IntelliJ IDEA 2022.1 Help

PHPUnit

Use this dialog to create a configuration to be used for running and debugging unit tests on PHP applications in the console using the PHPUnit framework.

Before you start

Enable PHPUnit support

  1. Install and configure PHPUnit on your computer, see PHPUnit.

  2. Make sure the PHP plugin is installed and enabled. The PHP plugin is not bundled with IntelliJ IDEA, but it can be installed on the Settings/Preferences | Plugins page, tab Marketplace, as described in Installing plugins from JetBrains repository.

Test Runner area

In this area, specify the unit tests to launch and the command line switches to be passed to the test runner.

Item

Description

Test scope

In this area, specify the location of tests or the configuration file where they are listed.

  • Directory: select this option to have all the unit tests in a directory launched.

    In the Directory field, specify the directory to search the unit test in. Type the path to the directory manually or click the Browse button and select the desired directory in the Choose Test Directory dialog, that opens.

  • Class: select this option to have all the unit tests in a test class launched.

    In the Class field, type the name of the desired class. To quickly locate a class, use code completion Ctrl+Space. The location of the selected class will be displayed in the control File read-only field.

  • Method: select this option to have a specific test method launched.

    In the Class field, type the name of the desired class. To quickly locate a class, use code completion Ctrl+Space. The location of the selected class will be displayed in the control File read-only field.

    In the Method field, specify the desired method. To quickly locate a class, use code completion Ctrl+Space.

  • Defined in the configuration file: select this option to have test runner execute the tests from a dedicated XML configuration file.

  • Composite: select this option to have the test runner execute the tests from an arbitrary tests selection.

    In the Composite test patterns area, use Add, Remove, and the Edit button to manage the list of test patterns (that is, test classes or test methods) to be included in the configuration.

    To add a test pattern, click the Add button. To edit the existing pattern, click the Edit button. In the Add PHPUnit test pattern dialog that opens, locate the desired test class or test method symbol by using the Search by Name tab or the Project tab. If the chosen test method uses a data provider, provide the name of the data set in the Data set field. Note that in the case of several data sets, you need to create a separate pattern entry for each of them.

    By default, IntelliJ IDEA attempts to detect the test patterns location automatically based on your project structure. To explicitly specify the directory containing test patterns, select the Use alternative patterns base path checkbox, then click the Browse button and locate the desired directory in the dialog that opens.

Use alternative configuration file

In this field, choose the location of the PHPUnit configuration file.

  • To use the default configuration file specified on the Test Frameworks page of the Settings/Preferences dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S), clear the Use alternative configuration file checkbox. If no default configuration file is appointed on the Test Frameworks page, the run/debug configuration is invalid. To quickly open the Test Frameworks page, click the Settings button.

  • To run the tests from a custom configuration file, select the Use alternative configuration file checkbox, click the Browse button, and specify the location of the file to use.

Use alternative bootstrap file

In this field, choose the location of the bootstrap PHP script, which will be executed before launching tests.

  • To use the default bootstrap file specified on the Test Frameworks page of the Settings/Preferences dialog (Ctrl+Alt+S), clear the Use alternative bootstrap file checkbox.

  • To execute a custom bootstrap file, select the Use alternative bootstrap file checkbox, click the Browse button, and specify the location of the file to use.

Test runner options

In this field, specify the test runner switches.

If necessary, click Expand and type the desired switches in the Command Line Options dialog. Type each switch on a new line. When you close the dialog, the specified switches are displayed in the Test runner options field with spaces as separators.

Preferred Coverage engine

From this list, choose one of the configured code coverage runners:

  • Xdebug, a debugging extension providing both the debugging and code coverage capabilities.

    To enable Xdebug, make sure at least the following settings are specified in the [xdebug] section of the active php.ini file.

    [xdebug] zend_extension="<path to xdebug extension>" xdebug.mode=coverage
    [xdebug] zend_extension="<path to xdebug extension>" xdebug.coverage_enable=1

    See Configure Xdebug for details.

  • PCOV, a lightweight extension only providing code coverage capabilities.

    To enable PCOV, download and install the extension as described in the PCOV documentation. Then, make sure at least the following settings are specified in the active php.ini file:

    extension="<path to pcov extension>"
  • phpdbg, a debugging and code coverage module, which is bundled in PHP 5.6 and later and requires no additional configuration.

Command Line area

In this area, choose a PHP interpreter and customize its behavior by specifying the options and arguments to be passed to the PHP executable file.

Item

Description

Interpreter

The list contains all the currently configured local and remote PHP interpreters. Choose one of the configured PHP interpreters from the list, or click the Browse button and define a new interpreter as described in Configuring Local PHP Interpreters and Configuring Remote PHP Interpreters.

Interpreter options

In this field, specify the options to be passed to the PHP executable file. They override the default behavior of the PHP interpreter or ensure that additional activities are performed.

If necessary, click the Expand button and type the desired options in the Command Line Options dialog. Type each option on a new line. When you close the dialog, they are all displayed in the Command line options field with spaces as separators.

Custom working directory

In this field, specify the location of the files that are outside the folder with tests and are referenced in your tests through relative paths.

This setting does not block the test execution because the location of tests is always specified through a full path to the corresponding files and/or directories.

By default, the field is empty, and the working directory is the root of the project.

Environment variables

In this field, specify the environment variables be passed to the built-in server. See Environment Variables in Apache for details.

