Introduction
Laravel provides a very fluent API for making HTTP requests to your application and examining the responses. For example, take a look at the feature test defined below:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
/**
* A basic test example.
*/
public function test_the_application_returns_a_successful_response(): void
{
$response = $this->get('/');
$response->assertStatus(200);
}
}
The get
method makes a GET
request into the
application, while the assertStatus
method asserts that the
returned response should have the given HTTP status code. In addition to
this simple assertion, Laravel also contains a variety of assertions for
inspecting the response headers, content, JSON structure, and more.
Making Requests
To make a request to your application, you may invoke the
get
, post
, put
,
patch
, or delete
methods within your test.
These methods do not actually issue a "real" HTTP request to your
application. Instead, the entire network request is simulated
internally.
Instead of returning an Illuminate\Http\Response
instance, test request methods return an instance of
Illuminate\Testing\TestResponse
, which provides a variety of helpful assertions that
allow you to inspect your application's responses:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
/**
* A basic test example.
*/
public function test_a_basic_request(): void
{
$response = $this->get('/');
$response->assertStatus(200);
}
}
In general, each of your tests should only make one request to your application. Unexpected behavior may occur if multiple requests are executed within a single test method.
Note:
For convenience, the CSRF middleware is automatically disabled when running tests.
Customizing Request Headers
You may use the withHeaders
method to customize the
request's headers before it is sent to the application. This method
allows you to add any custom headers you would like to the request:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
/**
* A basic functional test example.
*/
public function test_interacting_with_headers(): void
{
$response = $this->withHeaders([
'X-Header' => 'Value',
])->post('/user', ['name' => 'Sally']);
$response->assertStatus(201);
}
}
Cookies
You may use the withCookie
or withCookies
methods to set cookie values before making a request. The
withCookie
method accepts a cookie name and value as its
two arguments, while the withCookies
method accepts an
array of name / value pairs:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
public function test_interacting_with_cookies(): void
{
$response = $this->withCookie('color', 'blue')->get('/');
$response = $this->withCookies([
'color' => 'blue',
'name' => 'Taylor',
])->get('/');
}
}
Session / Authentication
Laravel provides several helpers for interacting with the session
during HTTP testing. First, you may set the session data to a given
array using the withSession
method. This is useful for
loading the session with data before issuing a request to your
application:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
public function test_interacting_with_the_session(): void
{
$response = $this->withSession(['banned' => false])->get('/');
}
}
Laravel's session is typically used to maintain state for the
currently authenticated user. Therefore, the actingAs
helper method provides a simple way to authenticate a given user as the
current user. For example, we may use a model factory to generate and
authenticate a user:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use App\Models\User;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
public function test_an_action_that_requires_authentication(): void
{
$user = User::factory()->create();
$response = $this->actingAs($user)
->withSession(['banned' => false])
->get('/');
}
}
You may also specify which guard should be used to authenticate the
given user by passing the guard name as the second argument to the
actingAs
method. The guard that is provided to the
actingAs
method will also become the default guard for the
duration of the test:
$this->actingAs($user, 'web')
Debugging Responses
After making a test request to your application, the
dump
, dumpHeaders
, and
dumpSession
methods may be used to examine and debug the
response contents:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
/**
* A basic test example.
*/
public function test_basic_test(): void
{
$response = $this->get('/');
$response->dumpHeaders();
$response->dumpSession();
$response->dump();
}
}
Alternatively, you may use the dd
,
ddHeaders
, and ddSession
methods to dump
information about the response and then stop execution:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
/**
* A basic test example.
*/
public function test_basic_test(): void
{
$response = $this->get('/');
$response->ddHeaders();
$response->ddSession();
$response->dd();
}
}
Exception Handling
Sometimes you may want to test that your application is throwing a
specific exception. To ensure that the exception does not get caught by
Laravel's exception handler and returned as an HTTP response, you may
invoke the withoutExceptionHandling
method before making
your request:
$response = $this->withoutExceptionHandling()->get('/');
In addition, if you would like to ensure that your application is not
utilizing features that have been deprecated by the PHP language or the
libraries your application is using, you may invoke the
withoutDeprecationHandling
method before making your
request. When deprecation handling is disabled, deprecation warnings
will be converted to exceptions, thus causing your test to fail:
$response = $this->withoutDeprecationHandling()->get('/');
The assertThrows
method may be used to assert that code
within a given closure throws an exception of the specified type:
$this->assertThrows(
fn () => (new ProcessOrder)->execute(),
OrderInvalid::class
);
Testing JSON APIs
Laravel also provides several helpers for testing JSON APIs and their
responses. For example, the json
, getJson
,
postJson
, putJson
, patchJson
,
deleteJson
, and optionsJson
methods may be
used to issue JSON requests with various HTTP verbs. You may also easily
pass data and headers to these methods. To get started, let's write a
test to make a POST
request to /api/user
and
assert that the expected JSON data was returned:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
/**
* A basic functional test example.
