Db
Installation
If you use Codeception installed using composer, install this module with the following command:
composer require --dev codeception/module-db
Alternatively, you can enable Db
module in suite configuration file and run
codecept init upgrade4
This module was bundled with Codeception 2 and 3, but since version 4 it is necessary to install it separately.
Some modules are bundled with PHAR files.
Warning. Using PHAR file and composer in the same project can cause unexpected errors.
Description
Access a database.
The most important function of this module is to clean a database before each test. This module also provides actions to perform checks in a database, e.g. seeInDatabase()
In order to have your database populated with data you need a raw SQL dump. Simply put the dump in the tests/_data
directory (by default) and specify the path in the config. The next time after the database is cleared, all your data will be restored from the dump. Don’t forget to include CREATE TABLE
statements in the dump.
Supported and tested databases are:
- MySQL
- SQLite (i.e. just one file)
- PostgreSQL
Also available:
- MS SQL
- Oracle
Connection is done by database Drivers, which are stored in the Codeception\Lib\Driver
namespace. Check out the drivers if you run into problems loading dumps and cleaning databases.
Config
- dsn required - PDO DSN
- user required - username to access database
- password required - password
- dump - path to database dump
- populate: false - whether the the dump should be loaded before the test suite is started
- cleanup: false - whether the dump should be reloaded before each test
- reconnect: false - whether the module should reconnect to the database before each test
- waitlock: 0 - wait lock (in seconds) that the database session should use for DDL statements
- ssl_key - path to the SSL key (MySQL specific, @see http://php.net/manual/de/ref.pdo-mysql.php#pdo.constants.mysql-attr-key)
- ssl_cert - path to the SSL certificate (MySQL specific, @see http://php.net/manual/de/ref.pdo-mysql.php#pdo.constants.mysql-attr-ssl-cert)
- ssl_ca - path to the SSL certificate authority (MySQL specific, @see http://php.net/manual/de/ref.pdo-mysql.php#pdo.constants.mysql-attr-ssl-ca)
- ssl_verify_server_cert - disables certificate CN verification (MySQL specific, @see http://php.net/manual/de/ref.pdo-mysql.php)
- ssl_cipher - list of one or more permissible ciphers to use for SSL encryption (MySQL specific, @see http://php.net/manual/de/ref.pdo-mysql.php#pdo.constants.mysql-attr-cipher)
- databases - include more database configs and switch between them in tests.
- initial_queries - list of queries to be executed right after connection to the database has been initiated, i.e. creating the database if it does not exist or preparing the database collation
Example
modules:
enabled:
- Db:
dsn: 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb'
user: 'root'
password: ''
dump: 'tests/_data/dump.sql'
populate: true
cleanup: true
reconnect: true
waitlock: 10
ssl_key: '/path/to/client-key.pem'
ssl_cert: '/path/to/client-cert.pem'
ssl_ca: '/path/to/ca-cert.pem'
ssl_verify_server_cert: false
ssl_cipher: 'AES256-SHA'
initial_queries:
- 'CREATE DATABASE IF NOT EXISTS temp_db;'
- 'USE temp_db;'
- 'SET NAMES utf8;'
Example with multi-dumps
modules:
enabled:
- Db:
dsn: 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb'
user: 'root'
password: ''
dump:
- 'tests/_data/dump.sql'
- 'tests/_data/dump-2.sql'
Example with multi-databases
modules:
enabled:
- Db:
dsn: 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb'
user: 'root'
password: ''
databases:
db2:
dsn: 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb2'
user: 'userdb2'
password: ''
Example with Sqlite
modules:
enabled:
- Db:
dsn: 'sqlite:relative/path/to/sqlite-database.db'
user: ''
password: ''
SQL data dump
There are two ways of loading the dump into your database:
Populator
The recommended approach is to configure a populator
, an external command to load a dump. Command parameters like host, username, password, database can be obtained from the config and inserted into placeholders:
For MySQL:
modules: enabled: - Db: dsn: 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb' user: 'root' password: '' dump: 'tests/_data/dump.sql' populate: true # run populator before all tests cleanup: true # run populator before each test populator: 'mysql -u $user -h $host $dbname < $dump'
For PostgreSQL (using pg_restore)
modules: enabled: - Db: dsn: 'pgsql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb' user: 'root' password: '' dump: 'tests/_data/db_backup.dump' populate: true # run populator before all tests cleanup: true # run populator before each test populator: 'pg_restore -u $user -h $host -D $dbname < $dump'
Variable names are being taken from config and DSN which has a keyword=value
format, so you should expect to have a variable named as the keyword with the full value inside it.
PDO dsn elements for the supported drivers:
- MySQL: PDO_MYSQL DSN
- SQLite: PDO_SQLITE DSN - use relative path from the project root
- PostgreSQL: PDO_PGSQL DSN
- MSSQL: PDO_SQLSRV DSN
- Oracle: PDO_OCI DSN
Dump
Db module by itself can load SQL dump without external tools by using current database connection. This approach is system-independent, however, it is slower than using a populator and may have parsing issues (see below).
Provide a path to SQL file in dump
config option:
modules: enabled: - Db: dsn: 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname=testdb' user: 'root' password: '' populate: true # load dump before all tests cleanup: true # load dump for each test dump: 'tests/_data/dump.sql'
To parse SQL Db file, it should follow this specification:
- Comments are permitted.
