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 -<head>
 -<META http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8">
 -<title>
 -        Extending the SimpleTest unit tester with additional expectation classes
 -    </title>
 -<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="docs.css" title="Styles">
 -</head>
 -<body>
 -<div class="menu_back">
 -<div class="menu">
 -<h2>
 -<a href="index.html">SimpleTest</a>
 -</h2>
 -<ul>
 -<li>
 -<a href="overview.html">Overview</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="unit_test_documentation.html">Unit tester</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="group_test_documentation.html">Group tests</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="server_stubs_documentation.html">Server stubs</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="mock_objects_documentation.html">Mock objects</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="partial_mocks_documentation.html">Partial mocks</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="reporter_documentation.html">Reporting</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<span class="chosen">Expectations</span>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="web_tester_documentation.html">Web tester</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="form_testing_documentation.html">Testing forms</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="authentication_documentation.html">Authentication</a>
 -</li>
 -<li>
 -<a href="browser_documentation.html">Scriptable browser</a>
 -</li>
 -</ul>
 -</div>
 -</div>
 -<h1>Expectation documentation</h1>
 -<div class="content">
 -        <p>
 -<a class="target" name="mock">
 -<h2>More control over mock objects</h2>
 -</a>
 -</p>
 -            <p>
 -                The default behaviour of the
 -                <a href="mock_objects_documentation.html">mock objects</a>
 -                in
 -                <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/simpletest/">SimpleTest</a>
 -                is either an identical match on the argument or to allow any argument at all.
 -                For almost all tests this is sufficient.
 -                Sometimes, though, you want to weaken a test case.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                One place where a test can be too tightly coupled is with
 -                text matching.
 -                Suppose we have a component that outputs a helpful error
 -                message when something goes wrong.
 -                You want to test that the correct error was sent, but the actual
 -                text may be rather long.
 -                If you test for the text exactly, then every time the exact wording
 -                of the message changes, you will have to go back and edit the test suite.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                For example, suppose we have a news service that has failed
 -                to connect to its remote source.
 -<pre>
 -<strong>class NewsService {
 -    ...
 -    function publish(&$writer) {
 -        if (! $this->isConnected()) {
 -            $writer->write('Cannot connect to news service "' .
 -                    $this->_name . '" at this time. ' .
 -                    'Please try again later.');
 -        }
 -        ...
 -    }
 -}</strong>
 -</pre>
 -                Here it is sending its content to a
 -                <span class="new_code">Writer</span> class.
 -                We could test this behaviour with a
 -                <span class="new_code">MockWriter</span> like so...
 -<pre>
 -class TestOfNewsService extends UnitTestCase {
 -    ...
 -    function testConnectionFailure() {<strong>
 -        $writer = &new MockWriter($this);
 -        $writer->expectOnce('write', array(
 -                'Cannot connect to news service ' .
 -                '"BBC News" at this time. ' .
 -                'Please try again later.'));
 -        
 -        $service = &new NewsService('BBC News');
 -        $service->publish($writer);
 -        
 -        $writer->tally();</strong>
 -    }
 -}
 -</pre>
 -                This is a good example of a brittle test.
 -                If we decide to add additional instructions, such as
 -                suggesting an alternative news source, we will break
 -                our tests even though no underlying functionality
 -                has been altered.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                To get around this, we would like to do a regular expression
 -                test rather than an exact match.
 -                We can actually do this with...
 -<pre>
 -class TestOfNewsService extends UnitTestCase {
 -    ...
 -    function testConnectionFailure() {
 -        $writer = &new MockWriter($this);<strong>
 -        $writer->expectOnce(
 -                'write',
 -                array(new WantedPatternExpectation('/cannot connect/i')));</strong>
 -        
 -        $service = &new NewsService('BBC News');
 -        $service->publish($writer);
 -        
 -        $writer->tally();
 -    }
 -}
 -</pre>
 -                Instead of passing in the expected parameter to the
 -                <span class="new_code">MockWriter</span> we pass an
 -                expectation class called
 -                <span class="new_code">WantedPatternExpectation</span>.
 -                The mock object is smart enough to recognise this as special
 -                and to treat it differently.
 -                Rather than simply comparing the incoming argument to this
 -                object, it uses the expectation object itself to
 -                perform the test.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                The <span class="new_code">WantedPatternExpectation</span> takes
 -                the regular expression to match in its constructor.
 -                Whenever a comparison is made by the <span class="new_code">MockWriter</span>
 -                against this expectation class, it will do a
 -                <span class="new_code">preg_match()</span> with this pattern.
 -                With our test case above, as long as "cannot connect"
 -                appears in the text of the string, the mock will issue a pass
 -                to the unit tester.
 -                The rest of the text does not matter.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                The possible expectation classes are...
 -                <table>
 -<tbody>
 -                    <tr>
 -<td><span class="new_code">EqualExpectation</span></td><td>An equality, rather than the stronger identity comparison</td>
 -</tr>
 -                    <tr>
 -<td><span class="new_code">NotEqualExpectation</span></td><td>An inequality comparison</td>
 -</tr>
 -                    <tr>
 -<td><span class="new_code">IndenticalExpectation</span></td><td>The default mock object check which must match exactly</td>
 -</tr>
 -                    <tr>
 -<td><span class="new_code">NotIndenticalExpectation</span></td><td>Inverts the mock object logic</td>
 -</tr>
 -                    <tr>
 -<td><span class="new_code">WantedPatternExpectation</span></td><td>Uses a Perl Regex to match a string</td>
 -</tr>
 -                    <tr>
 -<td><span class="new_code">NoUnwantedPatternExpectation</span></td><td>Passes only if failing a Perl Regex</td>
 -</tr>
 -                    <tr>
 -<td><span class="new_code">IsAExpectation</span></td><td>Checks the type or class name only</td>
 -</tr>
 -                    <tr>
 -<td><span class="new_code">NotAExpectation</span></td><td>Opposite of the <span class="new_code">IsAExpectation</span></td>
 -</tr>
 -                    <tr>
 -<td><span class="new_code">MethodExistsExpectation</span></td><td>Checks a method is available on an object</td>
 -</tr>
 -                </tbody>
 -</table>
 -                Most take the expected value in the constructor.
