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Although I love PHPT files, and I've done my fair share of making it easier to write them in this library, they're very slow, and running them has become a hindrance. I've been fidgeting with the idea of using Pest for a while, and I think it's the right tool for the job. I had to create a couple of functions to make it easier to run those tests, and now they're working really alright. I migrated all the PHPT files into Pest files -- I automated most of the work with a little script using "nikic/php-parser"; this commit should contain all the previous PHPT tests as Pest tests. The previous integration tests would take sixteen seconds, and the Pest tests take less than a second.
29 lines
970 B
PHP
29 lines
970 B
PHP
<?php
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/*
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* Copyright (c) Alexandre Gomes Gaigalas <alganet@gmail.com>
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* SPDX-License-Identifier: MIT
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*/
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declare(strict_types=1);
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use Respect\Validation\Validator;
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date_default_timezone_set('UTC');
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test('Scenario #1', expectMessages(
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function (): void {
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Validator::create()
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->key('username', Validator::lengthBetween(2, 32))->key('birthdate', Validator::dateTime())
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->key('password', Validator::notEmpty())
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->key('email', Validator::email())
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->assert(['username' => 'u', 'birthdate' => 'Not a date', 'password' => '']);
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},
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[
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'__root__' => 'All of the required rules must pass for `["username": "u", "birthdate": "Not a date", "password": ""]`',
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'username' => 'The length of username must be between 2 and 32',
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'birthdate' => 'birthdate must be a valid date/time',
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'password' => 'password must not be empty',
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'email' => 'email must be present',
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],
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));
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