zenstruck / assert
Standalone, lightweight, framework agnostic, test assertion library.
Fund package maintenance!
kbond
Installs: 6 608 466
Dependents: 8
Suggesters: 0
Security: 0
Stars: 61
Watchers: 4
Forks: 3
Open Issues: 2
Requires
- php: >=8.0
- symfony/polyfill-php81: ^1.23
- symfony/var-exporter: ^5.4|^6.0|^7.0
Requires (Dev)
- phpstan/phpstan: ^1.4
- phpunit/phpunit: ^9.5.21
- symfony/phpunit-bridge: ^6.3|^7.0
README
This library allows dependency-free test assertions. When using a PHPUnit-based test library (PHPUnit itself, Pest, Codeception), failed assertions are automatically converted to PHPUnit failures and successful assertions are added to PHPUnit's successful assertion count.
This library differs from other popular assertion libraries (webmozart/assert & beberlei/assert) in that it is purely for test assertions opposed to what these libraries provide: type safety assertions.
With the exception of the Expectation API (specifically, the Throws Expectation which provides a nice API for making exception assertions), this library is really only useful for 3rd party libraries that would like to provide test assertions but not have a direct dependency on a specific test library.
Installation
$ composer require zenstruck/assert
Zenstruck\Assert
This is the main entry point for making assertions. When the methods on this class
are called, they throw a Zenstruck\Assert\AssertionFailed
on failure. If they
do not throw this exception, they are considered successful.
When using a PHPUnit-based framework, failed assertions are auto-converted to PHPUnit test failures and successful assertions are added to PHPUnit's successful assertion count.
True/False Assertions
use Zenstruck\Assert; // passes Assert::true(true === true, 'The condition was not true.'); // fails Assert::true(true === false, 'The condition was not true.'); // passes Assert::false(true === false, 'The condition was not false.'); // fails Assert::false(true === true, 'The condition was not false.');
Generic Fail/Pass
use Zenstruck\Assert; // trigger a "fail" Assert::fail('This is a failure.'); // trigger a "pass" Assert::pass();
Try
Attempt to run a callback and return the result. If an exception is thrown while running, a fail is triggered. If run successfully, a pass is triggered.
use Zenstruck\Assert; $ret = Assert::try(fn() => 'value'); // $ret === 'value' Assert::try(fn() => throw new \RuntimeException('exception message')); // "fails" with message "exception message" // customize the failure message Assert::try( fn() => throw new \RuntimeException('exception message'), 'Tried to run the code but {exception} with message "{message}" was thrown.' ); // "fails" with message 'Tried to run the code but RuntimeException with message "exception message" was thrown.'
Run Assertions
Assert::run()
executes a callable
. A successful execution is considered
a pass and if Zenstruck\Assert\AssertionFailed
is thrown, it is a fail.
use Zenstruck\Assert; use Zenstruck\Assert\AssertionFailed; // failure Assert::run(function(): void { if (true) { AssertionFailed::throw('This failed.'); } }); // pass Assert::run(function(): void { if (false) { AssertionFailed::throw('This failed.'); } });
Expectation API
While the above assertions can be used to create any assertion, a simple, fluent, readable, expectation API is provided. This API is heavily inspired by Pest PHP.
