Dependency Injection na prostym przykładzie w PHP

Cześć! Dzisiaj na tapecie wzór projektowy wstrzykiwanie zależności. Co znajdziesz w tym wpisie:

Continue reading Dependency Injection na prostym przykładzie w PHP

Kahlan – PHP test framework – dla wolności, prawdy i sprawiedliwości

TDD

Czyli coś co chyba każdy z nas robi – a przynajmniej powinien! Kto słyszał o PHPUnit? Albo o PHPSpec? A może Codeception? To dobre i sprawdzone narzędzia które mają jednak swoje minusy. Dzisiaj chcę wam zaprezentować całkiem świeże narzędzie – Kahlan.

Co to kurcze jest?

Jest to kolejny framework do pisania testów. Czym się różni od poprzednich? Na pewno składnią. Czy znacie RSpec albo jasmine? Tutaj mamy bardzo podobną implementację dla PHP, a więc używamy describe-it. Jest to cholernie wygodne i łatwe do zrozumienia. Chcecie przykład*?

Continue reading Kahlan – PHP test framework – dla wolności, prawdy i sprawiedliwości

ESLint – install and config – PhpStorm/WebStorm and git pre commit hook

Hello there! It’s been awhile since last post. Sorry 🙁

Let’s talk about JavaScript linting. If you don’t know what is it – go to wikipedia.

Quick Introduction

Currently we have four linting tools available:

Continue reading ESLint – install and config – PhpStorm/WebStorm and git pre commit hook

Running and debugging Karma in PhpStorm / WebStorm

Hello!

Recently I wrote a post about configuring the Karma with RequireJS and PhantomJS (http://damian.dziaduch.pl/2015/09/12/karma-among-with-jasmine-requirejs-and-phantomjs/).

Today I’d like to move on and use the Karma inside the IDE instead of terminal. Before we start make sure you have installed & enabled Karma plugin and JavaScript debugger plugin in PhpStorm. I’m going to work on my previous example.

Continue reading Running and debugging Karma in PhpStorm / WebStorm

Karma among with Jasmine, RequireJS and PhantomJS

This time something about JavaScript. Everybody likes JavaScript :P.

I’d like to write quick guide how to set up working tests environment.

First, what we need:

Let get all required things by NPM. Create a package.json with content:

{
  "name": "tests",
  "description": "tests",
  "dependencies": {
    "karma-jasmine": "*",
    "karma-cli": "*",
    "karma-requirejs": "*",
    "karma-phantomjs-launcher": "*"
  }
}

Now run the command:

npm install

Great. We have now all required dependencies.

Next thing is to configure Karma. There are two ways of doing this, manually by creating a karma config file or using karma creator (karma init command). I prefer doing it manually. Create a new file and name it karma.conf.js. Here’s my file with comments:

module.exports = function ( config ) {
    config.set( {

        // base path that will be used to resolve all patterns (eg. files, exclude)
        basePath: '.',

        // frameworks to use
        frameworks: [ 'jasmine', 'requirejs' ],

        // list of files / patterns to load in the browser
        files: [
            'tests/main.js', // this is a main file which is booting up our test
            { pattern: 'tests/**/*.js', included: false }, // this is where are your specs, please do not include them!
            { pattern: 'src/**/*.js', included: false } // this is where are your source files, please do not include them!
        ],

        // list of files to exclude
        exclude: [],

        // test results reporter to use
        // possible values: 'dots', 'progress'
        // available reporters: https://npmjs.org/browse/keyword/karma-reporter
        reporters: [ 'progress' ],

        // web server port
        port: 9876,

        // enable / disable colors in the output (reporters and logs)
        colors: true,

        // level of logging
        // possible values: config.LOG_DISABLE || config.LOG_ERROR || config.LOG_WARN || config.LOG_INFO ||
        // config.LOG_DEBUG
        logLevel: config.LOG_INFO,

        // enable / disable watching file and executing tests whenever any file changes
        autoWatch: true,

        // start these browsers
        // available browser launchers: https://npmjs.org/browse/keyword/karma-launcher
        browsers: [ 'PhantomJS' ],

        // set this to true when your want do to a single run, usefull to CI
        singleRun: false
    } )
};

Basically what you need to change is basePath and files / exclude. But that’s not all. We need to create another file which will run asynchronous our test with RequireJS. Let’s place this file in the tests and name it main.js. This is the only file which is included by karma. Content of the file:

// RequireJS deps
var deps = [];

// Get a list of all the test files to include
Object.keys( window.__karma__.files ).forEach( function ( file ) {
    if ( /(spec|test)\.js$/i.test( file ) ) {
        deps.push( file );
    }
} );

require.config( {
    // Karma serves files under /base, which is the basePath from your config file
    baseUrl: '/base/src',

    // dynamically load all test files
    deps: deps,

    // we have to kickoff jasmine, as it is asynchronous
    callback: window.__karma__.start
} );

Variable window.__karma__.files comes from karma.conf.js files section. We need to filter them as we want to require only tests files. The source files will be declared as dependencies of each test file.

Let’s create a example test file tests/exampleSpec.js and put in it:

define( [ 'example' ], function ( example ) {
    "use strict";

    describe( 'example', function () {
        it( 'is defined', function () {
            expect( example ).not.toBe( undefined );
        } )
    } );
} );

We are defining a spec which has source file as a dependency. RequireJS injects it’s to our spec and we can now test it with Jasmine. How cool is that?

Let’s define our example via src/example.js:

define( function () {
    return {};
} );

The last thing which need to be done is to export the variable which will tell Karma where PhantomJS binary is:

export PHANTOMJS_BIN=./node_modules/.bin/phantomjs

Now let’s run Karma:

node ./node_modules/.bin/karma start karma.conf.js

Finally you should see something like this:

karma

If you have any problems with PhantomJS – maybe you need to install some libs required by it. Check it’s website for more info. Other solution is to try different browser – Chrome, Firefox etc. But this can’t be done via SSH… 🙂

Any problems, suggestions, feel free to comment.

 

PHP built in server and sessions

Hi!

Today I was struggling with Codeception tests. I’m working on Vagrant machine which has Apache2 installed.

Thing is that to view the page on my host machine I’m utilising Apache. But in the acceptance tests I’m using PHP built in server. To be specific https://github.com/tiger-seo/PhpBuiltinServer is used. It allows to run server as tests are running and destroy it at the end. It also supports many options.

Acceptance tests were broken. The Tester could not login. After some investigation I found that the issue was caused by read/write permissions for session. By default my Vagrant tries to store the session files in the /var/lib/php/session. As I opened my project in Apache earlier the permissions were given for it. There are two options to solve this:

  • change the path for session files,
  • change the permissions for the current path.

I choose first option. To be specific I changed it only for server used by tests. The extension allows to specify custom .ini file. So my file tests/php.ini look like this:

date.timezone="Europe/London"
session.save_path="/tmp"

Also here’s part of my codeception.yml file:

extensions:
    enabled:
        - Codeception\Extension\PhpBuiltinServer
    config:
        Codeception\Extension\PhpBuiltinServer:
            hostname: localhost
            port: 8000
            documentRoot: .
            phpIni: tests/php.ini
            startDelay: 0

Now session are working in tests 🙂

 

Cheers!