*/
public function test_making_an_api_request(): void
{
$response = $this->postJson('/api/user', ['name' => 'Sally']);
$response
->assertStatus(201)
->assertJson([
'created' => true,
]);
}
}
In addition, JSON response data may be accessed as array variables on the response, making it convenient for you to inspect the individual values returned within a JSON response:
$this->assertTrue($response['created']);
Note:
TheassertJson
method converts the response to an array and utilizesPHPUnit::assertArraySubset
to verify that the given array exists within the JSON response returned by the application. So, if there are other properties in the JSON response, this test will still pass as long as the given fragment is present.
Asserting Exact JSON Matches
As previously mentioned, the assertJson
method may be
used to assert that a fragment of JSON exists within the JSON response.
If you would like to verify that a given array exactly
matches the JSON returned by your application, you should use
the assertExactJson
method:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
/**
* A basic functional test example.
*/
public function test_asserting_an_exact_json_match(): void
{
$response = $this->postJson('/user', ['name' => 'Sally']);
$response
->assertStatus(201)
->assertExactJson([
'created' => true,
]);
}
}
Asserting On JSON Paths
If you would like to verify that the JSON response contains the given
data at a specified path, you should use the assertJsonPath
method:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
/**
* A basic functional test example.
*/
public function test_asserting_a_json_paths_value(): void
{
$response = $this->postJson('/user', ['name' => 'Sally']);
$response
->assertStatus(201)
->assertJsonPath('team.owner.name', 'Darian');
}
}
The assertJsonPath
method also accepts a closure, which
may be used to dynamically determine if the assertion should pass:
$response->assertJsonPath('team.owner.name', fn (string $name) => strlen($name) >= 3);
Fluent JSON Testing
Laravel also offers a beautiful way to fluently test your
application's JSON responses. To get started, pass a closure to the
assertJson
method. This closure will be invoked with an
instance of Illuminate\Testing\Fluent\AssertableJson
which
can be used to make assertions against the JSON that was returned by
your application. The where
method may be used to make
assertions against a particular attribute of the JSON, while the
missing
method may be used to assert that a particular
attribute is missing from the JSON:
use Illuminate\Testing\Fluent\AssertableJson;
/**
* A basic functional test example.
*/
public function test_fluent_json(): void
{
$response = $this->getJson('/users/1');
$response
->assertJson(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->where('id', 1)
->where('name', 'Victoria Faith')
->where('email', fn (string $email) => str($email)->is('victoria@gmail.com'))
->whereNot('status', 'pending')
->missing('password')
->etc()
);
}
Understanding The etc
Method
In the example above, you may have noticed we invoked the
etc
method at the end of our assertion chain. This method
informs Laravel that there may be other attributes present on the JSON
object. If the etc
method is not used, the test will fail
if other attributes that you did not make assertions against exist on
the JSON object.
The intention behind this behavior is to protect you from
unintentionally exposing sensitive information in your JSON responses by
forcing you to either explicitly make an assertion against the attribute
or explicitly allow additional attributes via the etc
method.
However, you should be aware that not including the etc
method in your assertion chain does not ensure that additional
attributes are not being added to arrays that are nested within your
JSON object. The etc
method only ensures that no additional
attributes exist at the nesting level in which the etc
method is invoked.