use Zenstruck\Assert; // empty Assert::that([])->isEmpty(); // pass Assert::that(['foo'])->isEmpty(); // fail Assert::that(null)->isNotEmpty(); // fail Assert::that('value')->isNotEmpty(); // pass // null Assert::that(null)->isNull(); // pass Assert::that('foo')->isNull(); // fail Assert::that(null)->isNotNull(); // fail Assert::that('value')->isNotNull(); // pass // count Assert::that([1, 2])->hasCount(2); // pass Assert::that(new \ArrayIterator([1, 2, 3]))->hasCount(2); // fail Assert::that(new \ArrayIterator([1, 2]))->doesNotHaveCount(5); // pass Assert::that($countableObjectWithCountOf5)->doesNotHaveCount(5); // fail // contains Assert::that('foobar')->contains('foo'); // pass Assert::that(['foo', 'bar'])->contains('foo'); // pass Assert::that('foobar')->contains('baz'); // fail Assert::that(['foo', 'bar'])->contains(6); // fail Assert::that('foobar')->doesNotContain('baz'); // pass Assert::that(new \ArrayIterator(['bar']))->doesNotContain('foo'); // pass Assert::that('foobar')->doesNotContain('bar'); // fail Assert::that(['foo', 'bar'])->doesNotContain('bar'); // fail // array subsets Assert::that(['foo' => 'bar'])->isSubsetOf(['foo' => 'bar', 'bar' => 'foo']); // pass Assert::that(['foo' => 'bar'])->isSubsetOf(['bar' => 'foo']); // fail Assert::that(['foo' => 'bar', 'bar' => 'foo'])->hasSubset(['foo' => 'bar']); // pass Assert::that(['foo' => 'bar'])->hasSubset(['bar' => 'foo']); // fail // array subset assertions can also be performed on non-associated arrays (lists/sets). // Keep in mind that order does not matter. Assert::that([ 'users' => [ ['name' => 'user3', 'age' => 20], ['name' => 'user1'], ] ])->isSubsetOf([ 'users' => [ ['name' => 'user1', 'age' => 25], ['name' => 'user2', 'age' => 23], ['name' => 'user3', 'age' => 20], ] ]); // pass // also works with json strings that decode to arrays Assert::that('[3, 1]')->isSubsetOf('[1, 2, 3]'); // pass // equals (== comparison) Assert::that('foo')->equals('foo'); // pass Assert::that('6')->equals(6); // pass Assert::that('foo')->equals('bar'); // fail Assert::that(6)->equals(7); // fail Assert::that('foo')->isNotEqualTo('bar'); // pass Assert::that(6)->isNotEqualTo('6'); // fail // is (=== comparison) Assert::that('foo')->is('foo'); // pass Assert::that(6)->is(6); // pass Assert::that('foo')->is('bar'); // fail Assert::that(6)->is('6'); // fail Assert::that('foo')->isNot('foo'); // fail Assert::that(6)->isNot(6); // fail Assert::that('foo')->isNot('bar'); // pass Assert::that(6)->isNot('6'); // pass // boolean (===) Assert::that(true)->isTrue(); // pass Assert::that(false)->isTrue(); // fail Assert::that(true)->isFalse(); // fail Assert::that(false)->isFalse(); // pass // boolean (==) Assert::that(1)->isTruthy(); // pass Assert::that(new \stdClass())->isTruthy(); // pass Assert::that('text')->isTruthy(); // pass Assert::that(null)->isTruthy(); // fail Assert::that(0)->isFalsy(); // pass Assert::that(null)->isFalsy(); // pass Assert::that('')->isFalsy(); // pass Assert::that(1)->isFalsy(); // fail // instanceof Assert::that($object)->isInstanceOf(Some::class); Assert::that($object)->isNotInstanceOf(Some::class); // greater than Assert::that(2)->isGreaterThan(1); // pass Assert::that(2)->isGreaterThan(1); // fail Assert::that(2)->isGreaterThan(2); // fail // greater than or equal to Assert::that(2)->isGreaterThanOrEqualTo(1); // pass Assert::that(2)->isGreaterThanOrEqualTo(1); // fail Assert::that(2)->isGreaterThanOrEqualTo(2); // pass // less than Assert::that(3)->isLessThan(4); // pass Assert::that(3)->isLessThan(2); // fail Assert::that(3)->isLessThan(3); // fail // less than or equal to Assert::that(3)->isLessThanOrEqualTo(4); // pass Assert::that(3)->isLessThanOrEqualTo(2); // fail Assert::that(3)->isLessThanOrEqualTo(3); // pass
Type Expectations
use Zenstruck\Assert; use Zenstruck\Assert\Type; Assert::that($something)->is(Type::bool()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::int()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::float()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::numeric()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::string()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::callable()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::iterable()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::countable()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::object()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::resource()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::array()); Assert::that($something)->is(Type::arrayList()); // [1, 2, 3] passes but ['foo' => 'bar'] does not Assert::that($something)->is(Type::arrayAssoc()); // ['foo' => 'bar'] passes but [1, 2, 3] does not Assert::that($something)->is(Type::arrayEmpty()); // [] passes but [1, 2, 3] does not Assert::that($something)->is(Type::json()); // valid json string // "Not's" Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::bool()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::int()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::float()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::numeric()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::string()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::callable()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::iterable()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::countable()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::object()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::resource()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::array()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::arrayList()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::arrayAssoc()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::arrayEmpty()); Assert::that($something)->isNot(Type::json());
Throws Expectation
This expectation provides a nice API for exceptions. It is an alternative to PHPUnit's
expectException()
which has the following limitations:
- Can only assert 1 exception is thrown per test.
