Bachir Soussi Chiadmi c2b4e25be4 upgrades core to 8.4.2 | 7 years ago | |
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.. | ||
Drupal | 7 years ago | |
TestSuites | 7 years ago | |
fixtures | 7 years ago | |
README.md | 7 years ago | |
bootstrap.php | 7 years ago |
Start PhantomJS:
phantomjs --ssl-protocol=any --ignore-ssl-errors=true ./vendor/jcalderonzumba/gastonjs/src/Client/main.js 8510 1024 768 2>&1 >> /dev/null &
Run the functional tests:
export SIMPLETEST_DB='mysql://root@localhost/dev_d8'
export SIMPLETEST_BASE_URL='http://d8.dev'
./vendor/bin/phpunit -c core --testsuite functional
./vendor/bin/phpunit -c core --testsuite functional-javascript
Note: functional tests have to be invoked with a user in the same group as the web server user. You can either configure Apache (or nginx) to run as your own system user or run tests as a privileged user instead.
To develop locally, a straightforward - but also less secure - approach is to
run tests as your own system user. To achieve that, change the default Apache
user to run as your system user. Typically, you'd need to modify
/etc/apache2/envvars
on Linux or /etc/apache2/httpd.conf
on Mac.
Example for Linux:
export APACHE_RUN_USER=<your-user>
export APACHE_RUN_GROUP=<your-group>
Example for Mac:
User <your-user>
Group <your-group>
If the default user is e.g. www-data
, the above functional tests will have to
be invoked with sudo instead:
export SIMPLETEST_DB='mysql://root@localhost/dev_d8'
export SIMPLETEST_BASE_URL='http://d8.dev'
sudo -u www-data -E ./vendor/bin/phpunit -c core --testsuite functional
sudo -u www-data -E ./vendor/bin/phpunit -c core --testsuite functional-javascript