Question

I've got a PHPUnit mock object that returns 'return value' no matter what its arguments:

// From inside a test...
$mock = $this->getMock('myObject', 'methodToMock');
$mock->expects($this->any))
     ->method('methodToMock')
     ->will($this->returnValue('return value'));

What I want to be able to do is return a different value based on the arguments passed to the mock method. I've tried something like:

$mock = $this->getMock('myObject', 'methodToMock');

// methodToMock('one')
$mock->expects($this->any))
     ->method('methodToMock')
     ->with($this->equalTo('one'))
     ->will($this->returnValue('method called with argument "one"'));

// methodToMock('two')
$mock->expects($this->any))
     ->method('methodToMock')
     ->with($this->equalTo('two'))
     ->will($this->returnValue('method called with argument "two"'));

But this causes PHPUnit to complain if the mock isn't called with the argument 'two', so I assume that the definition of methodToMock('two') overwrites the definition of the first.

So my question is: Is there any way to get a PHPUnit mock object to return a different value based on its arguments? And if so, how?

Was it helpful?

Solution

Use a callback. e.g. (straight from PHPUnit documentation):

<?php
class StubTest extends PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
{
    public function testReturnCallbackStub()
    {
        $stub = $this->getMock(
          'SomeClass', array('doSomething')
        );

        $stub->expects($this->any())
             ->method('doSomething')
             ->will($this->returnCallback('callback'));

        // $stub->doSomething() returns callback(...)
    }
}

function callback() {
    $args = func_get_args();
    // ...
}
?>

Do whatever processing you want in the callback() and return the result based on your $args as appropriate.

OTHER TIPS

From the latest phpUnit docs: "Sometimes a stubbed method should return different values depending on a predefined list of arguments. You can use returnValueMap() to create a map that associates arguments with corresponding return values."

$mock->expects($this->any())
    ->method('getConfigValue')
    ->will(
        $this->returnValueMap(
            array(
                array('firstparam', 'secondparam', 'retval'),
                array('modes', 'foo', array('Array', 'of', 'modes'))
            )
        )
    );

I had a similar problem (although slightly different... I didn't need different return value based on arguments, but had to test to ensure 2 sets of arguments were being passed to the same function). I stumbled upon using something like this:

$mock = $this->getMock();
$mock->expects($this->at(0))
    ->method('foo')
    ->with(...)
    ->will($this->returnValue(...));

$mock->expects($this->at(1))
    ->method('foo')
    ->with(...)
    ->will($this->returnValue(...));

It's not perfect, since it requires that the order of the 2 calls to foo() is known, but in practice this probably isn't too bad.

You would probably want to do a callback in a OOP fashion:

<?php
class StubTest extends PHPUnit_Framework_TestCase
{
    public function testReturnAction()
    {
        $object = $this->getMock('class_name', array('method_to_mock'));
        $object->expects($this->any())
            ->method('method_to_mock')
            ->will($this->returnCallback(array($this, 'returnCallback'));

        $object->returnAction('param1');
        // assert what param1 should return here

        $object->returnAction('param2');
        // assert what param2 should return here
    }

    public function returnCallback()
    {
        $args = func_get_args();

        // process $args[0] here and return the data you want to mock
        return 'The parameter was ' . $args[0];
    }
}
?>

It is not exactly what you ask, but in some cases it can help:

$mock->expects( $this->any() ) )
 ->method( 'methodToMock' )
 ->will( $this->onConsecutiveCalls( 'one', 'two' ) );

onConsecutiveCalls - returns a list of values in the specified order

Pass two level array, where each element is an array of:

  • first are method parameters, and least is return value.

example:

->willReturnMap([
    ['firstArg', 'secondArg', 'returnValue']
])

You also can return the argument as follows:

$stub = $this->getMock(
  'SomeClass', array('doSomething')
);

$stub->expects($this->any())
     ->method('doSomething')
     ->will($this->returnArgument(0));

As you can see in the Mocking documentation, the method returnValue($index) allows to return the given argument.

Do you mean something like this?

public function TestSomeCondition($condition){
  $mockObj = $this->getMockObject();
  $mockObj->setReturnValue('yourMethod',$condition);
}

I had a similar problem which I couldn't work out as well (there's surprisingly little information about for PHPUnit). In my case, I just made each test separate test - known input and known output. I realised that I didn't need to make a jack-of-all-trades mock object, I only needed a specific one for a specific test, and thus I separated the tests out and can test individual aspects of my code as a separate unit. I'm not sure if this might be applicable to you or not, but that's down to what you need to test.

$this->BusinessMock = $this->createMock('AppBundle\Entity\Business');

    public function testBusiness()
    {
        /*
            onConcecutiveCalls : Whether you want that the Stub returns differents values when it will be called .
        */
        $this->BusinessMock ->method('getEmployees')
                                ->will($this->onConsecutiveCalls(
                                            $this->returnArgument(0),
                                            $this->returnValue('employee')                                      
                                            )
                                      );
        // first call

        $this->assertInstanceOf( //$this->returnArgument(0),
                'argument',
                $this->BusinessMock->getEmployees()
                );
       // second call


        $this->assertEquals('employee',$this->BusinessMock->getEmployees()) 
      //$this->returnValue('employee'),


    }

Try :

->with($this->equalTo('one'),$this->equalTo('two))->will($this->returnValue('return value'));
Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top