Access the database using Doctrine2 ORM.
When used with Zend Framework 2 or Symfony2, Doctrine’s Entity Manager is automatically retrieved from Service Locator. Set up your functional.suite.yml
like this:
modules: enabled: - Symfony # 'ZF2' or 'Symfony' - Doctrine2: depends: Symfony cleanup: true # All doctrine queries will be wrapped in a transaction, which will be rolled back at the end of each test
If you don’t use Symfony or Zend Framework, you need to specify a callback function to retrieve the Entity Manager:
modules: enabled: - Doctrine2: connection_callback: ['MyDb', 'createEntityManager'] cleanup: true # All doctrine queries will be wrapped in a transaction, which will be rolled back at the end of each test
This will use static method of MyDb::createEntityManager()
to establish the Entity Manager.
By default, the module will wrap everything into a transaction for each test and roll it back afterwards. By doing this tests will run much faster and will be isolated from each other.
em
- Entity ManagerFlushes changes to database and performs findOneBy()
call for current repository.
param
$entityparam array
$paramsPerforms $em->flush();
Selects entities from repository. It builds query based on array of parameters. You can use entity associations to build complex queries.
Example:
<?php $users = $I->grabEntitiesFromRepository('AppBundle:User', array('name' => 'davert')); ?>
Available since
1.1param
$entityparam array
$paramsreturn
arraySelects a single entity from repository. It builds query based on array of parameters. You can use entity associations to build complex queries.
Example:
<?php $user = $I->grabEntityFromRepository('User', array('id' => '1234')); ?>
Available since
1.1param
$entityparam array
$paramsreturn
objectSelects field value from repository. It builds query based on array of parameters. You can use entity associations to build complex queries.
Example:
<?php $email = $I->grabFromRepository('User', 'email', array('name' => 'davert')); ?>
Available since
1.1param
$entityparam
$fieldparam array
$paramsreturn
arrayMocks the repository.
With this action you can redefine any method of any repository. Please, note: this fake repositories will be accessible through entity manager till the end of test.
Example:
<?php $I->haveFakeRepository('Entity\User', array('findByUsername' => function($username) { return null; }));
This creates a stub class for Entity\User repository with redefined method findByUsername, which will always return the NULL value.
param
$classnameparam array
$methodsPersists record into repository. This method creates an entity, and sets its properties directly (via reflection). Setters of entity won’t be executed, but you can create almost any entity and save it to database. Returns id using getId
of newly created entity.
$I->haveInRepository('Entity\User', array('name' => 'davert'));
@throws ModuleConfigException
Adds entity to repository and flushes. You can redefine it’s properties with the second parameter.
Example:
<?php $I->persistEntity(new \Entity\User, array('name' => 'Miles')); $I->persistEntity($user, array('name' => 'Miles'));
param
$objparam array
$valuesFlushes changes to database, and executes a query with parameters defined in an array. You can use entity associations to build complex queries.
Example:
<?php $I->seeInRepository('AppBundle:User', array('name' => 'davert')); $I->seeInRepository('User', array('name' => 'davert', 'Company' => array('name' => 'Codegyre'))); $I->seeInRepository('Client', array('User' => array('Company' => array('name' => 'Codegyre'))); ?>
Fails if record for given criteria can't be found,
param
$entityparam array
$params
© 2011 Michael Bodnarchuk and contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://codeception.com/docs/modules/Doctrine2