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injected

Automatic mocked dependency injection for testing

What is this?

InjectedTrait allows you to easily create classes with all of their dependencies mocked out for testing purposes.

Why?

The following pattern is very common:

  1. Create a class A with its dependencies (service objects) passed in through the constructor
  2. Use these services in various functions internal to the object
  3. Create tests that mock out each of A's dependencies, asserting that they are called as expected.

A lot of the testing logic ends up being boilerplate for constructing an object. InjectedTrait aims to remove this boilerplate entirely, letting you focus on what matters: the tests themselves.

Getting Started

Use composer to get the latest release (you'll probably only need it for development):

$ composer require sellerlabs/injected --dev

Example Usage

Suppose we're developing a web app, and we want to email users when they sign up. For a simple example, let's assume a user is defined entirely by their email address. When they sign up, naturally we want to send them a thank you email. Furthermore, we'd like to test that the emails are really being sent without actually sending them.

First, let's define an email service:

class EmailService
{
    public function email($address, $content)
    {
        // Send an email to $address with body $content
    }
}

(In a real application, email would send out an email -- we're not concerned with the implementation here, though!)

Let's also define a UserController which handles the extremely simple sign up process:

class UserController
{
    private $service;

    public function __construct(EmailService $service)
    {
        $this->service = $service;
    }

    public function signUp($emailAddress)
    {
        $this->service->email($emailAddress, 'Thanks for signing up!');

        return $emailAddress;
    }
}

Here, we provide the EmailService dependency through the constructor, and use it during our (incredibly simple) signup process.

To test this class, we'll have to do one of two things:

  1. Actually send an email out, and make sure it was sent somehow, or
  2. Mock the EmailService object using something like Mockery and make sure that email is called with the expected arguments.

InjectedTrait allows you to painlessly achieve option 2. Let's take a look:

use SellerLabs\Injected\InjectedTrait;

/**
 * Class InjectedExample
 *
 * // 1. These are helpful annotations for IDEs and language tools
 * @property MockInterface $service
 * @method UserController make()
 *
 * @author Benjamin Kovach <[email protected]>
 */
class InjectedExample extends PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
{
    // 2. Use our trait
    use InjectedTrait;

    // 3. Provide the name of the class to test
    protected $className = UserController::class;

    public function testSignUp()
    {
        // 4. Make a controller with mocked dependencies
        $controller = $this->make();
        $address = '[email protected]';

        // 5. We can access any mocked dependency of the class as a property
        $this->service->shouldReceive('email')
            ->withArgs(
                [
                    $address,
                    'Thanks for signing up!'
                ]
            );

        $result = $controller->signUp($address);

        $this->assertEquals($address, $result);
    }
}

Every class using InjectedTrait is required to have the $className property, which is used to locate the class that is being tested. InjectedTrait provides a single public method, make, which constructs an object of this type, but mocks its dependencies out and saves them as properties to the test class itself.

So, in testSignUp, we're constructing the controller using make(), which gives us access to a mocked EmailService type object called $service. This is because it's defined that way in the UserController's constructor:

public function __construct(EmailService $service)
{
    $this->service = $service;
}

For the duration of the test case, the $service member variable is bound to this mocked EmailService, which allows us to make expectations about what happens with it when the signUp method of the controller gets called. We use Mockery in order to create the mocked objects. There are some annotations in the class comment, which help with IDE autocompletion for these classes since the mock properties are declared dynamically.

This example lives in tests/InjectedExample.php. Feel free to poke around!

The impact of this trait may seem relatively small, but when working on large applications where classes have several dependencies, this makes testing much easier.

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