php-mock / php-mock-prophecy
Mock built-in PHP functions (e.g. time()) with Prophecy. This package relies on PHP's namespace fallback policy. No further extension is needed.
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Requires
- php: >=7.2
- php-mock/php-mock-integration: ^2.2.1
- phpspec/prophecy: ^1.12.1
Requires (Dev)
- phpunit/phpunit: ^8.5.13 || ^9.5
- squizlabs/php_codesniffer: ^3.5
README
This package integrates the function mock library PHP-Mock with Prophecy.
Installation
Use Composer:
composer require --dev php-mock/php-mock-prophecy
Usage
Build a new PHPProphet
and create function prophecies for a given namespace
with PHPProphet::prophesize()
:
namespace foo; use phpmock\prophecy\PHPProphet; $prophet = new PHPProphet(); $prophecy = $prophet->prophesize(__NAMESPACE__); $prophecy->time()->willReturn(123); $prophecy->reveal(); assert(123 == time()); $prophet->checkPredictions();
Restrictions
This library comes with the same restrictions as the underlying
php-mock
:
-
Only unqualified function calls in a namespace context can be prophesized. E.g. a call for
time()
in the namespacefoo
is prophesizable, a call for\time()
is not. -
The mock has to be defined before the first call to the unqualified function in the tested class. This is documented in Bug #68541. In most cases you can ignore this restriction. But if you happen to run into this issue you can call
PHPProphet::define()
before that first call. This would define a side effectless namespaced function. -
Additionally it shares restrictions from Prophecy as well: Prophecy doesn't support pass-by-reference. If you need pass-by-reference in prophecies, consider using another framework (e.g. php-mock-phpunit).
License and authors
This project is free and under the WTFPL. Responsable for this project is Markus Malkusch markus@malkusch.de.
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