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PHP Reactive Programming

You're reading from   PHP Reactive Programming Build fault tolerant and high performing application in PHP based on the reactive architecture

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786462879
Length 364 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Martin Sikora Martin Sikora
Author Profile Icon Martin Sikora
Martin Sikora
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Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to Reactive Programming FREE CHAPTER 2. Reactive Programming with RxPHP 3. Writing a Reddit Reader with RxPHP 4. Reactive versus a Typical Event-Driven Approach 5. Testing RxPHP Code 6. PHP Streams API and Higher-Order Observables 7. Implementing Socket IPC and WebSocket Server/Client 8. Multicasting in RxPHP and PHP7 pthreads Extension 9. Multithreaded and Distributed Computing with pthreads and Gearman 10. Using Advanced Operators and Techniques in RxPHP Appendix. Reusing RxPHP Techniques in RxJS

Basics of writing tests using PHPUnit


We're not going to go into very much detail about how to use PHPUnit, and instead leave it to its in-depth documentation ( https://phpunit.de/manual/5.6/en/index.html ). For the purpose of this chapter, we should, however, have a quick look at some of the basics we're going to use for the purposes of testing RxPHP code.

There are some basic rules we should follow:

  • All tests for a single class, MyClass, go into a class called MyClassTest, which should inherit from PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase.

  • Each test scenario is represented by a function prefixed with test or annotated with @test annotation. This way it can be auto-discovered by PHPUnit.

  • Each test function consists of one or more assertions using assert* methods (more on them later). If any one of them fails, the whole test scenario (one test function) is marked as failed. All assertions are inherited from PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase.

  • We can specify dependencies between test scenarios using @depends testname...

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