This changeset implements T89432 and related tickets and is based on exploration
done at the Prague Hackathon. The goal is to identify tests in MediaWiki core
that can be run without having to install & configure MediaWiki and its dependencies,
and provide a way to execute these tests via the standard phpunit entry point,
allowing for faster development and integration with existing tooling like IDEs.
The initial set of tests that met these criteria were identified using the work Amir did in
I88822667693d9e00ac3d4639c87bc24e5083e5e8. These tests were then moved into a new subdirectory
under phpunit/ and organized into a separate test suite. The environment for this suite
is set up via a PHPUnit bootstrap file without a custom entry point.
You can execute these tests by running:
$ vendor/bin/phpunit -d memory_limit=512M -c tests/phpunit/unit-tests.xml
Bug: T89432
Bug: T87781
Bug: T84948
Change-Id: Iad01033a0548afd4d2a6f2c1ef6fcc9debf72c0d
HHVM does not support variadic arguments with type hints. This is
mostly not a big problem, because we can just drop the type hint, but
for some reason PHPUnit adds a type hint of "array" when it creates
mocks, so a class with a variadic method can't be mocked (at least in
some cases). As such, I left alone all the classes that seem like
someone might like to mock them, like Title and User. If anyone wants
to mock them in the future, they'll have to switch back to
func_get_args(). Some of the changes are definitely safe, like
functions and test classes.
In most cases, func_get_args() (and/or func_get_arg(), func_num_args() )
were only present because the code was written before we required PHP
5.6, and writing them as variadic functions is strictly superior. In
some cases I left them alone, aside from HHVM compatibility:
* Forwarding all arguments to another function. It's useful to keep
func_get_args() here where we want to keep the list of expected
arguments and their meanings in the function signature line for
documentation purposes, but don't want to copy-paste a long line of
argument names.
* Handling deprecated calling conventions.
* One or two miscellaneous cases where we're basically using the
arguments individually but want to use them as an array as well for
some reason.
Change-Id: I066ec95a7beb7c0665146195a08e7cce1222c788
Most are already, but some had differnet names. In PHP 5.4+ this is
redundant as they inherit automatically, but we need these for PHP 5.3
compatibility. Settle on "$that" to make these easier to find.
Change-Id: I0b68b2c550fde9c2da53d844421e34b8df0c42ed