Asserting Attribute Presence / Absence
To assert that an attribute is present or absent, you may use the
has
and missing
methods:
$response->assertJson(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->has('data')
->missing('message')
);
In addition, the hasAll
and missingAll
methods allow asserting the presence or absence of multiple attributes
simultaneously:
$response->assertJson(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->hasAll(['status', 'data'])
->missingAll(['message', 'code'])
);
You may use the hasAny
method to determine if at least
one of a given list of attributes is present:
$response->assertJson(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->has('status')
->hasAny('data', 'message', 'code')
);
Asserting Against JSON Collections
Often, your route will return a JSON response that contains multiple items, such as multiple users:
Route::get('/users', function () {
return User::all();
});
In these situations, we may use the fluent JSON object's
has
method to make assertions against the users included in
the response. For example, let's assert that the JSON response contains
three users. Next, we'll make some assertions about the first user in
the collection using the first
method. The
first
method accepts a closure which receives another
assertable JSON string that we can use to make assertions about the
first object in the JSON collection:
$response
->assertJson(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->has(3)
->first(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->where('id', 1)
->where('name', 'Victoria Faith')
->where('email', fn (string $email) => str($email)->is('victoria@gmail.com'))
->missing('password')
->etc()
)
);
Scoping JSON Collection Assertions
Sometimes, your application's routes will return JSON collections that are assigned named keys:
Route::get('/users', function () {
return [
'meta' => [...],
'users' => User::all(),
];
})
When testing these routes, you may use the has
method to
assert against the number of items in the collection. In addition, you
may use the has
method to scope a chain of assertions:
$response
->assertJson(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->has('meta')
->has('users', 3)
->has('users.0', fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->where('id', 1)
->where('name', 'Victoria Faith')
->where('email', fn (string $email) => str($email)->is('victoria@gmail.com'))
->missing('password')
->etc()
)
);
However, instead of making two separate calls to the has
method to assert against the users
collection, you may make
a single call which provides a closure as its third parameter. When
doing so, the closure will automatically be invoked and scoped to the
first item in the collection:
$response
->assertJson(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->has('meta')
->has('users', 3, fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->where('id', 1)
->where('name', 'Victoria Faith')
->where('email', fn (string $email) => str($email)->is('victoria@gmail.com'))
->missing('password')
->etc()
)
);
Asserting JSON Types
You may only want to assert that the properties in the JSON response
are of a certain type. The
Illuminate\Testing\Fluent\AssertableJson
class provides the
whereType
and whereAllType
methods for doing
just that:
$response->assertJson(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->whereType('id', 'integer')
->whereAllType([
'users.0.name' => 'string',
'meta' => 'array'
])
);
You may specify multiple types using the |
character, or
passing an array of types as the second parameter to the
whereType
method. The assertion will be successful if the
response value is any of the listed types:
$response->assertJson(fn (AssertableJson $json) =>
$json->whereType('name', 'string|null')
->whereType('id', ['string', 'integer'])
);
The whereType
and whereAllType
methods
recognize the following types: string
,
integer
, double
, boolean
,
array
, and null
.
Testing File Uploads
The Illuminate\Http\UploadedFile
class provides a
fake
method which may be used to generate dummy files or
images for testing. This, combined with the Storage
facade's fake
method, greatly simplifies the testing of
file uploads. For example, you may combine these two features to easily
test an avatar upload form:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Illuminate\Http\UploadedFile;
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Storage;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
public function test_avatars_can_be_uploaded(): void
{
Storage::fake('avatars');
$file = UploadedFile::fake()->image('avatar.jpg');
$response = $this->post('/avatar', [
'avatar' => $file,
]);
Storage::disk('avatars')->assertExists($file->hashName());
}
}
If you would like to assert that a given file does not exist, you may
use the assertMissing
method provided by the
Storage
facade:
Storage::fake('avatars');
// ...
Storage::disk('avatars')->assertMissing('missing.jpg');
Fake File Customization
When creating files using the fake
method provided by
the UploadedFile
class, you may specify the width, height,
and size of the image (in kilobytes) in order to better test your
application's validation rules:
UploadedFile::fake()->image('avatar.jpg', $width, $height)->size(100);
In addition to creating images, you may create files of any other
type using the create
method:
UploadedFile::fake()->create('document.pdf', $sizeInKilobytes);
If needed, you may pass a $mimeType
argument to the
method to explicitly define the MIME type that should be returned by the
file:
UploadedFile::fake()->create(
'document.pdf', $sizeInKilobytes, 'application/pdf'
);
Testing Views
Laravel also allows you to render a view without making a simulated
HTTP request to the application. To accomplish this, you may call the
view
method within your test. The view
method
accepts the view name and an optional array of data. The method returns
an instance of Illuminate\Testing\TestView
, which offers
several methods to conveniently make assertions about the view's
contents:
<?php
namespace Tests\Feature;
use Tests\TestCase;
class ExampleTest extends TestCase
{
public function test_a_welcome_view_can_be_rendered(): void
{
$view = $this->view('welcome', ['name' => 'Taylor']);
$view->assertSee('Taylor');
}
}
The TestView
class provides the following assertion
methods: assertSee
, assertSeeInOrder
,
assertSeeText
, assertSeeTextInOrder
,
assertDontSee
, and assertDontSeeText
.