- Cannot make assertions on the exception itself (other than the message).
- Cannot make post-exception assertions (think side effects).
use Zenstruck\Assert; // the following can all be used within a single PHPUnit test // fails if exception not thrown // fails if exception is thrown but not instance of \RuntimeException Assert::that(fn() => $code->thatThrowsException())->throws(\RuntimeException::class); // fails if exception not thrown // fails if exception is thrown but not instance of \RuntimeException // fails if exception is thrown but exception message doesn't contain "some message" Assert::that(fn() => $code->thatThrowsException())->throws(\RuntimeException::class, 'some message'); // a callable can be used for the expected exception. The first parameter's type // hint is used as the expected exception and the callable is executed with the // caught exception // // fails if exception not thrown // fails if exception is thrown but not instance of CustomException Assert::that(fn() => $code->thatThrowsException())->throws( function(CustomException $e) use ($database) { // make assertions on the exception Assert::that($e->getMessage())->contains('some message'); Assert::that($e->getSomeValue())->is('value'); // make side effect assertions Assert::true($database->userTableEmpty(), 'The user table is not empty'); // If using within the context of a PHPUnit test, you can use standard PHPUnit assertions $this->assertStringContainsString('some message', $e->getMessage()); $this->assertSame('value', $e->getSomeValue()); $this->assertTrue($database->userTableEmpty()); } );
Fluent Expectations
use Zenstruck\Assert; // chain expectations on the same "value" Assert::that(['foo', 'bar']) ->hasCount(2) ->contains('foo') ->contains('bar') ->doesNotContain('baz') ; // start an additional expectation without breaking Assert::that(['foo', 'bar']) ->hasCount(2) ->contains('foo') ->and('foobar') // start a new expectation with "foobar" as the new expectation value ->contains('bar') ;
AssertionFailed
Exception
When triggering a failed assertion, it is important to provide a useful failure
message to the user. The AssertionFailed
exception has some features to help.
use Zenstruck\Assert\AssertionFailed; // The `throw()` named constructor creates the exception and immediately throws it AssertionFailed::throw('Some message'); // a second "context" parameter can be used as sprintf values for the message AssertionFailed::throw('Expected "%s" but got "%s"', ['value 1', 'value 2']); // Expected "value 1" but got "value 2" // when an associated array passed as the context parameter, the message is constructed // with a simple template system AssertionFailed::throw('Expected "{expected}" but got "{actual}"', [ // Expected "value 1" but got "value 2" 'expected' => 'value 1', 'actual' => 'value 2', ]);
NOTES:
- When the message is constructed with context, non-scalar values are run through
get_debug_type()
and strings longer than 100 characters are trimmed. The full context is available viaAssertionFailed::context()
. - When using with PHPUnit, the full context is exported with the failure message if in
verbose-mode (
--verbose|-v
).
Assertion Objects
Since Zenstruck\Assert::run()
accepts any callable
, complex assertions can be wrapped
up into invokable
objects:
use Zenstruck\Assert; use Zenstruck\Assert\AssertionFailed; class StringContains { public function __construct(private string $haystack, private string $needle) {} public function __invoke(): void { if (!str_contains($this->haystack, $this->needle)) { AssertionFailed::throw( 'Expected string "{haystack}" to contain "{needle}" but it did not.', get_object_vars($this) ]); } } } // use the above assertion: // passes Assert::run(new StringContains('quick brown fox', 'fox')); // fails Assert::run(new StringContains('quick brown fox', 'dog'));
Negatable Assertion Objects
Zenstruck\Assert
has a not()
method that can be used with Negatable
Assertion Objects. This can be helpful to create
custom assertions that can be easily negated. Let's convert the example above
into a Negatable Assertion Object:
use Zenstruck\Assert; use Zenstruck\Assert\AssertionFailed; use Zenstruck\Assert\Assertion\Negatable; class StringContains implements Negatable { public function __construct(private string $haystack, private string $needle) {} public function __invoke(): void { if (!str_contains($this->haystack, $this->needle)) { AssertionFailed::throw( 'Expected string "{haystack}" to contain "{needle}" but it did not.', get_object_vars($this) ]); } } public function notFailure(): AssertionFailed { return new AssertionFailed( 'Expected string "{haystack}" to not contain "{needle}" but it did.', get_object_vars($this) ); } } // use the above assertion: // fails Assert::not(new StringContains('quick brown fox', 'fox')); // passes Assert::not(new StringContains('quick brown fox', 'dog'));