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Using PSR-4 Autoloading for your Drupal 7 Test Cases | How to use the PSR-4 autoloading standard for Drupal 7 Simpletest test cases. |
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2020-02-04 |
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The Traditional Way
The typical way of including test cases in Drupal 7 is to add one or more
classes within a .test
file - e.g. opdavies.test
. This would typically
include all of the different test cases for that module, and would be placed in
the root of the module’s directory alongside the .info
and .module
files.
In order to load the files, each file would need to be declared within the
.info
file for the module.
There is a convention that if you have multiple tests for your project, these
can be split into different files and grouped within a tests
directory.
; Load a test file at the root of the module
files[] = opdavies.test
; Load a test file from within a subdirectory
files[] = tests/foo.test
files[] = tests/bar.test
Using the xautoload Module
Whilst splitting tests into separate files makes things more organised, each file needs to be loaded separately. This can be made simpler by using the Xautoload module, which supports wildcards when declaring files.
files[] = tests/**/*.test
This would load all of the .test
files within the tests directory.
Using PSR-4 Autoloading
Another option is to use PSR-4 (or PSR-0) autoloading.
This should be a lot more familiar to those who have worked with Drupal 8,
Symfony etc, and means that each test case is in its own file which is cleaner,
files have the .php
extension which is more standard, and the name of the file
matches the name of the test class for consistency.
To do this, create a src/Tests
(PSR-4) or lib/Drupal/{module_name}/Tests
(PSR-0) directory within your module, and then add or move your test cases
there. Add the appropriate namespace for your module, and ensure that
DrupalWebTestCase
or DrupalUnitTestCase
is also namespaced.
// src/Tests/Functional/OliverDaviesTest.php
namespace Drupal\opdavies\Tests\Functional;
class OliverDaviesTest extends \DrupalWebTestCase {
// ...
}
This also supports subdirectories, so you can group classes within Functional
and Unit
directories if you like.
If you want to see an real-world example, see the Drupal 7 branch of the Override Node Options module.
Digging into the simpletest_test_get_all function
This is the code within simpletest.module
that makes this work:
// simpletest_test_get_all()
// ...
$module_dir = DRUPAL_ROOT . '/' . dirname($filename);
// Search both the 'lib/Drupal/mymodule' directory (for PSR-0 classes)
// and the 'src' directory (for PSR-4 classes).
foreach (array(
'lib/Drupal/' . $name,
'src',
) as $subdir) {
// Build directory in which the test files would reside.
$tests_dir = $module_dir . '/' . $subdir . '/Tests';
// Scan it for test files if it exists.
if (is_dir($tests_dir)) {
$files = file_scan_directory($tests_dir, '/.*\\.php/');
if (!empty($files)) {
foreach ($files as $file) {
// Convert the file name into the namespaced class name.
$replacements = array(
'/' => '\\',
$module_dir . '/' => '',
'lib/' => '',
'src/' => 'Drupal\\' . $name . '\\',
'.php' => '',
);
$classes[] = strtr($file->uri, $replacements);
}
}
}
}
It looks for a the tests directory (src/Tests
or
lib/Drupal/{module_name}/Tests
) within the module, and then finds any .php
files within it. It then converts the file name into the fully qualified
(namespaced) class name and loads it automatically.
Running the Tests
You can still run the tests from within the Simpletest UI, or from the command
line using run-tests.sh
.
If you want to run a specific test case using the --class
option, you will now
need to include the fully qualified name.
php scripts/run-tests.sh --class Drupal\\opdavies\\Tests\\Functional\\OliverDaviesTest