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Currently just uses sample from iCalcreator docs, but shows how it can
be done, and how to hook it into WordPress.
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Since running the bash script on windows was a bit troublesome, make the
`composer test` command a first class citizen. Still don't know how to
run a specific test case using the composer command, but at least it
should be easy to run the full test suite.
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This makes it easier to run the test script directly from the editor it
your editor supports composer. Otherwise run it from the command line:
composer run test
Or like before:
./run-tests
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After much reading I finally found the magic incantations, so now we can
run tests with real database access. This means we no longer need the
primitive $wpdb_stub.
The setup as now _requires_ wp-env, or an environment set up
sufficiently similar. Running in wp-env is the easiest, so aim for that.
I've added a `run-tests` script that will invoke the magic incantation
without having to remember it every time.
To set up for testing:
1. make sure you have composer[1] installed.
2. run `composer install`
3. make sure you have wp-env[2] installed
4. start the wordpress env: `wp-env start`
5. run the tests: `./run-tests`
Let the thousand tests bloom!
[1]: https://github.com/wp-phpunit/wp-phpunit
[2]: https://www.npmjs.com/package/@wordpress/env
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See https://getcomposer.org/ for intro, why and usage. For now this is
mostly to handle dev dependencies, i.e phpunit.
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