Testing & Code Styling ​
Testing helps you and your team build Leaf apps faster by making sure that new features and changes to existing code breaks nothing else. Testing also encourages you to organize your app into smaller, easier-to-manage parts like functions, modules, and components.
Since you might need to setup a project for rapid prototyping and deployment, we don't add any tests to the default Leaf installation. However, we have Alchemy, a user-friendly tool that simplifies your testing, code styling checks, and code coverage reports with a single command.
Docs version
This documentation covers Alchemy v2 and above. If you're using an older version, you can check the documentation hosted here.
Setting up ​
Leaf CLI will always ask if you want to add Alchemy to your project when you create a new project. If you already have a project and want to add Alchemy, you can do so by running the following command:
leaf install alchemy --dev
composer require leafs/alchemy --dev
Once installed, you need to run the setup command to configure Alchemy for your project.
./vendor/bin/alchemy install
This will automatically set up an alchemy.yml
file in your project's root which you can use to configure your tests, linting and github actions. It also sets up commands for testing and linting in your composer.json
file.
Configuring Alchemy ​
The alchemy.yml
file should look something like this:
app:
- app
- src
tests:
engine: pest
parallel: true
paths:
- tests
files:
- '*.test.php'
coverage:
local: false
actions: true
lint:
preset: PSR12
rules:
no_unused_imports: true
not_operator_with_successor_space: false
single_quote: true
actions:
run:
- lint
- tests
os:
- ubuntu-latest
php:
extensions: json, zip, dom, curl, libxml, mbstring
versions:
- '8.3'
events:
- push
- pull_request
You can make edits to this file to suit your needs. The app
key is an array of directories to look for your app files in. The tests
key is an array of configurations for your tests. The lint
key is an array of configurations for your code styling checks. Once you're done setting up your alchemy.yml
file, you can run your test command, lint command, GitHub actions command or the alchemy command to do all of that at once.
leaf run test # Generate/Run tests
leaf run lint # Generate/Run code styling checks
leaf run actions # Generate GitHub Actions
leaf run alchemy # Run all of the above
composer run test # Generate/Run tests
composer run lint # Generate/Run code styling checks
composer run actions # Generate GitHub Actions
composer run alchemy # Run all of the above
Configuring Tests ​
Alchemy uses Pest for testing by default. Pest is a delightful PHP Testing Framework with a focus on simplicity which matches Leaf's philosophy. We are working on adding support for PHPUnit as well.
By default Pest expects a phpunit.xml
file in your project root, but as it's quite annoying to read, Leaf provides a alchemy.yml
file in your project root. This file is used to configure Pest and is much easier to read and understand. The alchemy.yml
file is used to configure Pest and can be used to set up your test environment.
app:
- app
- src
tests:
engine: pest
parallel: true
paths:
- tests
files:
- '*.test.php'
coverage:
local: false
actions: true
app
: This is a list of directories that contain your application code. Alchemy will use these directories to lint your code and also in code coverage reports. If you want to use the root directory, you can just remove the entireapp
section.tests.engine
: The testing engine to use. Only Pest is supported engine at the moment, but we plan to add support for other engines in the future.tests.parallel
: Whether to run tests in parallel. This can speed up your test suite significantly.tests.paths
: The directories to look for tests in.tests.files
: The files to look for tests in.tests.coverage
: Configuration for code coverage.- You can configure
local
to generate code coverage reports locally. By default, Alchemy will generate code coverage reports only on GitHub Actions. - You can also set
include
to include specific directories in your code coverage report. By default Alchemy will just use the directories defined in theapp
configuration.
- You can configure
If you don't want code coverage reports, you can just remove the entire coverage
section.
Code Styling ​
Alchemy allows you to define code styling rules in your alchemy.yml
file. Alchemy linting uses PHP CS Fixer which is a powerful tool that fixes your code to follow standards; whether you want to follow PHP coding standards as defined in the PSR-1, PSR-2, etc. Of course, all of this is abstracted into the beautiful alchemy.yml
file.
app:
- app
- src
...
lint:
preset: PSR12
ignore_dot_files: true
rules:
array_syntax:
syntax: short
no_unused_imports: true
single_quote: true
ordered_imports:
imports_order: null
case_sensitive: false
sort_algorithm: alpha
...
As you see, you can set up your code styling rules in the lint
section of the alchemy.yml
file. All of PHP-CS-Fixer Configurator rules are supported.
lint
: Configuration for code styling checks.lint.preset
: The preset to use for code styling checks. You can use any of the presets available to PHP CS Fixer. The default isPSR12
.lint.ignore_dot_files
: Whether to ignore dot files when linting.lint.ignore_vc_files
: Whether to ignore version control files when linting.lint.parallel
: Whether to run linting in parallel. This can speed up your linting significantly.lint.rules
: An array of rules to use for code styling checks. These rules are the same as the rules available in PHP CS Fixer.
Configuring GitHub Actions ​
Alchemy can also set up GitHub Actions for you. You can configure what it should generate in the alchemy.yml
file. Once you have set up your alchemy.yml
file, you can run the alchemy
command to generate the GitHub Actions files.
actions:
run:
- lint
- tests
os:
- ubuntu-latest
- windows-latest
- macos-latest
php:
extensions: json, zip
versions:
- '8.3'
events:
- push
- pull_request
actions
: Configuration for GitHub Actions. You can remove this entire section if you don't want to generate GitHub Actions.actions.run
: An array of commands to generate GitHub Actions for. The default islint
andtests
, but you can remove any command you don't want to generate.actions.fail-fast
: Whether to stop the workflow as soon as one of the jobs fails.actions.os
: The operating system to run the GitHub Actions on. The default isubuntu-latest
, but you can setwindows-latest
ormacos-latest
or all of them.actions.php
: Configuration for PHP in GitHub Actions. You can set the PHP extensions to install and the PHP versions to test against.actions.events
: An array of events to generate GitHub Actions for. The default ispush
andpull_request
, but you can remove any event you don't want to generate.