- The
dump.sql
may contain multiline statements. - The delimiter, a semi-colon in this case, must be on the same line as the last statement:
-- Add a few contacts to the table. REPLACE INTO `Contacts` (`created`, `modified`, `status`, `contact`, `first`, `last`) VALUES (NOW(), NOW(), 1, 'Bob Ross', 'Bob', 'Ross'), (NOW(), NOW(), 1, 'Fred Flintstone', 'Fred', 'Flintstone'); -- Remove existing orders for testing. DELETE FROM `Order`;
Query generation
seeInDatabase
, dontSeeInDatabase
, seeNumRecords
, grabFromDatabase
and grabNumRecords
methods accept arrays as criteria. WHERE condition is generated using item key as a field name and item value as a field value.
Example:
<?php $I->seeInDatabase('users', ['name' => 'Davert', 'email' => '[email protected]']);
Will generate:
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `users` WHERE `name` = 'Davert' AND `email` = '[email protected]'
Since version 2.1.9 it’s possible to use LIKE in a condition, as shown here:
<?php $I->seeInDatabase('users', ['name' => 'Davert', 'email like' => 'davert%']);
Will generate:
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `users` WHERE `name` = 'Davert' AND `email` LIKE 'davert%'
Null comparisons are also available, as shown here:
<?php $I->seeInDatabase('users', ['name' => null, 'email !=' => null]);
Will generate:
SELECT COUNT(*) FROM `users` WHERE `name` IS NULL AND `email` IS NOT NULL
Public Properties
- dbh - contains the PDO connection
- driver - contains the Connection Driver
Actions
amConnectedToDatabase
Make sure you are connected to the right database.
<?php $I->seeNumRecords(2, 'users'); //executed on default database $I->amConnectedToDatabase('db_books'); $I->seeNumRecords(30, 'books'); //executed on db_books database //All the next queries will be on db_books
-
param
$databaseKey @throws ModuleConfigException
dontSeeInDatabase
Effect is opposite to ->seeInDatabase
Asserts that there is no record with the given column values in a database. Provide table name and column values.
<?php $I->dontSeeInDatabase('users', ['name' => 'Davert', 'email' => '[email protected]']);
Fails if such user was found.
Comparison expressions can be used as well:
<?php $I->dontSeeInDatabase('posts', ['num_comments >=' => '0']); $I->dontSeeInDatabase('users', ['email like' => 'miles%']);
Supported operators: <
, >
, >=
, <=
, !=
, like
.
-
param string
$table -
param array
$criteria
grabColumnFromDatabase
Fetches all values from the column in database. Provide table name, desired column and criteria.
<?php $mails = $I->grabColumnFromDatabase('users', 'email', array('name' => 'RebOOter'));
-
param string
$table -
param string
$column -
param array
$criteria return array
grabFromDatabase
Fetches a single column value from a database. Provide table name, desired column and criteria.
<?php $mail = $I->grabFromDatabase('users', 'email', array('name' => 'Davert'));
Comparison expressions can be used as well:
<?php $post = $I->grabFromDatabase('posts', ['num_comments >=' => 100]); $user = $I->grabFromDatabase('users', ['email like' => 'miles%']);
Supported operators: <
, >
, >=
, <=
, !=
, like
.
-
param string
$table -
param string
$column -
param array
$criteria -
return mixed
Returns a single column value or false
grabNumRecords
Returns the number of rows in a database
-
param string
$table Table name -
param array
$criteria Search criteria [Optional] return int
haveInDatabase
Inserts an SQL record into a database. This record will be erased after the test.
<?php $I->haveInDatabase('users', array('name' => 'miles', 'email' => '[email protected]')); ?>
-
param string
$table -
param array
$data -
return integer
$id
performInDatabase
Can be used with a callback if you don’t want to change the current database in your test.
<?php $I->seeNumRecords(2, 'users'); //executed on default database $I->performInDatabase('db_books', function($I) { $I->seeNumRecords(30, 'books'); //executed on db_books database }); $I->seeNumRecords(2, 'users'); //executed on default database
List of actions can be pragmatically built using Codeception\Util\ActionSequence
:
<?php $I->performInDatabase('db_books', ActionSequence::build() ->seeNumRecords(30, 'books') );
Alternatively an array can be used:
$I->performInDatabase('db_books', ['seeNumRecords' => [30, 'books']]);
Choose the syntax you like the most and use it,
Actions executed from array or ActionSequence will print debug output for actions, and adds an action name to exception on failure.
-
param
$databaseKey -
param \Codeception\Util\ActionSequence|array|callable
$actions @throws ModuleConfigException
seeInDatabase
Asserts that a row with the given column values exists. Provide table name and column values.
<?php $I->seeInDatabase('users', ['name' => 'Davert', 'email' => '[email protected]']);
Fails if no such user found.
Comparison expressions can be used as well:
<?php $I->seeInDatabase('posts', ['num_comments >=' => '0']); $I->seeInDatabase('users', ['email like' => '[email protected]']);
Supported operators: <
, >
, >=
, <=
, !=
, like
.
-
param string
$table -
param array
$criteria
seeNumRecords
Asserts that the given number of records were found in the database.
<?php $I->seeNumRecords(1, 'users', ['name' => 'davert']) ?>
-
param int
$expectedNumber Expected number -
param string
$table Table name -
param array
$criteria Search criteria [Optional]
updateInDatabase
Update an SQL record into a database.
<?php $I->updateInDatabase('users', array('isAdmin' => true), array('email' => '[email protected]')); ?>
-
param string
$table -
param array
$data -
param array
$criteria
© 2011 Michael Bodnarchuk and contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://codeception.com/docs/modules/Db