 -                The exceptions are the pattern matchers, which take a regular expression,
 -                and the <span class="new_code">IsAExpectation</span> and <span class="new_code">NotAExpectation</span> which takes a type
 -                or class name as a string.
 -            </p>
 -        
 -        <p>
 -<a class="target" name="behaviour">
 -<h2>Using expectations to control stubs</h2>
 -</a>
 -</p>
 -            <p>
 -                The expectation classes can be used not just for sending assertions
 -                from mock objects, but also for selecting behaviour for either
 -                the
 -                <a href="mock_objects_documentation.html">mock objects</a>
 -                or the
 -                <a href="server_stubs_documentation.html">server stubs</a>.
 -                Anywhere a list of arguments is given, a list of expectation objects
 -                can be inserted instead.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                Suppose we want an authorisation server stub to simulate a successful login
 -                only if it receives a valid session object.
 -                We can do this as follows...
 -<pre>
 -Stub::generate('Authorisation');
 -<strong>
 -$authorisation = new StubAuthorisation();
 -$authorisation->setReturnValue(
 -        'isAllowed',
 -        true,
 -        array(new IsAExpectation('Session', 'Must be a session')));
 -$authorisation->setReturnValue('isAllowed', false);</strong>
 -</pre>
 -                We have set the default stub behaviour to return false when
 -                <span class="new_code">isAllowed</span> is called.
 -                When we call the method with a single parameter that
 -                is a <span class="new_code">Session</span> object, it will return true.
 -                We have also added a second parameter as a message.
 -                This will be displayed as part of the mock object
 -                failure message if this expectation is the cause of
 -                a failure.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                This kind of sophistication is rarely useful, but is included for
 -                completeness.
 -            </p>
 -        
 -        <p>
 -<a class="target" name="extending">
 -<h2>Creating your own expectations</h2>
 -</a>
 -</p>
 -            <p>
 -                The expectation classes have a very simple structure.
 -                So simple that it is easy to create your own versions for
 -                commonly used test logic.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                As an example here is the creation of a class to test for
 -                valid IP addresses.
 -                In order to work correctly with the stubs and mocks the new
 -                expectation class should extend
 -                <span class="new_code">SimpleExpectation</span>...
 -<pre>
 -<strong>class ValidIp extends SimpleExpectation {
 -    
 -    function test($ip) {
 -        return (ip2long($ip) != -1);
 -    }
 -    
 -    function testMessage($ip) {
 -        return "Address [$ip] should be a valid IP address";
 -    }
 -}</strong>
 -</pre>
 -                There are only two methods to implement.
 -                The <span class="new_code">test()</span> method should
 -                evaluate to true if the expectation is to pass, and
 -                false otherwise.
 -                The <span class="new_code">testMessage()</span> method
 -                should simply return some helpful text explaining the test
 -                that was carried out.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                This class can now be used in place of the earlier expectation
 -                classes.
 -            </p>
 -        
 -        <p>
 -<a class="target" name="unit">
 -<h2>Under the bonnet of the unit tester</h2>
 -</a>
 -</p>
 -            <p>
 -                The <a href="http://sourceforge.net/projects/simpletest/">SimpleTest unit testing framework</a>
 -                also uses the expectation classes internally for the
 -                <a href="unit_test_documentation.html">UnitTestCase class</a>.
 -                We can also take advantage of these mechanisms to reuse our
 -                homebrew expectation classes within the test suites directly.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                The most crude way of doing this is to use the
 -                <span class="new_code">SimpleTest::assertExpectation()</span> method to
 -                test against it directly...
 -<pre>
 -<strong>class TestOfNetworking extends UnitTestCase {
 -    ...
 -    function testGetValidIp() {
 -        $server = &new Server();
 -        $this->assertExpectation(
 -                new ValidIp(),
 -                $server->getIp(),
 -                'Server IP address->%s');
 -    }
 -}</strong>
 -</pre>
 -                This is a little untidy compared with our usual
 -                <span class="new_code">assert...()</span> syntax.
 -            </p>
 -            <p>
 -                For such a simple case we would normally create a
 -                separate assertion method on our test case rather
 -                than bother using the expectation class.
 -                If we pretend that our expectation is a little more
 -                complicated for a moment, so that we want to reuse it,
 -                we get...
 -<pre>
 -class TestOfNetworking extends UnitTestCase {
 -    ...<strong>
 -    function assertValidIp($ip, $message = '%s') {
 -        $this->assertExpectation(new ValidIp(), $ip, $message);
 -    }</strong>
 -    
 -    function testGetValidIp() {
 -        $server = &new Server();<strong>
 -        $this->assertValidIp(
 -                $server->getIp(),
 -                'Server IP address->%s');</strong>
 -    }
 -}
 -</pre>
 -                It is unlikely we would ever need this degree of control
 -                over the testing machinery.
 -                It is rare to need the expectations for more than pattern
 -                matching.
 -                Also, complex expectation classes could make the tests
 -                harder to read and debug.
 -                These mechanisms are really of most use to authors of systems
 -                that will extend the test framework to create their own tool set.
 -            </p>
 -        
 -    </div>
 -<div class="copyright">
 -            Copyright<br>Marcus Baker, Jason Sweat, Perrick Penet 2004
 -        </div>
 -</body>
 -</html>
 | 