Common settings

When you edit a run configuration (but not a run configuration template), you can specify the following options:

Name

Specify a name for the run/debug configuration to quickly identify it when editing or running the configuration, for example, from the Run popup Alt+Shift+F10.

Allow parallel run

Select to allow running multiple instances of this run configuration in parallel.

By default, it is disabled, and when you start this configuration while another instance is still running, IntelliJ IDEA suggests to stop the running instance and start another one. This is helpful when a run/debug configuration consumes a lot of resources and there is no good reason to run multiple instances.

Store as project file

Save the file with the run configuration settings to share it with other team members. The default location is .idea/runConfigurations. However, if you do not want to share the .idea directory, you can save the configuration to any other directory within the project.

By default, it is disabled, and IntelliJ IDEA stores run configuration settings in .idea/workspace.xml.

Toolbar

The tree view of run/debug configurations has a toolbar that helps you manage configurations available in your project as well as adjust default configurations templates.

Item

Shortcut

Description

the Add button

Alt+Insert

Create a run/debug configuration.

the Remove button

Alt+Delete

Delete the selected run/debug configuration. Note that you cannot delete default configurations.

Copy

Ctrl+D

Create a copy of the selected run/debug configuration. Note that you create copies of default configurations.

Save configuration

The button is displayed only when you select a temporary configuration. Click this button to save a temporary configuration as permanent.

Move into new folder / Create new folder

Move into new folder / Create new folder. You can group run/debug configurations by placing them into folders.

To create a folder, select the configurations within a category, click Folder, and specify the folder name. If only a category is in focus, an empty folder is created.

Then, to move a configuration into a folder, between the folders or out of a folder, use drag or Move Up and Move Down buttons.

To remove grouping, select a folder and click Remove Configuration.

Sort configurations

Click this button to sort configurations in the alphabetical order.

Before launch

In this area, you can specify tasks to be performed before starting the selected run/debug configuration. The tasks are performed in the order they appear in the list.

Item

Shortcut

Description

the Add button

Alt+Insert

Click this icon to add one of the following available tasks:

  • Run External tool: select to run an external application. In the dialog that opens, select one or multiple applications you want to run. If it is not defined in IntelliJ IDEA yet, add its definition. For more information, see External tools and External Tools.

  • Run Another Configuration: select to execute another run/debug configuration and wait until it finishes before starting the current configuration. If you want to run several configurations in parallel, use a compound run configuration.

  • Build Artifacts: select this option to build an artifact or artifacts. In the dialog that opens, select the artifact or artifacts that should be built.

  • Launch Web Browser: select this option to have a browser started. In the dialog that opens, select the type of the browser and provide the start URL. Also, specify if you want the browser be launched with JavaScript debugger.

  • Run Ant target: select this option to run an Ant target. In the dialog that opens, select the target to be run.

  • Run Grunt task: select this option to run a Grunt task.

    In the Grunt task dialog that opens, specify the Gruntfile.js where the required task is defined, select the task to execute, and specify the arguments to pass to the Grunt tool.

    Specify the location of the Node.js interpreter, the parameters to pass to it, and the path to the grunt-cli package.

  • Run gulp task: select this option to run a Gulp task.

    In the Gulp task dialog that opens, specify the Gulpfile.js where the required task is defined, select the task to execute, and specify the arguments to pass to the Gulp tool.

    Specify the location of the Node.js interpreter, the parameters to pass to it, and the path to the gulp package.

  • Run Maven Goal: select this option to run a Maven goal. In the dialog that opens, select the goal to be run.

  • Run npm script: select this option to execute an npm script.

    In the NPM Script dialog that opens, specify the npm run/debug configuration settings.

  • Compile TypeScript: select to run the built-in TypeScript compiler and thus make sure that all the changes you made to your TypeScript code are reflected in the generated JavaScript files. In the TypeScript Compile Settings dialog that opens, select or clear the Check errors checkbox to configure the behaviour of the compiler in case any errors are detected:

    • If the Check errors checkbox is selected, the compiler will show all the errors and the run configuration will not start.

    • If the Check errors checkbox is cleared, the compiler will show all the detected errors but the run configuration still will be launched.

  • Generate CoffeeScript Source Maps: select this option to generate the source maps for your CoffeeScript sources. In the dialog that opens, specify where your CoffeeScript source files are located.

  • Run Remote External Tool: adds a remote SSH external tool.

  • Run Rake task: add a Rake task to be executed prior to running or debugging. To choose a Rake task, click the browse button the Browse button, and select the desired task from the list of available tasks.

    Note that code completion is available here.

    Code completion for the Rake tasks

  • Run JRuby compiler: choose this option to execute JRuby compiler with the specified target path, compiler process heap size, and command line parameters (if any).

the Remove button

Alt+Delete

Click this icon to remove the selected task from the list.

Edit

Enter

Click this icon to edit the selected task. Make the necessary changes in the dialog that opens.

Method up/Method down

Alt+Up/Alt+Down

Click these icons to move the selected task one line up or down in the list. The tasks are performed in the order that they appear in the list.

Show this page

Select this checkbox to show the run/debug configuration settings prior to actually starting the run/debug configuration.

Activate tool window

By default this checkbox is selected and the Run or the Debug tool window opens when you start the run/debug configuration.

Otherwise, if the checkbox is cleared, the tool window is hidden. However, when the configuration is running, you can open the corresponding tool window for it yourself by pressing Alt+4 or Alt+5.

Last modified: 10 August 2022