Package Data | |
---|---|
Maintainer Username: | jeffer8a |
Package Create Date: | 2017-06-19 |
Package Last Update: | 2019-01-15 |
Language: | PHP |
License: | MIT |
Last Refreshed: | 2024-11-23 03:02:58 |
Package Statistics | |
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Total Downloads: | 50,699 |
Monthly Downloads: | 419 |
Daily Downloads: | 11 |
Total Stars: | 78 |
Total Watchers: | 4 |
Total Forks: | 6 |
Total Open Issues: | 2 |
This package allows you to create complex model factories in separate classes reusable among your tests classes.
inspired by the Model Factories podcast on twentypercent.fm
$ composer require jeffochoa/factory-stories
If you are using Laravel 5.4 or lower, add the service provider to the app.php file:
FactoryStories\Providers\StoryFactoryServiceProvider::class
On Laravel 5.5+, the provider will be discovered automatically.
Let's say you have to do some tests over articles created with certain conditions like:
// Active articles, from Active Users, with tags attached
You may end creating something like
$user = factory(User::class)->states('active');
$tags = factory(Taxonomy::class, 3)->states('tag')->create();
$article = factory(Article::class)->create([
user_id => $user->id
]);
$article->tags()->attach($tags->pluck('id')->toArray());
... or something like that.
Of course, you can always extract this to its own method in a helper class, but sometimes you may want to have each of these kinds of "stories" in its own class, even more when you need to add some extra methods to generate more complex data.
After installing this package, you'll have access to a new artisan command
$ php artisan make:factory-story SomeClassName
After you run this command you should see the new file under the "database/" directory
<?php
use App\Models\User;
use FactoryStories\FactoryStory;
class TestStory extends FactoryStory
{
public function build($params = [])
{
// here you can add your complex model factories with their relationships
return factory(User::class)->create();
}
// and You can add custom methods if You need to
}
Consider this UserTestClass.php
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\WithoutMiddleware;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseMigrations;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseTransactions;
class ManageUsersTest extends TestCase
{
use DatabaseMigrations;
/** @test **/
public function your_test_method()
{
//
}
}
You just need to create a new instance of the Story Class and call the create() method on it
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\WithoutMiddleware;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseMigrations;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseTransactions;
class ManageUsersTest extends TestCase
{
use DatabaseMigrations;
/** @test **/
public function your_test_method()
{
$article = (new ActiveUserArticleWithTags)
->times(5)->create();
}
}
This will return a collection of 5 items with the object that you return in the build() method of the custom story class.
Laravel 5.4 includes "Real time facades", this allows you to use the Story Class as a facade as well just by adding the use Facades\{YourClassName}
at the top of your file
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
use Facades\ActiveUserArticleWithTags;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\WithoutMiddleware;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseMigrations;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseTransactions;
class ManageUsersTest extends TestCase
{
use DatabaseMigrations;
/** @test **/
public function your_test_method()
{
$article = ActiveUserArticleWithTags::times(5)->create();
}
}