I am making an API with Laravel 5
and I'm testing it with PHPUnit
. I need to test legacy functionality for compatibility, which is an XML POST. As of right now, my first test looks like:
public function testPostMessages()
{
$response = $this->call('POST', 'xml');
$this->assertEquals(200, $response->getStatusCode());
}
This is passing just fine. Next on my list is actually sending the XML data with the POST. So for my second test, I have:
public function testPostMessagesContent()
{
$response = $this->call('POST', 'xml');
$this->assertTrue(is_valid_xml($response->getContent()));
}
This test fails. However, I am not sending my XML data. How do I send my XML?
Now, after that I need to add in the functionality to get the content from the request. I know there is a Request
object that I can interact with but I don't exactly know which method to call on it. How do I get my XML from inside my controller?
I was able to get some results in the meantime. My current test looks like this:
public function testPostMessagesContent()
{
$response = $this->call('POST', 'xml', array('key' => 'value'), array(), array(), array('content' => 'content'));
$this->assertContains('~', $response->getContent());
}
I only have the tilde there because I know it won't match so that I can see the whole response. In XmlController.php
I have:
class XmlController extends Controller {
public function index(Request $request)
{
return $request;
}
}
My output from PHPUnit
is as follows:
1) XmlTest::testPostMessagesContent
Failed asserting that 'POST xml HTTP/1.1
Accept: text/html,application/xhtml+xml,application/xml;q=0.9,*/*;q=0.8
Accept-Charset: ISO-8859-1,utf-8;q=0.7,*;q=0.7
Accept-Language: en-us,en;q=0.5
Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded
Host: localhost
User-Agent: Symfony/2.X
' contains "~".
Where are my parameters and my content? I feel like I am simply just using call()
incorrectly.
I updated my controller to use Request:all()
like so:
class XmlController extends Controller
{
public function index()
{
$content = Request::all();
return $content;
}
}
This returned my key-value pair, but not the content.
1) XmlTest::testPostMessagesContent
Failed asserting that '{"key":"value"}' contains "~".
Key-value pairs are good; it's progress. However, what I really need is the content since I'll be receiving that data in the content portion of the request. If I use Request::getContent()
I get back a blank string. Here's my call in the test:
$response = $this->call('POST', 'xml', array('key' => 'value'), array(), array(), array('content' => 'content'));
Here's my test results:
1) XmlTest::testPostMessagesContent
Failed asserting that '' contains "~".
I am not able to get the content body of an HTTP Request at all. Since XML wasn't working, I moved forward with the REST part of my API, which uses JSON. Here's one of my tests:
public function testPostMessagesContent()
{
$response = $this->call('POST', 'messages', ['content' => 'content']);
$this->assertEquals('saved!', $response->getContent());
}
This test passes. If I use curl, I get a successful call as well:
curl -X POST -d "content=my_new_content" "http://localhost:8000/messages"
This returns 'saved!'
That's awesome, but if I try to use curl in a standalone PHP script (to simulate a client), this is what is returned:
Array ( [url] => http://localhost:8000/messages [content_type] => text/html; charset=UTF-8 [http_code] => 302 [header_size] => 603 [request_size] => 118 [filetime] => -1 [ssl_verify_result] => 0 [redirect_count] => 0 [total_time] => 0.063977 [namelookup_time] => 0.000738 [connect_time] => 0.000866 [pretransfer_time] => 0.000943 [size_upload] => 12 [size_download] => 328 [speed_download] => 5126 [speed_upload] => 187 [download_content_length] => -1 [upload_content_length] => 12 [starttransfer_time] => 0.057606 [redirect_time] => 0 [certinfo] => Array ( ) [primary_ip] => ::1 [primary_port] => 8000 [local_ip] => ::1 [local_port] => 63248 [redirect_url] => http://localhost:8000 [request_header] => POST /messages HTTP/1.1 Host: localhost:8000 Accept: */* Content-type: text/xml Content-length: 12 ) Redirecting to http://localhost:8000.
This is my curl command adding the POST fields:
curl_setopt($ch, CURLOPT_POSTFIELDS, 'content=test');
It seems to me that POSTFIELDS is getting added to the body of the request. In this case, I still have the same problem. I am not able to get body content of my HTTP headers. After commenting out my validation, I get:
Array ( [url] => http://localhost:8000/messages [content_type] => text/html; charset=UTF-8 [http_code] => 200 [header_size] => 565 [request_size] => 118 [filetime] => -1 [ssl_verify_result] => 0 [redirect_count] => 0 [total_time] => 0.070225 [namelookup_time] => 0.000867 [connect_time] => 0.00099 [pretransfer_time] => 0.001141 [size_upload] => 12 [size_download] => 6 [speed_download] => 85 [speed_upload] => 170 [download_content_length] => -1 [upload_content_length] => 12 [starttransfer_time] => 0.065204 [redirect_time] => 0 [certinfo] => Array ( ) [primary_ip] => ::1 [primary_port] => 8000 [local_ip] => ::1 [local_port] => 63257 [redirect_url] => [request_header] => POST /messages HTTP/1.1 Host: localhost:8000 Accept: */* Content-type: text/xml Content-length: 12 ) saved!
So I have my 'saved!'
message. Great! But, in my database now I have a blank row. Not great. It is still not seeing the body content, just the headers.
I'm looking for the answers to these questions:
Inside controller inject Request object. So if you want to access request body inside controller method 'foo' do the following:
public function foo(Request $request){
$bodyContent = $request->getContent();
}