If needed, you may get the raw, rendered view contents by casting the
TestView
instance to a string:
$contents = (string) $this->view('welcome');
Sharing Errors
Some views may depend on errors shared in the global
error bag provided by Laravel. To hydrate the error bag with error
messages, you may use the withViewErrors
method:
$view = $this->withViewErrors([
'name' => ['Please provide a valid name.']
])->view('form');
$view->assertSee('Please provide a valid name.');
Rendering Blade & Components
If necessary, you may use the blade
method to evaluate
and render a raw Blade string. Like the
view
method, the blade
method returns an
instance of Illuminate\Testing\TestView
:
$view = $this->blade(
'<x-component :name="$name" />',
['name' => 'Taylor']
);
$view->assertSee('Taylor');
You may use the component
method to evaluate and render
a Blade component. The
component
method returns an instance of
Illuminate\Testing\TestComponent
:
$view = $this->component(Profile::class, ['name' => 'Taylor']);
$view->assertSee('Taylor');
Available Assertions
Response Assertions
Laravel's Illuminate\Testing\TestResponse
class provides
a variety of custom assertion methods that you may utilize when testing
your application. These assertions may be accessed on the response that
is returned by the json
, get
,
post
, put
, and delete
test
methods:
assertBadRequest
Assert that the response has a bad request (400) HTTP status code:
$response->assertBadRequest();
assertAccepted
Assert that the response has an accepted (202) HTTP status code:
$response->assertAccepted();
assertConflict
Assert that the response has a conflict (409) HTTP status code:
$response->assertConflict();
assertCookie
Assert that the response contains the given cookie:
$response->assertCookie($cookieName, $value = null);
assertCookieExpired
Assert that the response contains the given cookie and it is expired:
$response->assertCookieExpired($cookieName);
assertCookieNotExpired
Assert that the response contains the given cookie and it is not expired:
$response->assertCookieNotExpired($cookieName);
assertCookieMissing
Assert that the response does not contain the given cookie:
$response->assertCookieMissing($cookieName);
assertCreated
Assert that the response has a 201 HTTP status code:
$response->assertCreated();
assertDontSee
Assert that the given string is not contained within the response
returned by the application. This assertion will automatically escape
the given string unless you pass a second argument of
false
:
$response->assertDontSee($value, $escaped = true);
assertDontSeeText
Assert that the given string is not contained within the response
text. This assertion will automatically escape the given string unless
you pass a second argument of false
. This method will pass
the response content to the strip_tags
PHP function before
making the assertion:
$response->assertDontSeeText($value, $escaped = true);
assertDownload
Assert that the response is a "download". Typically, this means the
invoked route that returned the response returned a
Response::download
response,
BinaryFileResponse
, or Storage::download
response:
$response->assertDownload();
If you wish, you may assert that the downloadable file was assigned a given file name:
$response->assertDownload('image.jpg');
assertExactJson
Assert that the response contains an exact match of the given JSON data:
$response->assertExactJson(array $data);
assertForbidden
Assert that the response has a forbidden (403) HTTP status code:
$response->assertForbidden();
assertFound
Assert that the response has a found (302) HTTP status code:
$response->assertFound();
assertGone
Assert that the response has a gone (410) HTTP status code:
$response->assertGone();
assertHeader
Assert that the given header and value is present on the response:
$response->assertHeader($headerName, $value = null);
assertHeaderMissing
Assert that the given header is not present on the response:
$response->assertHeaderMissing($headerName);
assertInternalServerError
Assert that the response has an "Internal Server Error" (500) HTTP status code:
$response->assertInternalServerError();
assertJson
Assert that the response contains the given JSON data:
$response->assertJson(array $data, $strict = false);
The assertJson
method converts the response to an array
and utilizes PHPUnit::assertArraySubset
to verify that the
given array exists within the JSON response returned by the application.
