This commits reduces the execution time of the test WC_Tests_Paypal_Gateway_Request::test_request_url() from about 30s to about 6s (which is still super slow and even after this change this test is still the slowest in our test suite). This test creates several products that are needed to test different scenarios. To make it run faster, the code was changed to create the WC_Product objects without saving them to the database. Just interacting with the objects is enough to this test and skipping the database makes it run much faster. Other tests might benefit from the same technique.
This commit removes unnecessary clean up code form some unit tests. All database changes done during a test are automatically reverted after the test finishes, so it is not necessary to write code to manually remove them. This change simplifies the test code and make it run a bit faster.
This commit removes a bunch of unnecessary cleanup code from cart tests. All database changes are automatically reverted after each test, so it is not necessary to write code inside the test to manually revert the changes that were made. One test method was split into three different methods for clarity and to avoid having to revert database changes manually between each part of the test.
This change makes the tests easier to read but also reduced the execution time of the cart tests in about 15%.
This commit fixes a bug in WC_Customer_Download_Log_Data_Store::get_download_logs() that made impossible to change the order in which the query returned the results. This method accepts the arguments order_by and order, but it was ignoring them and always using the default values ('download_log_id' and 'ASC' respectively).
It also introduces a very basic unit test to cover the method main functionality and to make sure that the parameters order and orderby are not ignored anymore.
It seems that the modified method was inspired in WC_Customer_Download_Data_Store::get_downloads() before the same bug was fixed in #18620.
This commit changes the travis codecoverage from using xdebug to phpdbg, phpdbg seems much faster and gives similar results.
Reason for switching is we have been running into constant timeouts on our codecoverage due to the 50min job limit on travis, which means our codecoverage has not been updated in a couple of months.
* Remove xdebug as it slows tests down, switch to using phpdbg for code coverage.
* Update parameters for phpdbg
* It is qrr not qqr
* Include vendor/bin path when using phpdbg
* Use PHP 7.1 to run phpdbg
* Update phpunit dire
* Include $HOME in phpdbg call to phpunit
* Set no memory limit to avoid out of memory errors.
* Assign timeout group to test_request_url test for paypal and do not execute that on coverage as it causes a memeory timeout. Test needs optimization to run for code coverage.
* @covers usage for methods should be prefixed with ::
This commit changes WC_Tests_REST_System_Status tests to use artificial HTTP responses instead of performing external HTTP requests. With this change execution time for these tests droped from 22s to 3s.
This commits changes WC_Unit_Test_Case parent class to WP_HTTP_TestCase (which extends WP_UnitTestCase). This way all WC core test classes can benefit from the functionality provided by WP_HTTP_TestCase if needed. This is necessary because otherwise test classes can use the functionality provided by WC_Unit_Test_Case or WP_HTTP_TestCase. This change should not affect test classes that don't explicitly call one of the WP_HTTP_TestCase features.
Doing this to speed up the test as an HTTP request to an external server is slow and also because it should fix this test that has been failing on Travis only for an unknown reason.
WP test suite starts a transaction when the test starts and roll it back when the test finishes. So it is not necessary to undo database changes using tearDown().
This commit adds the composer package jdgrimes/wp-http-testcase directly to this repository instead of via composer. Doing this because I couldn't find a way to make this package work on Travis build jobs running older versions of PHP and I don't think it is worth investing much time on it.
This commit changes the WC_Tests_Product_CSV_Importer class to use artificial HTTP responses instead of performing real HTTP requests to a external server to get the images of the imported products. On my local machine, this change reduced the test execution time from 3257ms to 831ms.
As a consequence of this change, this commit also fixes WC_Tests_Product_CSV_Importer::test_import() in all Travis builds. This test has been failing for a few weeks on Travis but not on our local environments. After some debugging, I found out that the test was failing on Travis because of the following error when `wp_safe_remote_get()` was called to get images for the imported products:
```
Error getting remote image http://demo.woothemes.com/woocommerce/wp-content/uploads/sites/56/2013/06/T_1_front.jpg. Error: cURL error 35: gnutls_handshake() failed: Handshake failed.
```
Apparently, the PHP binary that is used by Travis is unable to handle the TLS handshake (see https://github.com/travis-ci/travis-ci/issues/6339) and the test probably started failing when demo.woothemes.com (which is used to download the images for the imported products) switched from HTTP to HTTPS.
Previously, the variable product had 2 variations, but one of them had a term assigned ('large') that wasn't assigned to the parent product. Normally, when variable product is created, parent has all the terms assigned to its children assigned.