How to Unit Test your Forms¶
ご用心
This article is intended for developers who create custom form types. If you are using the built-in Symfony form types or the form types provided by third-party bundles, you don’t need to unit test them.
The Form component consists of 3 core objects: a form type (implementing
FormTypeInterface
), the
Form
and the
FormView
.
The only class that is usually manipulated by programmers is the form type class
which serves as a form blueprint. It is used to generate the Form
and the
FormView
. You could test it directly by mocking its interactions with the
factory but it would be complex. It is better to pass it to FormFactory like it
is done in a real application. It is simple to bootstrap and you can trust
the Symfony components enough to use them as a testing base.
There is already a class that you can benefit from for simple FormTypes
testing: TypeTestCase
. It is used to
test the core types and you can use it to test your types too.
注釈
Depending on the way you installed your Symfony or Symfony Form component
the tests may not be downloaded. Use the --prefer-source
option with
Composer if this is the case.
The Basics¶
The simplest TypeTestCase
implementation looks like the following:
// tests/Form/Type/TestedTypeTest.php
namespace App\Tests\Form\Type;
use App\Form\Type\TestedType;
use App\Model\TestObject;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Test\TypeTestCase;
class TestedTypeTest extends TypeTestCase
{
public function testSubmitValidData()
{
$formData = [
'test' => 'test',
'test2' => 'test2',
];
$objectToCompare = new TestObject();
// $objectToCompare will retrieve data from the form submission; pass it as the second argument
$form = $this->factory->create(TestedType::class, $objectToCompare);
$object = new TestObject();
// ...populate $object properties with the data stored in $formData
// submit the data to the form directly
$form->submit($formData);
$this->assertTrue($form->isSynchronized());
// check that $objectToCompare was modified as expected when the form was submitted
$this->assertEquals($object, $objectToCompare);
$view = $form->createView();
$children = $view->children;
foreach (array_keys($formData) as $key) {
$this->assertArrayHasKey($key, $children);
}
}
}
So, what does it test? Here comes a detailed explanation.
First you verify if the FormType
compiles. This includes basic class
inheritance, the buildForm()
function and options resolution. This should
be the first test you write:
$form = $this->factory->create(TestedType::class, $objectToCompare);
This test checks that none of your data transformers used by the form
failed. The isSynchronized()
method is only set to false
if a data transformer throws an exception:
$form->submit($formData);
$this->assertTrue($form->isSynchronized());
注釈
Don’t test the validation: it is applied by a listener that is not active in the test case and it relies on validation configuration. Instead, unit test your custom constraints directly.
Next, verify the submission and mapping of the form. The test below checks if all the fields are correctly specified:
$this->assertEquals($object, $objectToCompare);
Finally, check the creation of the FormView
. You should check if all
widgets you want to display are available in the children property:
$view = $form->createView();
$children = $view->children;
foreach (array_keys($formData) as $key) {
$this->assertArrayHasKey($key, $children);
}
ちなみに
Use PHPUnit data providers to test multiple form conditions using the same test code.
Testings Types from the Service Container¶
Your form may be used as a service, as it depends on other services (e.g. the Doctrine entity manager). In these cases, using the above code won’t work, as the Form component just instantiates the form type without passing any arguments to the constructor.
To solve this, you have to mock the injected dependencies, instantiate your own
form type and use the PreloadedExtension
to
make sure the FormRegistry
uses the created instance:
// tests/Form/Type/TestedTypeTest.php
namespace App\Tests\Form\Type;
use App\Form\Type\TestedType;
use Doctrine\Persistence\ObjectManager;
use Symfony\Component\Form\PreloadedExtension;
use Symfony\Component\Form\Test\TypeTestCase;
// ...
class TestedTypeTest extends TypeTestCase
{
private $objectManager;
protected function setUp()
{
// mock any dependencies
$this->objectManager = $this->createMock(ObjectManager::class);
parent::setUp();
}
protected function getExtensions()
{
// create a type instance with the mocked dependencies
$type = new TestedType($this->objectManager);
return [
// register the type instances with the PreloadedExtension
new PreloadedExtension([$type], []),
];
}
public function testSubmitValidData()
{
// Instead of creating a new instance, the one created in
// getExtensions() will be used.
$form = $this->factory->create(TestedType::class);
// ... your test
}
}
Adding Custom Extensions¶
It often happens that you use some options that are added by
form extensions. One of the
cases may be the ValidatorExtension
with its invalid_message
option.
The TypeTestCase
only loads the core form extension, which means an
InvalidOptionsException
will be raised if you try to test a class that depends on other extensions.
The getExtensions()
method
allows you to return a list of extensions to register:
// tests/Form/Type/TestedTypeTest.php
namespace App\Tests\Form\Type;
// ...
use Symfony\Component\Form\Extension\Validator\ValidatorExtension;
use Symfony\Component\Validator\Validation;
class TestedTypeTest extends TypeTestCase
{
protected function getExtensions()
{
$validator = Validation::createValidator();
// or if you also need to read constraints from annotations
$validator = Validation::createValidatorBuilder()
->enableAnnotationMapping()
->getValidator();
return [
new ValidatorExtension($validator),
];
}
// ... your tests
}
It is also possible to load custom form types, form type extensions or type
guessers using the getTypes()
,
getTypeExtensions()
and getTypeGuessers()
methods.