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Running System Tests

This is the quick-start to CodeIgniter testing. Its intent is to describe what it takes to set up your system and get it ready to run unit tests. It is not intended to be a full description of the test features that you can use to test your application. Those details can be found in the documentation.

Resources

Requirements

It is recommended to use the latest version of PHPUnit. At the time of this writing we are running version 9.x. Support for this has been built into the composer.json file that ships with CodeIgniter and can easily be installed via Composer if you don't already have it installed globally.

composer install

If running under macOS or Linux, you can create a symbolic link to make running tests a touch nicer.

ln -s ./vendor/bin/phpunit ./phpunit

You also need to install Xdebug in order for code coverage to be calculated successfully. After installing Xdebug, you must add xdebug.mode=coverage in the php.ini file to enable code coverage.

Setting Up

A number of the tests use a running database. The default configuration uses SQLite3 transient in-memory database, so it works if you can use SQLite3.

In order to change the database for testing, edit the details for the tests group in app/Config/Database.php or phpunit.xml or use .env file.

E.g.:

database.tests.hostname = localhost
database.tests.database = ci4_test
database.tests.username = root
database.tests.password = root
database.tests.DBDriver = MySQLi
database.tests.DBPrefix = db_
database.default.port   = 3306

Make sure that you provide a database engine that is currently running on your machine.

More details on a test database setup are in the Testing Your Database section of the documentation.

If you want to run the tests without using live database you can exclude @DatabaseLive group. This will make the tests run quite a bit faster.

Groups

Each test class that we are running should belong to at least one Group attribute to the test class.

The available groups to use are:

Group Purpose
AutoReview Used for tests that perform automatic code reviews
CacheLive Used for cache tests that need external services (redis, memcached)
DatabaseLive Used for database tests that need to run on actual database drivers
SeparateProcess Used for tests that need to run on separate PHP processes
Others Used as a "catch-all" group for tests not falling in the above groups

Running the tests

The entire test suite can be run by simply typing one command-line command from the main directory.

./phpunit

If you are using Windows, use the following command.

vendor\bin\phpunit

You can limit tests to those within a single test directory by specifying the directory name after phpunit. All core tests are stored under tests/system.

./phpunit tests/system/HTTP/

Individual tests can be run by including the relative path to the test file.

./phpunit tests/system/HTTP/RequestTest.php

You can run the tests without running the live database and the live cache tests.

./phpunit --exclude-group DatabaseLive,CacheLive

Generating Code Coverage

The coverage reports are generated by default after the execution of tests. These reports include a textual overview and HTML reports which can be opened in a browser.

The text file can be found at build/coverage/text/coverage.txt. The HTML files can be viewed by opening build/coverage/html/index.html in your favorite browser.

Alternatively you can use the following command:

./phpunit --colors --coverage-text=build/coverage/text/coverage.txt --coverage-html=build/coverage/html/ -d memory_limit=1024m

This runs all of the tests again collecting information about how many lines, functions, and files are tested. It also reports the percentage of the code that is covered by tests. It is collected in two formats: a simple text file that provides an overview as well as a comprehensive collection of HTML files that show the status of every line of code in the project.

PHPUnit XML Configuration

The repository has a phpunit.xml.dist file in the project root that's used for PHPUnit configuration. This is used to provide a default configuration if you do not have your own configuration file in the project root.

The normal practice would be to copy phpunit.xml.dist to phpunit.xml (which is git ignored), and to tailor it as you see fit. For instance, you might wish to exclude database tests, or automatically generate HTML code coverage reports.