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61 lines
1.8 KiB
Plaintext
Executable File
61 lines
1.8 KiB
Plaintext
Executable File
PHP Regression Tests
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====================
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To run the tests, go to the top-level directory and
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run "./php -q run-tests.php".
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Without parameters, "run-tests.php" will recursively scan through the
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file tree looking for directories called "tests", and run all the
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tests (.phpt files) within (recursively).
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To run tests in a single directory, pass the directory as a parameter:
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"./php -q run-tests.php tests/lang".
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To run one or more single tests, pass them as parameters:
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"./php -q run-tests.php tests/lang/015.phpt".
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The format of the .phpt files is quite simple. There are 6 possible
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sections. Test, Skipif, Post, Get, File and Expect. The Test section
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contains the description of the test. The Skipif section contains
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code that should print "skip" if this test should be skipped for some
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reason (such as an extension that is not compiled in). The Post
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section contains any post data that the script might need. The Get
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section contains any Get data. Note that both the Post and the Get
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sections need to have this data in url-encoded format. The File
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section contains the actual script and the Expect section is the
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expected output, sans headers. Blank lines are ignored in the
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expected output.
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A simple example which takes one argument through the POST method
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and one through the GET and displays these would be:
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--TEST--
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Simple GET and POST test
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--SKIPIF--
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--POST--
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a=Hello
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--GET--
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b=There
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--FILE--
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<?php echo "$a $b">
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--EXPECT--
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Hello There
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Another simple example that only runs if the PCRE extension is loaded:
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--TEST--
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Simple Perl regexp test
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--SKIPIF--
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<?php if (!extension_loaded("pcre")) print "skip"; ?>
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--POST--
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--GET--
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--FILE--
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<?php
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$str="Hello 42 World";
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if (pcre_match('/^([a-z]+)\s+(\d+)\s+([a-z]+)/i', $str, $matches)) {
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printf("%s %s: %d\n", $matches[1], $matches[3], $matches[2]);
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}
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?>
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--EXPECT--
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Hello World: 42
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