So, if there are other properties in the JSON response, this test will
still pass as long as the given fragment is present.
assertJsonCount
Assert that the response JSON has an array with the expected number of items at the given key:
$response->assertJsonCount($count, $key = null);
assertJsonFragment
Assert that the response contains the given JSON data anywhere in the response:
Route::get('/users', function () {
return [
'users' => [
[
'name' => 'Taylor Otwell',
],
],
];
});
$response->assertJsonFragment(['name' => 'Taylor Otwell']);
assertJsonIsArray
Assert that the response JSON is an array:
$response->assertJsonIsArray();
assertJsonIsObject
Assert that the response JSON is an object:
$response->assertJsonIsObject();
assertJsonMissing
Assert that the response does not contain the given JSON data:
$response->assertJsonMissing(array $data);
assertJsonMissingExact
Assert that the response does not contain the exact JSON data:
$response->assertJsonMissingExact(array $data);
assertJsonMissingValidationErrors
Assert that the response has no JSON validation errors for the given keys:
$response->assertJsonMissingValidationErrors($keys);
Note:
The more generic assertValid method may be used to assert that a response does not have validation errors that were returned as JSON and that no errors were flashed to session storage.
assertJsonPath
Assert that the response contains the given data at the specified path:
$response->assertJsonPath($path, $expectedValue);
For example, if the following JSON response is returned by your application:
{
"user": {
"name": "Steve Schoger"
}
}
You may assert that the name
property of the
user
object matches a given value like so:
$response->assertJsonPath('user.name', 'Steve Schoger');
assertJsonMissingPath
Assert that the response does not contain the given path:
$response->assertJsonMissingPath($path);
For example, if the following JSON response is returned by your application:
{
"user": {
"name": "Steve Schoger"
}
}
You may assert that it does not contain the email
property of the user
object:
$response->assertJsonMissingPath('user.email');
assertJsonStructure
Assert that the response has a given JSON structure:
$response->assertJsonStructure(array $structure);
For example, if the JSON response returned by your application contains the following data:
{
"user": {
"name": "Steve Schoger"
}
}
You may assert that the JSON structure matches your expectations like so:
$response->assertJsonStructure([
'user' => [
'name',
]
]);
Sometimes, JSON responses returned by your application may contain arrays of objects:
{
"user": [
{
"name": "Steve Schoger",
"age": 55,
"location": "Earth"
},
{
"name": "Mary Schoger",
"age": 60,
"location": "Earth"
}
]
}
In this situation, you may use the *
character to assert
against the structure of all of the objects in the array:
$response->assertJsonStructure([
'user' => [
'*' => [
'name',
'age',
'location'
]
]
]);
assertJsonValidationErrors
Assert that the response has the given JSON validation errors for the given keys. This method should be used when asserting against responses where the validation errors are returned as a JSON structure instead of being flashed to the session:
$response->assertJsonValidationErrors(array $data, $responseKey = 'errors');
Note:
The more generic assertInvalid method may be used to assert that a response has validation errors returned as JSON or that errors were flashed to session storage.
