tddwizard/magento2-fixtures v0.2.0

Fixture library for Magento 2 integration tests

Type

magento2-module

License

MIT

Requires
Requires (dev)

None

Suggests

None

Provides

None

Conflicts

None

Replaces

None

TddWizard Fixture library

This library is in alpha state, that means:

  • it's super incomplete
  • nothing is guaranteed to work
  • everything can still be changed

Wercker Status Code Climate Latest Version Software License


What is it?

An alternative to the procedural script based fixtures in Magento 2 integration tests.

It aims to be:

  • extensible
  • expressive
  • easy to use

Installation

Install it into your Magento 2 project with composer:

composer require --dev tddwizard/magento2-fixtures

Usage examples:

Customer

If you need a customer without specific data, this is all:

protected function setUp()
{
  $this->customerFixture = new CustomerFixture(
    CustomerBuilder::aCustomer()->build()
  );
}
protected function tearDown()
{
  CustomerFixtureRollback::create()->execute($this->customerFixture);
}

It uses default sample data and a random email address. If you need the ID or email address in the tests, the CustomerFixture gives you access:

$this->customerFixture->getId();
$this->customerFixture->getEmail();

You can configure the builder with attributes:

CustomerBuilder::aCustomer()
  ->withEmail('[email protected]')
  ->withCustomAttributes(
    [
      'my_custom_attribute' => 42
    ]
  )
  ->build()

You can add addresses to the customer:

CustomerBuilder::aCustomer()
  ->withAddresses(
    AddressBuilder::anAddress()->asDefaultBilling(),
    AddressBuilder::anAddress()->asDefaultShipping(),
    AddressBuilder::anAddress()
  )
  ->build()

Or just one:

CustomerBuilder::aCustomer()
  ->withAddresses(
    AddressBuilder::anAddress()->asDefaultBilling()->asDefaultShipping()
  )
  ->build()

The CustomerFixture also has a shortcut to create a customer session:

$this->customerFixture->login();

Adresses

Similar to the customer builder you can also configure the address builder with custom attributes:

AddressBuilder::anAddress()
  ->withCountryId('DE')
  ->withCity('Aachen')
  ->withPostcode('52078')
  ->withCustomAttributes(
    [
      'my_custom_attribute' => 42
    ]
  )
  ->asDefaultShipping()

Product

Product fixtures work similar as customer fixtures:

protected function setUp()
{
  $this->productFixture = new ProductFixture(
    ProductBuilder::aSimpleProduct()
      ->withPrice(10)
      ->withCustomAttributes(
        [
          'my_custom_attribute' => 42
        ]
      )
      ->build()
  );
}
protected function tearDown()
{
  ProductFixtureRollback::create()->execute($this->productFixture);
}

The SKU is randomly generated and can be accessed through ProductFixture, just as the ID:

$this->productFixture->getSku();
$this->productFixture->getId();

Cart/Checkout

To create a quote, use the CartBuilder together with product fixtures:

$cart = CartBuilder::forCurrentSession()
  ->withSimpleProduct(
    $productFixture1->getSku()
  )
  ->withSimpleProduct(
    $productFixture2->getSku(), 10 // optional qty parameter
  )
  ->build()
$quote = $cart->getQuote();

Checkout is supported for logged in customers. To create an order, you can simulate the checkout as follows, given a customer fixture with default shipping and billing addresses and a product fixture:

$this->customerFixture->login();
$checkout = CustomerCheckout::fromCart(
  CartBuilder::forCurrentSession()
    ->withSimpleProduct(
      $productFixture->getSku()
    )
    ->build()
);
$order = $checkout->placeOrder();

It will try to select the default addresses and the first available shipping and payment methods.

You can also select them explicitly:

$order = $checkout
  ->withShippingMethodCode('freeshipping_freeshipping')
  ->withPaymentMethodCode('checkmo')
  ->withCustomerBillingAddressId($this->customerFixture->getOtherAddressId())
  ->withCustomerShippingAddressId($this->customerFixture->getOtherAddressId())
  ->placeOrder();