or the convenient selectLink() shortcut:

$crawler->selectLink('Click here');

This selects all links that contain the given text, or clickable images for which the alt attribute contains the given text. Like the other filtering methods, this returns another Crawler object.

Once you've selected a link, you have access to a special Link object, which has helpful methods specific to links (such as getMethod() and getUri()). To click on the link, use the Client's click() method and pass it a Link object:

$link = $crawler->selectLink('Click here')->link();

$client->click($link);

Forms

Forms can be selected using their buttons, which can be selected with the selectButton() method, just like links:

$buttonCrawlerNode = $crawler->selectButton('submit');

Note

Notice that you select form buttons and not forms as a form can have several buttons; if you use the traversing API, keep in mind that you must look for a button.

The selectButton() method can select button tags and submit input tags. It uses several parts of the buttons to find them:

  • The value attribute value;
  • The id or alt attribute value for images;
  • The id or name attribute value for button tags.

Once you have a Crawler representing a button, call the form() method to get a Form instance for the form wrapping the button node:

$form = $buttonCrawlerNode->form();

When calling the form() method, you can also pass an array of field values that overrides the default ones:

$form = $buttonCrawlerNode->form(array(
    'name'              => 'Fabien',
    'my_form[subject]'  => 'Symfony rocks!',
));

And if you want to simulate a specific HTTP method for the form, pass it as a second argument:

$form = $buttonCrawlerNode->form(array(), 'DELETE');

The Client can submit Form instances:

$client->submit($form);

The field values can also be passed as a second argument of the submit() method:

$client->submit($form, array(
    'name'              => 'Fabien',
    'my_form[subject]'  => 'Symfony rocks!',
));

For more complex situations, use the Form instance as an array to set the value of each field individually:

// Change the value of a field
$form['name'] = 'Fabien';
$form['my_form[subject]'] = 'Symfony rocks!';

There is also a nice API to manipulate the values of the fields according to their type:

// Select an option or a radio
$form['country']->select('France');

// Tick a checkbox
$form['like_symfony']->tick();

// Upload a file
$form['photo']->upload('/path/to/lucas.jpg');

Tip

If you purposefully want to select "invalid" select/radio values, see :ref:`components-dom-crawler-invalid`.

Tip

You can get the values that will be submitted by calling the getValues() method on the Form object. The uploaded files are available in a separate array returned by getFiles(). The getPhpValues() and getPhpFiles() methods also return the submitted values, but in the PHP format (it converts the keys with square brackets notation - e.g. my_form[subject] - to PHP arrays).

Adding and Removing Forms to a Collection

If you use a :doc:`Collection of Forms </form/form_collections>`, you can't add fields to an existing form with $form['task[tags][0][name]'] = 'foo';. This results in an error Unreachable field "…" because $form can only be used in order to set values of existing fields. In order to add new fields, you have to add the values to the raw data array:

// Get the form.
$form = $crawler->filter('button')->form();

// Get the raw values.
$values = $form->getPhpValues();

// Add fields to the raw values.
$values['task']['tags'][0]['name'] = 'foo';
$values['task']['tags'][1]['name'] = 'bar';

// Submit the form with the existing and new values.
$crawler = $this->client->request($form->getMethod(), $form->getUri(), $values,
    $form->getPhpFiles());

// The 2 tags have been added to the collection.
$this->assertEquals(2, $crawler->filter('ul.tags > li')->count());

Where task[tags][0][name] is the name of a field created with JavaScript.

You can remove an existing field, e.g. a tag:

// Get the values of the form.
$values = $form->getPhpValues();

// Remove the first tag.
unset($values['task']['tags'][0]);

// Submit the data.
$crawler = $client->request($form->getMethod(), $form->getUri(),
    $values, $form->getPhpFiles());

// The tag has been removed.
$this->assertEquals(0, $crawler->filter('ul.tags > li')->count());
.. index::
   pair: Tests; Configuration

Testing Configuration

The Client used by functional tests creates a Kernel that runs in a special test environment. Since Symfony loads the app/config/config_test.yml in the test environment, you can tweak any of your application's settings specifically for testing.

For example, by default, the Swift Mailer is configured to not actually deliver emails in the test environment. You can see this under the swiftmailer configuration option:

.. configuration-block::

    .. code-block:: yaml

        # app/config/config_test.yml

        # ...
        swiftmailer:
            disable_delivery: true

    .. code-block:: xml

        <!-- app/config/config_test.xml -->
        <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8" ?>
        <container xmlns="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services"
            xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance"
            xmlns:swiftmailer="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/swiftmailer"
            xsi:schemaLocation="http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services
                http://symfony.com/schema/dic/services/services-1.0.xsd
                http://symfony.com/schema/dic/swiftmailer
                http://symfony.com/schema/dic/swiftmailer/swiftmailer-1.0.xsd">

            <!-- ... -->
            <swiftmailer:config disable-delivery="true" />
        </container>

    .. code-block:: php

        // app/config/config_test.php

        // ...
        $container->loadFromExtension('swiftmailer', array(
            'disable_delivery' => true,
        ));

You can also use a different environment entirely, or override the default debug mode (true) by passing each as options to the createClient() method:

$client = static::createClient(array(
    'environment' => 'my_test_env',
    'debug'       => false,
));

If your application behaves according to some HTTP headers, pass them as the second argument of createClient():

$client = static::createClient(array(), array(
    'HTTP_HOST'       => 'en.example.com',
    'HTTP_USER_AGENT' => 'MySuperBrowser/1.0',
));

You can also override HTTP headers on a per request basis:

$client->request('GET', '/', array(), array(), array(
    'HTTP_HOST'       => 'en.example.com',
    'HTTP_USER_AGENT' => 'MySuperBrowser/1.0',
));

Tip

The test client is available as a service in the container in the test environment (or wherever the :ref:`framework.test <reference-framework-test>` option is enabled). This means you can override the service entirely if you need to.

.. index::
   pair: PHPUnit; Configuration

PHPUnit Configuration

Each application has its own PHPUnit configuration, stored in the phpunit.xml.dist file. You can edit this file to change the defaults or create a phpunit.xml file to set up a configuration for your local machine only.

Tip

Store the phpunit.xml.dist file in your code repository and ignore the phpunit.xml file.

By default, only the tests stored in /tests are run via the phpunit command, as configured in the phpunit.xml.dist file:

<!-- phpunit.xml.dist -->
<phpunit>
    <!-- ... -->
    <testsuites>
        <testsuite name="Project Test Suite">
            <directory>tests</directory>
        </testsuite>
    </testsuites>
    <!-- ... -->
</phpunit>

But you can easily add more directories. For instance, the following configuration adds tests from a custom lib/tests directory:

<!-- phpunit.xml.dist -->
<phpunit>
    <!-- ... -->
    <testsuites>
        <testsuite name="Project Test Suite">
            <!-- ... --->
            <directory>lib/tests</directory>
        </testsuite>
    </testsuites>
    <!-- ... --->
</phpunit>

To include other directories in the code coverage, also edit the <filter> section:

<!-- phpunit.xml.dist -->
<phpunit>
    <!-- ... -->
    <filter>
        <whitelist>
            <!-- ... -->
            <directory>lib</directory>
            <exclude>
                <!-- ... -->
                <directory>lib/tests</directory>
            </exclude>
        </whitelist>
    </filter>
    <!-- ... --->
</phpunit>

Learn more

.. toctree::
    :maxdepth: 1
    :glob:

    testing/*