Izveidot aplikāciju, kura ik pēc noteikta intervāla (60 sekundes) veic ierakstu datubāzē izmantojot Laravel freimworka iebūvēto funkcionalitāti.
.. index::
single: Cookbook; Complex Argument Matching With Mockery::on
Complex Argument Matching With Mockery::on
==========================================
When we need to do a more complex argument matching for an expected method call,
the ``\Mockery::on()`` matcher comes in really handy. It accepts a closure as an
argument and that closure in turn receives the argument passed in to the method,
when called. If the closure returns ``true``, Mockery will consider that the
argument has passed the expectation. If the closure returns ``false``, or a
"falsey" value, the expectation will not pass.
The ``\Mockery::on()`` matcher can be used in various scenarios — validating
an array argument based on multiple keys and values, complex string matching...
Say, for example, we have the following code. It doesn't do much; publishes a
post by setting the ``published`` flag in the database to ``1`` and sets the
``published_at`` to the current date and time:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
namespace Service;
class Post
{
public function __construct($model)
{
$this->model = $model;
}
public function publishPost($id)
{
$saveData = [
'post_id' => $id,
'published' => 1,
'published_at' => gmdate('Y-m-d H:i:s'),
];
$this->model->save($saveData);
}
}
In a test we would mock the model and set some expectations on the call of the
``save()`` method:
.. code-block:: php
<?php
$postId = 42;
$modelMock = \Mockery::mock('Model');
$modelMock->shouldReceive('save')
->once()
->with(\Mockery::on(function ($argument) use ($postId) {
$postIdIsSet = isset($argument['post_id']) && $argument['post_id'] === $postId;
$publishedFlagIsSet = isset($argument['published']) && $argument['published'] === 1;
$publishedAtIsSet = isset($argument['published_at']);
return $postIdIsSet && $publishedFlagIsSet && $publishedAtIsSet;
}));
$service = new \Service\Post($modelMock);
$service->publishPost($postId);
\Mockery::close();
The important part of the example is inside the closure we pass to the
``\Mockery::on()`` matcher. The ``$argument`` is actually the ``$saveData`` argument
the ``save()`` method gets when it is called. We check for a couple of things in
this argument:
* the post ID is set, and is same as the post ID we passed in to the
``publishPost()`` method,
* the ``published`` flag is set, and is ``1``, and
* the ``published_at`` key is present.
If any of these requirements is not satisfied, the closure will return ``false``,
the method call expectation will not be met, and Mockery will throw a
``NoMatchingExpectationException``.
.. note::
This cookbook entry is an adaption of the blog post titled
`"Complex argument matching in Mockery" <https://robertbasic.com/blog/complex-argument-matching-in-mockery/>`_,
published by Robert Basic on his blog.