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Very simple filesystem emulating PHP stream wrapper for use in unit testing with PHPUnit, PHPSpec or any other testing framework. It offers means to test methods interacting with real filesystem without creating temporary directories or file fixtures.

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michael-donat/php-vfs

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php-vfs

Very simple filesystem emulating PHP stream wrapper for use in unit testing with PHPUnit, PHPSpec or any other testing framework. It offers means to test methods interacting with real filesystem without creating temportary directories or file fixtures.

Released under a MIT licence.

For latest release please use tag indicated above.

Prerequisites

PHP >= 7.0

Compatibility

Tested and working on (Linux/MacOs):

  • php 7.0
  • php 7.1
  • php 7.2

There is no reason for php-vfs to not work on php5 and before 1.4.0 those versions where tested with travis. YMMV tho.

Windows compatibility is unknown (should work!)

Installation

Composer

Add a dev dependency on php-vfs/php-vfs to your project's composer.json

{
    "require-dev": {
        "php-vfs/php-vfs": "*@stable"
    }
}

Or via command line:

composer require --dev php-vfs/php-vfs=*@stable

This will install latest stable version of php-vfs as a development dependency, for the latest development version replace @stable with @dev.

PEAR

php-vfs is hosted on pear.michaeldonat.net and can be installed using following commands:

sudo pear channel-discover pear.michaeldonat.net
sudo pear install pear.michaeldonat.net/VirtualFileSystem

To use PEAR installation with your testing framework you need to initialize the autoloader in your bootsrtap files.

require_once 'VirtualFileSystem/Loader.php';
$l = new \VirtualFileSystem\Loader();
$l->register();

Version 1.2.3 of php-vfs was the last one to be released via PEAR, future builds will not be provided through this installation channel.

Usage

Let's assume we need to test a class that reads CSV file and provides SUM() of columns. The unit test class would normally look something similar to following:

class CSVTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase {

    public function test_sumIsCorrectlyCalculated()
    {
        $csv = new CSV('fixtures/sum.csv');

        $this->assertEquals(10, $csv->getColumnSum(1), 'Sum of first column is 10');
        $this->assertEquals(15, $csv->getColumnSum(2), 'Sum of first column is 15');
    }
}

And the CSV file would look something like:

"Column 1","Column 2"
5,5
4,7
1,3

And our CSV class:

class CSV {

    protected $data = array();

    public function __construct($file)
    {
        if (false === ($handle = fopen($file, "r"))) {
            throw new \RuntimeException('Could not read input file: ' . $file);
        }

        while (false !== ($data = fgetcsv($handle, 1024))) {
            $this->data[] = $data;
        }

        fclose($handle);
    }

    public function getColumnSum($column)
    {
        $toSum = array();
        foreach ($this->data as $line) {
            $toSum[] = $line[$column];
        }

        return array_sum($toSum);
    }

}

While above works, providing fixture file to be able to test is somewhat not in line with unit testing principles; it creates dependency on filesystem. We could possibly create the file in our setUp method and then clear it in tearDown, but if the test fails and tearDown is never executed we will leave garbage behind, and we didn't even consider a situation when we don't have permissions to the file system and so on. The other option is to create fixture and keep it together with source files. While this approach is widely used it does mean that if someone changes that fixture your test will fail.

The solution is to create our file in memory - this is when php-vfs comes into play.

Let's consider slightly reworked unit test:

use VirtualFileSystem\FileSystem;

class CSVTest extends \PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase {

    protected $csvData = array(
        '"Column 1";"Column 2"',
        '5,5',
        '4,7',
        '1,3'
    );

    public function test_sumIsCorrectlyCalculated()
    {
        $fs = new FileSystem();

        file_put_contents($fs->path('/sum.csv'), join(PHP_EOL, $this->csvData));

        $csv = new CSV($fs->path('/sum.csv'));

        $this->assertEquals(10, $csv->getColumnSum(1), 'Sum of first column is 10');
        $this->assertEquals(15, $csv->getColumnSum(2), 'Sum of first column is 15');
    }
}

As you can see there is no fixture or file created by our test that could be otherwise left behind. We can control the file contents and existence within the scope of our unit test, thus keeping our test background/environment isolated from external changes.

API

While using low level API for interaction with php-vfs is at its core, a much easier approach is to mock filesystem using provided interface.

There are generally 4 methods you should always use when mocking up the state:

  • \VirtualFileSystem\FileSystem::createDirectory($path, $recursive, $mode) used to mock directory;
  • \VirtualFileSystem\FileSystem::createFile($path, $data) used to mock file and its contents.
  • \VirtualFileSystem\FileSystem::createLink($linkPath, $targetPath) used to mock symlink.
  • \VirtualFileSystem\FileSystem::createStructure(array $structure) used to mock filesystem from array.

Combining above should allow you to recreate any directory/file structure.

Full API documentation is available here.

Behaviour

php-vfs tries to mimic unix filesystem as much as possible. The same conditions must be matched and the same errors will be triggered as if we were interacting via php with real underlying filesystem.

Most of PHP filesystem functions are happily supported by php-vfs as long as the full file URL is passed as argument (using $fs->path()). If you find something not working and not listed below please rise an issue on github issues page.

Known pitfalls

streamWrapper implementations like php-vfs will not work with glob methods for directory iteration - you need to use DirectoryIterator or readdir() instead.

Contributing

Any contributions are more than welcome. Please make sure that you keep to PSR-2 standards and provide tested code.

You are more than welcome to add yourself to CONTRIBUTORS.md.

Changes in 1.1.x

For full diff of changes please go to https://github.com/michael-donat/php-vfs/compare/v1.0.0...v1.1.0

  • added support for symlinks
  • fixed Windows compatibility issues
  • provided method to recreate dir/file structure from array [createStructure method]
  • added permission support where it was previously not available (touch etc)

Changes in 1.2.x

For full diff of changes please go to https://github.com/michael-donat/php-vfs/compare/v1.1.0...1.2.x

Changes in 1.3.x

For full diff of changes please go to https://github.com/michael-donat/php-vfs/compare/v1.2.3...1.3.x

  • ensured compatibility with php7.0
  • ensured compatibility with hhvm

Note on HHVM:

There'a a problem with PHPUnit version on HHVM which means the build started failing - I no longer have the time to spare to chase all the little bits so right now the HHVM support is on YMMV basis.

Changes in 1.4.x

  • confirmed support for php7.0, php7.1 and php7.2
  • earlier versions of php no longer officially supported
  • ensured compatibility with Finfo

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Very simple filesystem emulating PHP stream wrapper for use in unit testing with PHPUnit, PHPSpec or any other testing framework. It offers means to test methods interacting with real filesystem without creating temporary directories or file fixtures.

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