Let’s take a look at Codeception’s architecture. We’ll assume that you have already installed it and bootstrapped your first test suites. Codeception has generated three of them: unit, functional, and acceptance. They are well described in the previous chapter. Inside your /tests folder you will have three .yml
config files and three directories with names corresponding to these suites: unit
, functional
, acceptance
. Suites are independent groups of tests with a common purpose.
Codeception follows simple naming rules to make it easy to remember (as well as easy to understand) its method names.
<?php $I->click('Login'); $I->fillField('#input-username', 'John Dough'); $I->pressKey('#input-remarks', 'foo');
<?php $I->see('Welcome'); $I->seeInTitle('My Company'); $I->seeElement('nav'); $I->dontSeeElement('#error-message'); $I->dontSeeInPageSource('<section class="foo">');
<?php $method = $I->grabAttributeFrom('#login-form', 'method'); $I->assertEquals('post', $method);
One of the main concepts of Codeception is representation of tests as actions of a person. We have a UnitTester, who executes functions and tests the code. We also have a FunctionalTester, a qualified tester, who tests the application as a whole, with knowledge of its internals. Lastly we have an AcceptanceTester, a user who works with our application through an interface that we provide.
Methods of actor classes are generally taken from Codeception Modules. Each module provides predefined actions for different testing purposes, and they can be combined to fit the testing environment. Codeception tries to solve 90% of possible testing issues in its modules, so you don’t have to reinvent the wheel. We think that you can spend more time on writing tests and less on writing support code to make those tests run. By default, AcceptanceTester relies on PhpBrowser module, which is set in the tests/acceptance.suite.yml
configuration file:
actor: AcceptanceTester modules: enabled: - PhpBrowser: url: http://localhost/myapp/ - \Helper\Acceptance
In this configuration file you can enable/disable and reconfigure modules for your needs. When you change the configuration, the actor classes are rebuilt automatically. If the actor classes are not created or updated as you expect, try to generate them manually with the build
command:
php vendor/bin/codecept build
Codeception has its own testing format called Cest (Codecept + Test). To start writing a test we need to create a new Cest file. We can do that by running the following command:
php vendor/bin/codecept generate:cest acceptance Signin
This will generate SigninCest.php
file inside tests/acceptance
directory. Let’s open it:
<?php class SigninCest { function _before(AcceptanceTester $I) { } public function _after(AcceptanceTester $I) { } public function tryToTest(AcceptanceTester $I) { // todo: write test } }
We have _before
and _after
methods to run some common actions before and after a test. And we have a placeholder action tryToTest
which we need to implement. If we try to test a signin process it’s a good start to test a successful signin. Let’s rename this method to signInSuccessfully
.
We’ll assume that we have a ‘login’ page where we get authenticated by providing a username and password. Then we are sent to a user page, where we see the text Hello, %username%
. Let’s look at how this scenario is written in Codeception:
<?php class SigninCest { public function loginSuccessfully(AcceptanceTester $I) { $I->amOnPage('/login'); $I->fillField('Username','davert'); $I->fillField('Password','qwerty'); $I->click('Login'); $I->see('Hello, davert'); } }
This scenario can probably be read by non-technical people. If you just remove all special chars like braces, arrows and $
, this test transforms into plain English text:
I amOnPage '/login' I fillField 'Username','davert' I fillField 'Password','qwerty' I click 'Login' I see 'Hello, davert'
Codeception generates this text representation from PHP code by executing:
php vendor/bin/codecept generate:scenarios
These generated scenarios will be stored in your _data
directory in text files.
Before we execute this test, we should make sure that the website is running on a local web server. Let’s open the tests/acceptance.suite.yml
file and replace the URL with the URL of your web application:
actor: AcceptanceTester modules: enabled: - PhpBrowser: url: 'http://myappurl.local' - \Helper\Acceptance
After configuring the URL we can run this test with the run
command:
php vendor/bin/codecept run
This is the output we should see:
Acceptance Tests (1) ------------------------------- ✔ SigninCest: sign in successfully ---------------------------------------------------- Time: 1 second, Memory: 21.00Mb OK (1 test, 1 assertions)
Let’s get some detailed output:
php vendor/bin/codecept run acceptance --steps
We should see a step-by-step report on the performed actions:
Acceptance Tests (1) ------------------------------- SigninCest: Login to website Signature: SigninCest.php:signInSuccessfully Test: tests/acceptance/SigninCest.php:signInSuccessfully Scenario -- I am on page "/login" I fill field "Username" "davert" I fill field "Password" "qwerty" I click "Login" I see "Hello, davert" OK ---------------------------------------------------- Time: 0 seconds, Memory: 21.00Mb OK (1 test, 1 assertions)
This simple test can be extended to a complete scenario of site usage, therefore, by emulating the user’s actions, you can test any of your websites.
