Now @hack class and method annotations can be used to register
code hacks as an alternative to using before_ methods.
The syntax is /* @hack HackClassName param1 param2 */
where parameters will be passed to the class constructor.
If the class name ends with "Hack", then that suffix can be
omitted (e.g. "Foo" can be specified instead of "FooHack").
The "code hacker" is a class that hooks on filesystem events
(using stream_wrapper_unregister) in order to allow for dynamically
modifying the content of PHP code files while they are loaded.
The code hacker class allows registering hacks, which are
functions that take source code as input and return the modified code.
A hack can be a standalone function or a class with a "hack" method.
A few hacks are provided off the shelf. One allows mocking standalone
PHP functions (WP, WOO or not), another one allows mocking static
methods, and there's the one that removes the "final" qualifier
from a class definition. This helps unit testing stuff that would
otherwise be quite hard to test.
This commit fixes all 1533 PHPCS errors that PHPCBF can fix automatically in the tests/ directory. Before this change there was a total of 3106 PHPCS errors in the WooCommerce repository and now there is 1573 errors.
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.