Introduction
Laravel provides a variety of helpful tools to make it
easier to test your database driven applications. First,
you may use the seeInDatabase
helper to
assert that data exists in the database matching a given
set of criteria. For example, if you would like to
verify that there is a record in the users
table with the email
value of
sally@example.com
, you can do the
following:
public function testDatabase()
{
// Make call to application...
$this->seeInDatabase('users', [
'email' => 'sally@example.com'
]);
}
Of course, the seeInDatabase
method and
other helpers like it are for convenience. You are free
to use any of PHPUnit's built-in assertion methods to
supplement your tests.
Resetting The Database After Each Test
It is often useful to reset your database after each test so that data from a previous test does not interfere with subsequent tests.
Using Migrations
One approach to resetting the database state is to
rollback the database after each test and migrate it
before the next test. Laravel provides a simple
DatabaseMigrations
trait that will
automatically handle this for you. Simply use the trait
on your test class and everything will be handled for
you:
<?php
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\WithoutMiddleware;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseMigrations;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseTransactions;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
use DatabaseMigrations;
/**
* A basic functional test example.
*
* @return void
*/
public function testBasicExample()
{
$this->visit('/')
->see('Laravel 5');
}
}
Using Transactions
Another approach to resetting the database state is to
wrap each test case in a database transaction. Again,
Laravel provides a convenient
DatabaseTransactions
trait that will
automatically handle this for you:
<?php
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\WithoutMiddleware;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseMigrations;
use Illuminate\Foundation\Testing\DatabaseTransactions;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
use DatabaseTransactions;
/**
* A basic functional test example.
*
* @return void
*/
public function testBasicExample()
{
$this->visit('/')
->see('Laravel 5');
}
}
Note:
By default, this trait will only wrap the default database connection in a transaction. If your application is using multiple database connections, you should define a$connectionsToTransact
property on your test class. This property should be an array of connection names to execute the transactions on.
Writing Factories
When testing, you may need to insert a few records into
your database before executing your test. Instead of
manually specifying the value of each column when you
create this test data, Laravel allows you to define a
default set of attributes for each of your Eloquent models using model
factories. To get started, take a look at the
database/factories/ModelFactory.php
file in
your application. Out of the box, this file contains one
factory definition:
$factory->define(App\User::class, function (Faker\Generator $faker) {
static $password;
return [
'name' => $faker->name,
'email' => $faker->unique()->safeEmail,
'password' => $password ?: $password = bcrypt('secret'),
'remember_token' => str_random(10),
];
});
Within the Closure, which serves as the factory definition, you may return the default test values of all attributes on the model. The Closure will receive an instance of the Faker PHP library, which allows you to conveniently generate various kinds of random data for testing.
Of course, you are free to add your own additional
factories to the ModelFactory.php
file. You
may also create additional factory files for each model
for better organization. For example, you could create
UserFactory.php
and
CommentFactory.php
files within your
database/factories
directory. All of the
files within the factories
directory will
automatically be loaded by Laravel.
Factory States
States allow you to define discrete modifications that
can be applied to your model factories in any
combination. For example, your User
model
might have a delinquent
state that modifies
one of its default attribute values. You may define your
state transformations using the state
method:
$factory->state(App\User::class, 'delinquent', function ($faker) {
return [
'account_status' => 'delinquent',
];
});
Using Factories
Creating Models
Once you have defined your factories, you may use the
global factory
function in your tests or
seed files to generate model instances. So, let's take a
look at a few examples of creating models. First, we'll
use the make
method to create models but
not save them to the database:
public function testDatabase()
{
$user = factory(App\User::class)->make();
// Use model in tests...
}
You may also create a Collection of many models or create models of a given type:
// Create three App\User instances...
$users = factory(App\User::class, 3)->make();
Applying States
You may also apply any of your states to the models. If you would like to apply multiple state transformations to the models, you should specify the name of each state you would like to apply:
$users = factory(App\User::class, 5)->states('delinquent')->make();
$users = factory(App\User::class, 5)->states('premium', 'delinquent')->make();
Overriding Attributes
If you would like to override some of the default values
of your models, you may pass an array of values to the
make
method. Only the specified values will
be replaced while the rest of the values remain set to
their default values as specified by the factory:
$user = factory(App\User::class)->make([
'name' => 'Abigail',
]);
Persisting Models
The create
method not only creates the model
instances but also saves them to the database using
Eloquent's save
method:
public function testDatabase()
{
// Create a single App\User instance...
$user = factory(App\User::class)->create();
// Create three App\User instances...
$users = factory(App\User::class, 3)->create();
// Use model in tests...
}
You may override attributes on the model by passing an
array to the create
method:
$user = factory(App\User::class)->create([
'name' => 'Abigail',
]);
Relationships
In this example, we'll attach a relation to some created
models. When using the create
method to
create multiple models, an Eloquent collection
instance is returned, allowing you to use any of
the convenient functions provided by the collection,
such as each
:
$users = factory(App\User::class, 3)
->create()
->each(function ($u) {
$u->posts()->save(factory(App\Post::class)->make());
});
Relations & Attribute Closures
You may also attach relationships to models using Closure
attributes in your factory definitions. For example, if
you would like to create a new User
instance when creating a Post
, you may do
the following:
$factory->define(App\Post::class, function ($faker) {
return [
'title' => $faker->title,
'content' => $faker->paragraph,
'user_id' => function () {
return factory(App\User::class)->create()->id;
}
];
});
These Closures also receive the evaluated attribute array of the factory that contains them:
$factory->define(App\Post::class, function ($faker) {
return [
'title' => $faker->title,
'content' => $faker->paragraph,
'user_id' => function () {
return factory(App\User::class)->create()->id;
},
'user_type' => function (array $post) {
return App\User::find($post['user_id'])->type;
}
];
});