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Framework

This is a framework of feature modules for WordPress that are shared across plugins.

Many of these were refactored from the deprecated plugin framework v2.

Source code

Git repository: https://github.com/tangibleinc/framework

Modules

Develop

Prerequisites: Git, Node (version 18 and above)

Clone the repository and install dependencies.

git clone [email protected]:tangibleinc/framework.git
cd framework
npm install

JS and CSS

Build for development - watch files for changes and rebuild

npm run dev

Build for production

npm run build

Format to code standard

npm run format

Build modules for development

Watch files for changes and rebuild.

npm run dev [module1 module2..]

Press CTRL + C to stop.

Build modules for production

Builds minified bundles with source maps.

npm run build [module1 module2..]

Format code

Format files to code standard with Prettier and PHP Beautify.

npm run format [module1 module2..]

Local dev site

Start a local dev site using wp-now.

npm run start

Press CTRL + C to stop.

Dev dependencies

Optionally, install dev dependencies such as third-party plugins before starting the site.

npm run install:dev

To keep them updated, run:

npm run update:dev

Customize environment

Create a file named .wp-env.override.json to customize the WordPress environment. This file is listed in .gitignore so it's local to your setup.

Mainly it's useful for mounting local folders into the virtual file system. For example, to link another plugin in the parent directory:

{
  "mappings": {
    "wp-content/plugins/example-plugin": "../example-plugin"
  }
}

Tests

This plugin comes with a suite of unit and integration tests.

The test environment is started by running:

npm run env:start

This uses wp-env to quickly spin up a local dev and test environment, optionally switching between multiple PHP versions. It requires Docker to be installed. There are instructions available for installing Docker on Windows, macOS, and Linux.

Visit http://localhost:8888 to see the dev site, and http://localhost:8889 for the test site, whose database is cleared on every run.

Before running tests, install PHPUnit as a dev dependency using Composer inside the container.

npm run env:composer:install

Composer will add and remove folders in the vendor folder, based on composer.json and composer.lock. If you have any existing Git repositories, ensure they don't have any work in progress before running the above command.

Run the tests:

npm run env:test

For each PHP version:

npm run env:test:7.4
npm run env:test:8.2

The version-specific commands take a while to start, but afterwards you can run npm run env:test to re-run tests in the same environment.

To stop the Docker process:

npm run env:stop

To remove Docker containers, volumes, images associated with the test environment.

npm run env:destroy

Notes

To run more than one instance of wp-env, set different ports for the dev and test sites:

WP_ENV_PORT=3333 WP_ENV_TESTS_PORT=3334 npm run env:start

This repository includes NPM scripts to run the tests with PHP versions 8.2 and 7.4. We need to maintain compatibility with PHP 7.4, as WordPress itself only has “beta support” for PHP 8.x. See https://make.wordpress.org/core/handbook/references/php-compatibility-and-wordpress-versions/ for more information.


If you’re on Windows, you might have to use Windows Subsystem for Linux to run the tests (see this comment).

End-to-end tests

The folder /tests/e2e contains end-to-end-tests using Playwright and WordPress E2E Testing Utils.

Prepare

Before the first time you run it, install the browser engine.

npx playwright install chromium

Run

Run the tests. This will start the local WordPress environment with wp-env as needed. Then Playwright starts a browser engine to interact with the test site.

npm run test:e2e

Watch mode

There is a "Watch mode", where it will watch the test files for changes and re-run them. This provides a helpful feedback loop when writing tests, as a kind of test-driven development. Press CTRL + C to stop the process.

npm run test:e2e:watch

A common usage is to have terminal sessions open with npm run dev (build assets and watch to rebuild) and npm run tdd (run tests and watch to re-run).

UI mode

There's also "UI mode" that opens a browser interface to see the tests run.

npm run test:e2e:ui

Utilities

Here are the common utilities used to write the tests.

References

Examples of how to write end-to-end tests: