6

Here is my problem.

I have a test suite that is testing a few classes. My classes all use dependency injection.

I have a class called scheduleHandler that passes all tests. Then my other class ruleHandler has a method that requires an instance of scheduleHandler. I dont want to pass in the real scheduleHandler so I tried to create a mock scheduleHandler to inject in.

The problem I have is that because the scheduleHandler class is tested in the suite above ruleHandler, when the mock is created I get:-

PHP Fatal error:  Cannot redeclare class scheduleHandler

If I dont use a test suite, and run the tests individually everything is fine.

Anyone know of a way to get round this ?

7
  • $mockScheduler = $this->getMock('scheduleHandler');
    – SteveG
    Oct 12, 2011 at 15:51
  • It works if I change the order in the test suite : $this->addTestSuite('scheduleHandlerTest'); $this->addTestSuite('ruleHandlerTest'); Very strange....
    – SteveG
    Oct 12, 2011 at 15:54
  • 1
    can you put a var_dump(class_exists('scheduleHandler', false)); before the $this->getMock call please? Just to see if my assumption has any merit
    – edorian
    Oct 12, 2011 at 16:12
  • 1
    Can you confirm var_dump(get_class($this->getMock('scheduleHandler'))) gives you something like scheduleHandlerTest_<random hash>
    – Mike B
    Oct 12, 2011 at 16:47
  • @Mike B: Yeap I do get that result:- object(Mock_scheduleHandler_47ab6dd0)#208 (3) { ["invocationMocker:protected"]=> NULL ["_observer:private"]=> array(0) { } ["_db:private"]=> NULL }
    – SteveG
    Oct 13, 2011 at 7:19

3 Answers 3

5

My best guess so far:

var_dump(class_exists('scheduleHandler', false)); 

returns false for you. That means the class doesn't exist yet. Now if you autoloader doesn't find the class when phpunit is trying to extend from it phpunit will create the class it's self.

If you later down the road then require the REAL class from somewhere those to classes will collide.

To test this make sure you have required your REAL scheduleHandler class BEFORE creating the mock object.

4
  • Yes, as mentioned previously, it does work with the real scheduleHandler being above the ruleHandler (which has the mock) in the test suite. I'm not using an autoloader with these tests. It does all work, but I dont like how it breaks if the order is changed. Cheers
    – SteveG
    Oct 13, 2011 at 15:44
  • So my suggestion is to require_once the real class before creating the mock. --- There is pretty much nothing else you can that i know of to avoid this behavior.
    – edorian
    Oct 14, 2011 at 7:23
  • Yeah, thats about all I can do. I will revisit this and try and work out what is causing the re-declare when I have more time. Thanks for everyone's input !
    – SteveG
    Oct 14, 2011 at 9:44
  • 1
    The redeclaration is caused exactly as edorian stated: you are manually including the class's module after telling PHPUnit to declare the class itself (by calling getMock() before the class exists). An autoloader will save you so much effort and headache, it's just plain silly not to use one. :) Oct 19, 2011 at 2:35
3

Try using namespaces in Mock creation. If you don't use them in your project code then hopefully it will override global namespace and not cause conflict

$this->getMock('\SomeTestingFramework\SomeTestClass\scheduleHandler');

0

Try $this->getMock('scheduleHandler', array(), array(), '', false). That will cause PHPUnit to skip calling scheduleHandler::__construct, which probably caused the error by loading a class twice.

5
  • Nope, no difference. PHP Fatal error: Cannot redeclare class scheduleHandler in /var/www/fleetManagement/models/scheduleHandler.class.php
    – SteveG
    Oct 13, 2011 at 7:22
  • Could you put something like echo '!!!'; die; after the getMock call, to see if that line causes the fatal error, or if it happens later?
    – Tgr
    Oct 13, 2011 at 9:25
  • The above doesnt get echoed out, the fatal error happens first.
    – SteveG
    Oct 13, 2011 at 15:53
  • That is weird - with the fifth paramter set to false, getMock() should not invoke anything in your code, so it should not be able to result in a fatal error. Maybe you are using a very old version of PHPUnit which does not have that option - could you check phpunit --version? You could also try calling $this->getMock('scheduleHandler', array(), array(), '', false, false, false) to disable autoloading and calling __clone - neither should be relevant here, but worth a try.
    – Tgr
    Oct 16, 2011 at 8:41
  • Thanks. I tried that, and its just the same. Here is the version output :- PHPUnit 3.5.15 by Sebastian Bergmann.
    – SteveG
    Oct 18, 2011 at 8:02

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