To run more tests create a public method for each of them. Include AcceptanceTester
object as $I
as a method parameter and use the same $I->
API you’ve seen before. If your tests share common setup actions put them into _before
method.
For instance, to test CRUD we want 4 methods to be implemented and all next tests should start at /task
page:
<?php class TaskCrudCest { function _before(AcceptanceTester $I) { // will be executed at the beginning of each test $I->amOnPage('/task'); } function createTask(AcceptanceTester $I) { // todo: write test } function viewTask(AcceptanceTester $I) { // todo: write test } function updateTask(AcceptanceTester $I) { // todo: write test } function deleteTask(AcceptanceTester $I) { // todo: write test } }
Learn more about the Cest format in the Advanced Testing section.
Codeception allows execution of user stories in Gherkin format in a similar manner as is done in Cucumber or Behat. Please refer to the BDD chapter to learn more.
Codeception has a global configuration in codeception.yml
and a config for each suite. We also support .dist
configuration files. If you have several developers in a project, put shared settings into codeception.dist.yml
and personal settings into codeception.yml
. The same goes for suite configs. For example, the unit.suite.yml
will be merged with unit.suite.dist.yml
.
Tests can be started with the run
command:
php vendor/bin/codecept run
With the first argument you can run all tests from one suite:
php vendor/bin/codecept run acceptance
To limit tests run to a single class, add a second argument. Provide a local path to the test class, from the suite directory:
php vendor/bin/codecept run acceptance SigninCest.php
Alternatively you can provide the full path to test file:
php vendor/bin/codecept run tests/acceptance/SigninCest.php
You can further filter which tests are run by appending a method name to the class, separated by a colon (for Cest or Test formats):
php vendor/bin/codecept run tests/acceptance/SigninCest.php:^anonymousLogin$
You can provide a directory path as well. This will execute all acceptance tests from the backend
dir:
php vendor/bin/codecept run tests/acceptance/backend
Using regular expressions, you can even run many different test methods from the same directory or class. For example, this will execute all acceptance tests from the backend
dir beginning with the word “login”:
php vendor/bin/codecept run tests/acceptance/backend:^login
To execute a group of tests that are not stored in the same directory, you can organize them in groups.
To generate JUnit XML output, you can provide the --xml
option, and --html
for HTML report.
php vendor/bin/codecept run --steps --xml --html
This command will run all tests for all suites, displaying the steps, and building HTML and XML reports. Reports will be stored in the tests/_output/
directory.
To see all the available options, run the following command:
php vendor/bin/codecept help run
To receive detailed output, tests can be executed with the --debug
option. You may print any information inside a test using the codecept_debug
function.
There are plenty of useful Codeception commands:
generate:cest
suite filename - Generates a sample Cest testgenerate:test
suite filename - Generates a sample PHPUnit Test with Codeception hooksgenerate:feature
suite filename - Generates Gherkin feature filegenerate:suite
suite actor - Generates a new suite with the given Actor class namegenerate:scenarios
suite - Generates text files containing scenarios from testsgenerate:helper
filename - Generates a sample Helper Filegenerate:pageobject
suite filename - Generates a sample Page objectgenerate:stepobject
suite filename - Generates a sample Step objectgenerate:environment
env - Generates a sample Environment configurationgenerate:groupobject
group - Generates a sample Group ExtensionWe have taken a look into the Codeception structure. Most of the things you need were already generated by the bootstrap
command. After you have reviewed the basic concepts and configurations, you can start writing your first scenario.
© 2011 Michael Bodnarchuk and contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://codeception.com/docs/02-GettingStarted