PHPSpec is not capable of doing a lot of things you can, for example, do with PHPUnit and Mockery.
Bottom line: I'd say PHPSpec is not the right tool for testing Eloquent.
There is a lot of 'magic' happening inside Eloquent and PHPSpec doesn't seem to like magic, if you feels like you must use PHPSpec for testing Eloquent or the world will shatter then here are a couple things you can do.
Disclaimer: I am not encouraging you to go ahead and use PHPSpec for Eloquent testing, in fact I don't want you to test eloquent models with it, I am only explaining some tricks to work around the situations you will encounter while testing magic methods and black art - in a hope that you will be able to apply them somewhere else when it make sense. To me, it doesn't make sense in case of Eloquent models.
So here is the list:
- Don't use magic getters and setters, use
getAttribute()
and setAttribute()
instead
- Don't use magic calls to lazily loaded relations, i.e.
$user->profile
. Use methods $user->profile()->getResults()
- Create a SUT mock class extending your model and define those
where
methods on it, also define the scope methods and everything else that Eloquent is supposed to do for you 'magically'.
- Use
beAnInstanceOf()
method to switch to the mock and make assertions on it.
Here is an example of how my test would look like:
Product Model
use Illuminate\Database\Eloquent\Model;
class Product extends Model
{
public function scopeLatest($query)
{
return $query->where('created_at', '>', new Carbon('-1 week'))
->latest();
}
// Model relations here...
}
Spec for Product Model
<?php namespace Spec\Model;
use Prophecy\Argument;
use App\Entities\Product;
use PhpSpec\ObjectBehavior;
class ProductSpec extends ObjectBehavior
{
public function let()
{
$this->beAnInstanceOf(DecoyProduct::class);
}
public function it_is_initializable()
{
$this->shouldHaveType('Product');
}
}
// Decoy Product to run tests on
class DecoyProduct extends Product
{
public function where();
// Assuming the Product model has a scope method
// 'scopeLatest' on it that'd translate to 'latest()'
public function latest();
// add other methods similarly
}
By defining the where
and latest
method on the decoy class and making it SUT you are letting PHPSpec know that those methods actually exists on the class. Their arguments and return type doesn't matter, only the existence.
Advantage ?
Now in your spec when you call ->where()
or ->latest()
method on the model PHPSpec will not complain about it, and you can change the methods on decoy class to return, say, an object of Prophecy
and make assertions on it.