assertJsonValidationErrorFor
Assert the response has any JSON validation errors for the given key:
$response->assertJsonValidationErrorFor(string $key, $responseKey = 'errors');
assertMethodNotAllowed
Assert that the response has a method not allowed (405) HTTP status code:
$response->assertMethodNotAllowed();
assertMovedPermanently
Assert that the response has a moved permanently (301) HTTP status code:
$response->assertMovedPermanently();
assertLocation
Assert that the response has the given URI value in the
Location
header:
$response->assertLocation($uri);
assertContent
Assert that the given string matches the response content:
$response->assertContent($value);
assertNoContent
Assert that the response has the given HTTP status code and no content:
$response->assertNoContent($status = 204);
assertStreamedContent
Assert that the given string matches the streamed response content:
$response->assertStreamedContent($value);
assertNotFound
Assert that the response has a not found (404) HTTP status code:
$response->assertNotFound();
assertOk
Assert that the response has a 200 HTTP status code:
$response->assertOk();
assertPaymentRequired
Assert that the response has a payment required (402) HTTP status code:
$response->assertPaymentRequired();
assertPlainCookie
Assert that the response contains the given unencrypted cookie:
$response->assertPlainCookie($cookieName, $value = null);
assertRedirect
Assert that the response is a redirect to the given URI:
$response->assertRedirect($uri = null);
assertRedirectContains
Assert whether the response is redirecting to a URI that contains the given string:
$response->assertRedirectContains($string);
assertRedirectToRoute
Assert that the response is a redirect to the given named route:
$response->assertRedirectToRoute($name, $parameters = []);
assertRedirectToSignedRoute
Assert that the response is a redirect to the given signed route:
$response->assertRedirectToSignedRoute($name = null, $parameters = []);
assertRequestTimeout
Assert that the response has a request timeout (408) HTTP status code:
$response->assertRequestTimeout();
assertSee
Assert that the given string is contained within the response. This
assertion will automatically escape the given string unless you pass a
second argument of false
:
$response->assertSee($value, $escaped = true);
assertSeeInOrder
Assert that the given strings are contained in order within the
response. This assertion will automatically escape the given strings
unless you pass a second argument of false
:
$response->assertSeeInOrder(array $values, $escaped = true);
assertSeeText
Assert that the given string is contained within the response text.
This assertion will automatically escape the given string unless you
pass a second argument of false
. The response content will
be passed to the strip_tags
PHP function before the
assertion is made:
$response->assertSeeText($value, $escaped = true);
assertSeeTextInOrder
Assert that the given strings are contained in order within the
response text. This assertion will automatically escape the given
strings unless you pass a second argument of false
. The
response content will be passed to the strip_tags
PHP
function before the assertion is made:
$response->assertSeeTextInOrder(array $values, $escaped = true);
assertServerError
Assert that the response has a server error (>= 500 , < 600) HTTP status code:
$response->assertServerError();
assertServiceUnavailable
Assert that the response has a "Service Unavailable" (503) HTTP status code:
$response->assertServiceUnavailable();
assertSessionHas
Assert that the session contains the given piece of data:
$response->assertSessionHas($key, $value = null);
If needed, a closure can be provided as the second argument to the
assertSessionHas
method. The assertion will pass if the
closure returns true
:
$response->assertSessionHas($key, function (User $value) {
return $value->name === 'Taylor Otwell';
});
assertSessionHasInput
Assert that the session has a given value in the flashed input array:
$response->assertSessionHasInput($key, $value = null);
If needed, a closure can be provided as the second argument to the
assertSessionHasInput
method. The assertion will pass if
the closure returns true
:
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Crypt;
$response->assertSessionHasInput($key, function (string $value) {
return Crypt::decryptString($value) === 'secret';
});
assertSessionHasAll
Assert that the session contains a given array of key / value pairs:
$response->assertSessionHasAll(array $data);
For example, if your application's session contains name
and status
keys, you may assert that both exist and have
the specified values like so:
$response->assertSessionHasAll([
'name' => 'Taylor Otwell',
'status' => 'active',
]);
assertSessionHasErrors
Assert that the session contains an error for the given
$keys
. If $keys
is an associative array,
assert that the session contains a specific error message (value) for
each field (key). This method should be used when testing routes that
flash validation errors to the session instead of returning them as a
JSON structure:
$response->assertSessionHasErrors(
array $keys = [], $format = null, $errorBag = 'default'
);
For example, to assert that the name
and
email
fields have validation error messages that were
flashed to the session, you may invoke the
assertSessionHasErrors
method like so:
$response->assertSessionHasErrors(['name', 'email']);
Or, you may assert that a given field has a particular validation error message:
$response->assertSessionHasErrors([
'name' => 'The given name was invalid.'
