Now it was just a matter of adding the directory where the tests reside. Once the dialog opened I clicked the “+” to add a run configuration, and select the PHPUnit type. Now I had to add a Run/Debug Configuration for the project. I did this by clicking on the toolbar dropdown and selecting Edit Configurations. To start I needed to inform the IDE where to find the Composer autoload file and leverage the awesome PSR-0 goodness to autoload PHPUnit in the /vendor directory. To do this I open the Settings via the icon on the toolbar, or by using the File->Settings menu item, or hitting the Ctrl+Alt+S keyboard shortcut. Then in the Project Settings (top section) I expanded PHP to get the PHPUnit dialog. The way OpenCFP was set up, using Composer, meant that PHPUnit was already placed in the /vendor directory as a requirement in the composer.json. So rather than taking the lazy way out and using the PHPUnit already installed globally on my system, I wanted to use the latest PHPUnit within the project. This requires 2 setup steps in PHPStorm. (I’ll do the same for Zend Studio in another post later.) (I have a pull requests pending, and another to submit. Love open source!)įor my CFP I wanted a few more fields of information than the “out of the box” setup, so I quickly added them to the app. However, doing this meant the included unit tests would fail. But wait, I hadn’t run the unit tests yet! I realized immediately how spoiled I had become with today’s modern frameworks with a testing method built in. This little project did not have that luxury, so I would need to run the tests the old fashioned way, or let an IDE do it for me. I decided to configure PHPStorm do it. To launch the call for papers for the SunshinePHP Developer Conference it was a pleasure to use the OpenCFP project as a starting point rather than creating the entire thing from scratch. While the project is still a “beta” with a few wrinkles to get ironed out, it’s still a pretty nice effort. However, with the right steps it’s actually pretty simple. Installing PHPUnit within a project via Composer, then running tests through PHPStorm is not an intuitive process.
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