I'm using laravel (4.2) framework to develop a web application (PHP 5.4.25). I've create a repository-interface that was implemented with eloquent-repository, I use that repository inside a UserController:
# app/controllers/UsersController.php
use Gas\Storage\User\UserRepositoryInterface as User;
class UsersController extends \BaseController {
protected $user;
public function __construct(User $user) {
$this->user = $user;
}
public function store() {
$input = Input::all();
$validator = Validator::make(Input::all(), $this->user->getRoles());
if ( $validator->passes() ) {
$this->user->getUser()->username = Input::get('username');
$this->user->getUser()->password = Hash::make(Input::get('password'));
$this->user->getUser()->first_name = Input::get('first_name');
$this->user->getUser()->last_name = Input::get('last_name');
$this->user->getUser()->email = Input::get('email');
$this->user->save();
return false;
} else {
return true;
}
}
}
My Repository implementation:
namespace Gas\Storage\User;
# app/lib/Gas/Storage/User/EloquentUserRepository.php
use User;
class EloquentUserRepository implements UserRepositoryInterface {
public $_eloquentUser;
public function __construct(User $user) {
$this->_eloquentUser = $user;
}
public function all()
{
return User::all();
}
public function find($id)
{
return User::find($id);
}
public function create($input)
{
return User::create($input);
}
public function save()
{
$this->_eloquentUser->save();
}
public function getRoles()
{
return User::$rules;
}
public function getUser()
{
return $this->_eloquentUser;
}
}
I've also create a UsersControllerTest to testing the controller and all works fine, the user was added to the DB. After I mocked my UserRepositoryInterface because I don't need to test the DB insert, but I just want to test the controller
class UsersControllerTest extends TestCase {
private $mock;
public function setUp() {
parent::setUp();
}
public function tearDown() {
Mockery::close();
}
public function mock($class) {
$mock = Mockery::mock($class);
$this->app->instance($class, $mock);
return $mock;
}
public function testStore() {
$this->mock = $this->mock('Gas\Storage\User\UserRepositoryInterface[save]');
$this->mock
->shouldReceive('save')
->once();
$data['username'] = 'xxxxxx';
$data['first_name'] = 'xxxx';
$data['last_name'] = 'xxxx';
$data['email'] = 'prova@gmail.com';
$data['password'] = 'password';
$data['password_confirmation'] = 'password';
$response = $this->call('POST', 'users', $data);
var_dump($response->getContent());
}
}
My ruote file:
Route::resource('users', 'UsersController');
When I run the test I get the following error:
Mockery\Exception\InvalidCountException : Method save() from Mockery_0_Gas_Storage_User_UserRepositoryInterface should be called
exactly 1 times but called 0 times.
Why the mocked method save has not be called?
What is wrong?
EDIT: without partial mock all works fine, now the question is: why with partial mock it doesn't work?
Thanks
[save]
part? It seems like that would confuse the IoC container. I.e., it would return the correct mock if your controller constructor was type-hinted to expect "Gas\Storage\User\UserRepositoryInterface[save]". But it's type-hinted to expect "Gas\Storage\User\UserRepositoryInterface", so the IoC container will return whatever you've previously bound to that interface. You want it to overwrite the original IoC binding, but since '[save]' is there, and it's a different string, I'd expect it will only create a new binding and not return the mock to the test.UserRepositoryInterface[save]
to the mock you've created. But your application code never asks the IoC container to provide an instance ofUserRepositoryInterface[save]
. You can see in the controller constructor that it asks forUserRepositoryInterface
. I'm not sure you can use a partial mock at all for this scenario. I'm curious - why use a partial mock at all? If it were me I'd just mock the whole class and fret no more.