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Testing 

Create and Run Unit and Functional Tests to Test the Message Queue 

To test that a message was sent in unit and functional tests, you can use the AbstractMessageQueueAssertTrait trait. There are two implementations of this trait, one for unit tests and the other one for functional tests:

If you need a custom logic to manage sent messages, you can use the Oro\Bundle\MessageQueueBundle\Test\Unit\MessageQueueAssertTrait or Oro\Bundle\MessageQueueBundle\Test\Functional\MessageQueueAssertTrait traits.

The following example shows how to test whether a message was sent.

namespace Acme\Bundle\DemoBundle\Tests\Functional;

use Oro\Bundle\MessageQueueBundle\Test\Functional\MessageQueueExtension;
use Oro\Bundle\TestFrameworkBundle\Test\WebTestCase;

class SomeTest extends WebTestCase
{
    use MessageQueueExtension;

    public function testSingleMessage()
    {
        // assert that a message was sent to a topic
        self::assertMessageSent('aFooTopic', 'Something has happened');

        // assert that at least one message was sent to a topic
        // can be used if a message is not matter
        self::assertMessageSent('aFooTopic');
    }

    public function testSeveralMessages()
    {
        // assert that exactly given messages were sent to a topic
        self::assertMessagesSent(
            'aFooTopic',
            [
                'Something has happened',
                'Something else has happened',
            ]
        );
        // assert that the exactly given number of messages were sent to a topic
        // can be used if messages are not matter
        self::assertMessagesCount('aFooTopic', 2);
        // also assertCountMessages alias can be used to do the same assertion
        self::assertCountMessages('aFooTopic');
    }

    public function testNoMessages()
    {
        // assert that no any message was sent to a topic
        self::assertMessagesEmpty('aFooTopic');
        // also assertEmptyMessages alias can be used to do the same assertion
        self::assertEmptyMessages('aFooTopic');
    }

    public function testAllMessages()
    {
        // assert that exactly given messages were sent
        // NOTE: use this assertion with caution because it is possible
        // that messages not related to a testing functionality were sent as well
        self::assertAllMessagesSent(
            [
                ['topic' => 'aFooTopic', 'message' => 'Something has happened'],
                ['topic' => 'aFooTopic', 'message' => 'Something else has happened'],
            ]
        );
    }
}

In unit tests, you are usually need to pass the message producer to a service you are testing. To fetch the correct instance of the message producer in the unit tests, use self::getMessageProducer().

For example:

namespace Acme\Bundle\DemoBundle\Tests\Unit;

use Acme\Bundle\DemoBundle\SomeClass;
use Oro\Bundle\MessageQueueBundle\Test\Unit\MessageQueueExtension;

class SomeTest extends \PHPUnit\Framework\TestCase
{
    use MessageQueueExtension;

    public function testSingleMessage()
    {
        $instance = new SomeClass(self::getMessageProducer());

        $instance->doSomethind();

        self::assertMessageSent('aFooTopic', 'Something has happened');
    }
}