\section{Test First!} Let's say that our most important client has a database and one of the tables in the database is a list of people. Our client tells us: ``We would like to use a web application to display the people in this table and to add, edit, and delete individual records.'' Not a complicated story, but it will cover the CRUD most developers want to learn first. :) Let's start with the people table that the client mentioned. Since we're keeping it simple, we'll say it's a table in an Access database. The table definition is shown as Example~\ref{example:1}. \begin{example}\label{example:1} The Person Table \begin{verbatim} Name Type Size PER_ID Long Integer 4 PER_FIRST_NAME Text 40 PER_LAST_NAME Text 40 PER_BIRTH_DATE Date/Time 8 PER_WEIGHT_KG Double 8 PER_HEIGHT_M Double 8 \end{verbatim} \end{example} \begin{mybox}{Tip:} This example is bundled with a SQLite database file ``Data/test.db'' that contains the \tt{Person} table and some data, ready to use. \end{mybox} The first thing our story says is that client would like to display a list of people. Example~\ref{example:2} shows our test for that. \begin{example}\label{example:2} Tests/PersonTest.php \begin{verbatim} queryForList("SelectAll"); //test it $this->assertNotNull($people, "Person list is not returned"); $this->assertTrue($people->getCount() > 0, "Person list is empty"); $person = $people[0]; $this->assertNotNull($person, "Person not returned"); } } ?> \end{verbatim} \end{example} Well, Example 2 sure looks easy enough! We ask a method to ``select all'', and it returns a list of person objects. But, what code do we need to write to pass this test? \begin{mybox}{Note:} Save the PersonTest.php into a \tt{Tests} directory. The unit tests are written for the SimpleTest framework (http://simpletest.sf.net). \end{mybox} Now, to setup the testing framework, suppose you have the \tt{SimpleTest} framework installed. Then we need to create an entry file to run the tests. See the \tt{SimpleTest} documentation for further details on setting up tests. \begin{example}\label{example:2a} Unit test entry file, \tt{run\_tests.php}. \begin{verbatim} addTestFile('Tests/PersonTest.php'); $test->run(new HtmlReporter()); ?> \end{verbatim} \end{example} To run the tests, point your browser to the ``run\_test.php'' script file served from your web server. Let's see. The test uses a list of person objects. We could start with a blank object, just to satisfy the test, and add the display properties later. But let's be naughty and skip a step. Our fully-formed person object is shown in Example~\ref{example:3}. \begin{example}\label{example:3} Models/Person.php \begin{verbatim} _birthDate; } public function setBirthDate($value) { $this->_birthDate = $value; } } ?> \end{verbatim} \end{example} OK, that was fun! The \tt{\$this->assertXXX} methods are built into \tt{UnitTestCase} class. So to run Example~\ref{example:2}, we just need the \tt{TMapper} object and \tt{queryForList} method. Wonderfully, the SQLMap DataMapper framework has a \tt{TMapper}class built into it that will work just fine for for us to use in this tutorial, so we don't need to write that either. When the \tt{TMapper->instance()} method is called, an instance of the SQLMap \tt{TSqlMapper} class is returned that has various methods available such as \tt{queryForList}. In this example, the SQLMap \tt{TSqlMapper->queryForList()} method executes our SQL statement (or stored procedure) and returns the result as a list. Each row in the result becomes an entry in the list. Along with \tt{queryForList()}, there are also \tt{delete()}, \tt{insert()}, \tt{queryForObject()}, \tt{queryForPagedList()} and a few other methods in the SQLMap API. (See Chapter 9 in the SQLMap DataMapper Developer Guide for details.) Looking at Example~\ref{example:2}, we see that the \tt{queryForList()} method takes the name of the statement we want to run. OK. Easy enough. But where does SQLMap get the ``SelectAll'' statement? Some systems try to generate SQL statements for you, but SQLMap specializes in data mapping, not code generation. It's our job (or the job of our database administrator) to craft the SQL or provide a stored procedure. We then describe the statement in an XML element, like the one shown in Example~\ref{example:4}. \begin{example}\label{example:4} We use XML elements to map a database statement to an application object. \begin{verbatim} \end{verbatim} \end{example} The SQLMap mapping documents can hold several sets of related elements, like those shown in Example~\ref{example:4}. We can also have as many mapping documents as we need to help organize our code. Additionally, having multiple mapping documents is handy when several developers are working on the project at once. So, the framework gets the SQL code for the query from the mapping, and plugs it into a prepared statement. But, how does SQLMap know where to find the table's datasource? Surprise! More XML! You can define a configuration file for each datasource your application uses. Example~\ref{example:5} shows a configuration file for our SQLite database. \begin{example}\label{example:5} sqlmap.config - a configuration file for our SQLite database \begin{verbatim} \end{verbatim} \end{example} The \tt{} specifies the database provider class, in this case \tt{TAdodbProvider} using the Adodb library. The \tt{} tag specifies the database connection details. In this case, for an SQLite database, we just need the driver name, and the host that points to the actual SQLite database file. The last part of the configuration file ("sqlMaps") is where we list our mapping documents, like the one shown back in Example~\ref{example:4}. We can list as many documents as we need here, and they will all be read when the configuration is parsed. OK, so how does the configuration get parsed? Look back at Example~\ref{example:2}. The heart of the code is the call to the ``\tt{TMapper}'' object (under the remark "try it"). The \tt{TMapper} object is a singleton that handles the instantiation and configuration of an SQLMap \tt{TSqlMapper} object, which provides a facade to the SQLMap DataMapper framework API. The first time that the \tt{TMapper} is called, it reads in the \tt{sqlmap.config} file and associated mapping documents to create an instance of the \tt{TSqlMapper} class. On subsequent calls, it reuses the \tt{TSqlMapper} object so that the configuration is re-read only when files change. The framework comes bundled with a default \tt{TMapper} class for you to use immediately to get access to the SQLMap SqlMapper object. If you want to use a different name other than \tt{sqlmap.config} at the default location for the configuration file, or need to use more than one database and have one SqlMapper per database, you can also write your own class to mimic the role of the Mapper class view by copying and modifying the standard version. \begin{mybox}{Tip:} You can also call \tt{TMapper::configure('/path/to/your/sqlmap.config')} to configure the \tt{TMapper} for a specific configuration file. \end{mybox} If we put this all together into a solution, we can ``green bar'' our test. At this point you should have the following files. \begin{verbatim} Data/person.xml % Mapping file. Data/test.db % SQLite database file. Models/Person.php % Person class file. Tests/PersonTest.php % Unit test case for Person mapping. run_tests.php % Unit test entry point. sqlmap.config % SQLMap configuration file. \end{verbatim} Run the tests by pointing your browser URL to the ``run\_tests.php'' server file. \begin{figure}[!h] \centering \includegraphics[width=0.7\textwidth]{example1} \caption{Green Bar!} \label{fig:diagram} \end{figure}