woocommerce/tests
vedanshujain f4e169f21e Moved test specific logic from bootstrap to test file 2020-05-02 00:31:54 +05:30
..
bin Corrected the handling of sockets in the unit test install script 2020-03-13 20:44:38 -07:00
cli Merge percent and cart percent coupon types 2016-12-14 11:07:08 +00:00
e2e-tests Add wait for the 'Proceed' button to become active in shipping task 2020-04-27 16:30:50 -04:00
legacy Moved test specific logic from bootstrap to test file 2020-05-02 00:31:54 +05:30
php Moved test specific logic from bootstrap to test file 2020-05-02 00:31:54 +05:30
README.md Updated the tests readme to explain the purpose of our two test directories 2020-04-30 10:09:42 -07:00

README.md

WooCommerce Tests

Table of contents

WooCommerce Unit Tests

Initial Setup

From the WooCommerce root directory (if you are using VVV you might need to vagrant ssh first), run the following:

  1. Install PHPUnit via Composer by running:

    $ composer install
    
  2. Install WordPress and the WP Unit Test lib using the install.sh script:

    $ tests/bin/install.sh <db-name> <db-user> <db-password> [db-host]
    

You may need to quote strings with backslashes to prevent them from being processed by the shell or other programs.

Example:

$ tests/bin/install.sh woocommerce_tests root root

#  woocommerce_tests is the database name and root is both the MySQL user and its password.

Important: The <db-name> database will be created if it doesn't exist and all data will be removed during testing.

Running Tests

Change to the plugin root directory and type:

$ vendor/bin/phpunit

The tests will execute and you'll be presented with a summary.

You can run specific tests by providing the path and filename to the test class:

$ vendor/bin/phpunit tests/legacy/unit-tests/importer/product.php

A text code coverage summary can be displayed using the --coverage-text option:

$ vendor/bin/phpunit --coverage-text

Writing Tests

  • There are two different PHPUnit directories, tests/legacy and tests/php. The tests/legacy directory contains all of the tests for code in the includes directory, and the tests/php directory is a PSR-4 namespaced directory for tests of code in the src directory.
  • Each test file should roughly correspond to an associated source file, e.g. the formatting/functions.php test file covers code in the wc-formatting-functions.php file
  • Each test method should cover a single method or function with one or more assertions
  • A single method or function can have multiple associated test methods if it's a large or complex method
  • Use the test coverage HTML report (under tmp/coverage/index.html) to examine which lines your tests are covering and aim for 100% coverage
  • For code that cannot be tested (e.g. they require a certain PHP version), you can exclude them from coverage using a comment: // @codeCoverageIgnoreStart and // @codeCoverageIgnoreEnd. For example, see wc_round_tax_total()
  • In addition to covering each line of a method/function, make sure to test common input and edge cases.
  • Prefer assertSame() where possible as it tests both type and value
  • Remember that only methods prefixed with test will be run so use helper methods liberally to keep test methods small and reduce code duplication. If there is a common helper method used in multiple test files, consider adding it to the WC_Unit_Test_Case class so it can be shared by all test cases
  • Filters persist between test cases so be sure to remove them in your test method or in the tearDown() method.
  • Use data providers where possible. Be sure that their name is like data_provider_function_to_test (i.e. the data provider for test_is_postcode would be data_provider_test_is_postcode). Read more about data providers here.

Automated Tests

Tests are automatically run with Travis-CI for each commit and pull request.

Code Coverage

Code coverage is available on Codecov which receives updated data after each Travis build.

WooCommerce E2E Tests

See e2e-tests README to learn how to setup testing environment for running e2e tests and run them.