title | description |
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Continuous Integration |
Up until now, we have only discussed running tests from the command line on your local machine. But, you can also run your tests from a CI platform of your choice. As `pestphp/pest` is included in your Composer development dependencies, you can easily execute the `vendor/bin/pest --ci` command within your CI platform's deployment pipeline. |
Up until now, we have only discussed running tests from the command line on your local machine. But, you can also run your tests from a CI platform of your choice. As pestphp/pest
is included in your Composer development dependencies, you can easily execute the vendor/bin/pest --ci
command within your CI platform's deployment pipeline.
If your application uses GitHub Actions as its CI platform, the following guidelines will assist you in configuring Pest so that your application is automatically tested when someone pushes a commit to your GitHub repository.
To get started, create a tests.yml
file within the your-project/.github/workflows
directory. The file should have the following contents:
name: Tests
on: ['push', 'pull_request']
jobs:
ci:
runs-on: ubuntu-latest
steps:
- name: Checkout
uses: actions/checkout@v3
- name: Setup PHP
uses: shivammathur/setup-php@v2
with:
php-version: 8.2
tools: composer:v2
coverage: xdebug
- name: Install Dependencies
run: composer install --no-interaction --prefer-dist --optimize-autoloader
- name: Tests
run: ./vendor/bin/pest --ci
Naturally, you may customize the script above according to your requirements. For example, you may need to set up a database if your tests require one.
Once you have created your tests.yml
file, commit and push the tests.yml
file so GitHub Actions can run your tests. Keep in mind that once you make this commit, your test suite will execute on all new pull requests and commits.
If your application uses GitLab CI/CD Pipelines as its CI platform, the following guidelines will assist you in configuring Pest so that your application is automatically tested when someone pushes a commit to your GitLab repository.
To get started, add the following configuration to your .gitlab-ci.yml
file. The file should have the following contents:
stages:
- build
- test
build:vendors:
stage: build
only:
refs:
- merge_requests
- push
cache:
key:
files:
- composer.lock
policy: pull-push
image: composer:2
script:
- composer install --no-interaction --prefer-dist --optimize-autoloader
tests:
stage: test
only:
refs:
- merge_requests
- push
cache:
key:
files:
- composer.lock
policy: pull
image: php:8.2
script:
- ./vendor/bin/pest --ci
Naturally, you may customize the script above according to your requirements. For example, you may need to set up a database if your tests require one.
Once you have created your .gitlab-ci.yml
file, commit and push the .gitlab-ci.yml
file so Gitlab CI/CD Pipelines can run your tests. Keep in mind that once you make this commit, your test suite will execute on all new merge requests and commits.
If your application uses Bitbucket CI/CD Pipelines as its CI platform, the following guidelines will assist you in configuring Pest so that your application is automatically tested when someone pushes a commit to your Bitbucket repository.
To get started, add the following configuration to your bitbucket-pipelines.yml
file. The file should have the following contents:
image: composer:2
pipelines:
default:
- parallel:
- step:
name: Test
script:
- composer install --no-interaction --prefer-dist --optimize-autoloader
- ./vendor/bin/pest
caches:
- composer
Naturally, you may customize the script above according to your requirements. For example, you may need to set up a database if your tests require one.
Once you have created your bitbucket-pipelines.yml
file, commit and push the bitbucket-pipelines.yml
file so Bitbucket Pipelines can run your tests. Keep in mind that once you make this commit, your test suite will execute on all new pull requests and commits.
If your application uses Chipper CI as its CI platform, the following guidelines will assist you in configuring Pest so that your application is automatically tested when someone pushes a commit to your git repository.
To get started, add the following configuration to your .chipperci.yml
file. The file should have the following contents:
version: 1
environment:
php: 8.2
node: 16
# Optional services
services:
# - mysql: 8
# - redis:
# Build all commits
on:
push:
branches: .*
pipeline:
- name: Setup
cmd: |
cp -v .env.example .env
composer install --no-interaction --prefer-dist --optimize-autoloader
php artisan key:generate
- name: Compile Assets
cmd: |
npm ci --no-audit
npm run build
- name: Test
cmd: pest
In addition to handling Composer and NPM caches, Chipper CI automatically adds vendor/bin
to your PATH, so simply running the pest --ci
command will work when running tests.
Naturally, you may customize the scripts above according to your requirements. For example, you may need to define a database service if your tests require one.
Once you have created your .chipperci.yml
file, commit and push the .chipperci.yml
file so Chipper CI can run your tests. Keep in mind that once you make this commit, your test suite will execute on all new commits.
Great job setting up Continuous Integration for your project to ensure codebase stability! Now, let's take a deeper dive into Pest's concepts by exploring it's test configuration capabilities: Configuring Pest →