]);
Note:
The more generic assertInvalid method may be used to assert that a response has validation errors returned as JSON or that errors were flashed to session storage.
assertSessionHasErrorsIn
Assert that the session contains an error for the given
$keys
within a specific error bag. If
$keys
is an associative array, assert that the session
contains a specific error message (value) for each field (key), within
the error bag:
$response->assertSessionHasErrorsIn($errorBag, $keys = [], $format = null);
assertSessionHasNoErrors
Assert that the session has no validation errors:
$response->assertSessionHasNoErrors();
assertSessionDoesntHaveErrors
Assert that the session has no validation errors for the given keys:
$response->assertSessionDoesntHaveErrors($keys = [], $format = null, $errorBag = 'default');
Note:
The more generic assertValid method may be used to assert that a response does not have validation errors that were returned as JSON and that no errors were flashed to session storage.
assertSessionMissing
Assert that the session does not contain the given key:
$response->assertSessionMissing($key);
assertStatus
Assert that the response has a given HTTP status code:
$response->assertStatus($code);
assertSuccessful
Assert that the response has a successful (>= 200 and < 300) HTTP status code:
$response->assertSuccessful();
assertTooManyRequests
Assert that the response has a too many requests (429) HTTP status code:
$response->assertTooManyRequests();
assertUnauthorized
Assert that the response has an unauthorized (401) HTTP status code:
$response->assertUnauthorized();
assertUnprocessable
Assert that the response has an unprocessable entity (422) HTTP status code:
$response->assertUnprocessable();
assertUnsupportedMediaType
Assert that the response has an unsupported media type (415) HTTP status code:
$response->assertUnsupportedMediaType();
assertValid
Assert that the response has no validation errors for the given keys. This method may be used for asserting against responses where the validation errors are returned as a JSON structure or where the validation errors have been flashed to the session:
// Assert that no validation errors are present...
$response->assertValid();
// Assert that the given keys do not have validation errors...
$response->assertValid(['name', 'email']);
assertInvalid
Assert that the response has validation errors for the given keys. This method may be used for asserting against responses where the validation errors are returned as a JSON structure or where the validation errors have been flashed to the session:
$response->assertInvalid(['name', 'email']);
You may also assert that a given key has a particular validation error message. When doing so, you may provide the entire message or only a small portion of the message:
$response->assertInvalid([
'name' => 'The name field is required.',
'email' => 'valid email address',
]);
assertViewHas
Assert that the response view contains a given piece of data:
$response->assertViewHas($key, $value = null);
Passing a closure as the second argument to the
assertViewHas
method will allow you to inspect and make
assertions against a particular piece of view data:
$response->assertViewHas('user', function (User $user) {
return $user->name === 'Taylor';
});
In addition, view data may be accessed as array variables on the response, allowing you to conveniently inspect it:
$this->assertEquals('Taylor', $response['name']);
assertViewHasAll
Assert that the response view has a given list of data:
$response->assertViewHasAll(array $data);
This method may be used to assert that the view simply contains data matching the given keys:
$response->assertViewHasAll([
'name',
'email',
]);
Or, you may assert that the view data is present and has specific values:
$response->assertViewHasAll([
'name' => 'Taylor Otwell',
'email' => 'taylor@example.com,',
]);
assertViewIs
Assert that the given view was returned by the route:
$response->assertViewIs($value);
assertViewMissing
Assert that the given data key was not made available to the view returned in the application's response:
$response->assertViewMissing($key);
Authentication Assertions
Laravel also provides a variety of authentication related assertions
that you may utilize within your application's feature tests. Note that
these methods are invoked on the test class itself and not the
Illuminate\Testing\TestResponse
instance returned by
methods such as get
and post
.
assertAuthenticated
Assert that a user is authenticated:
$this->assertAuthenticated($guard = null);
assertGuest
Assert that a user is not authenticated:
$this->assertGuest($guard = null);
assertAuthenticatedAs
Assert that a specific user is authenticated:
$this->assertAuthenticatedAs($user, $guard = null);
Validation Assertions
Laravel provides two primary validation related assertions that you may use to ensure the data provided in your request was either valid or invalid.
assertValid
Assert that the response has no validation errors for the given keys. This method may be used for asserting against responses where the validation errors are returned as a JSON structure or where the validation errors have been flashed to the session:
// Assert that no validation errors are present...
$response->assertValid();
// Assert that the given keys do not have validation errors...
$response->assertValid(['name', 'email']);
assertInvalid
Assert that the response has validation errors for the given keys. This method may be used for asserting against responses where the validation errors are returned as a JSON structure or where the validation errors have been flashed to the session:
$response->assertInvalid(['name', 'email']);
You may also assert that a given key has a particular validation error message. When doing so, you may provide the entire message or only a small portion of the message:
$response->assertInvalid([
'name' => 'The name field is required.',
'email' => 'valid email address',
]);