Thank you for contributing to Doctrine!
Before we can merge your Pull-Request here are some guidelines that you need to follow. These guidelines exist not to annoy you, but to keep the code base clean, unified and future proof.
Doctrine has general contributing guidelines, make sure you follow them.
This project follows doctrine/coding-standard
.
You may fix many some of the issues with vendor/bin/phpcbf
.
Please try to add a test for your pull-request.
- If you want to fix a bug or provide a reproduce case, create a test file in
tests/Doctrine/Tests/ORM/Functional/Ticket
with the name of the ticket,DDC1234Test.php
for example. - If you want to contribute new functionality add unit- or functional tests depending on the scope of the feature.
You can run the unit-tests by calling vendor/bin/phpunit
from the root of the project.
It will run all the tests with an in memory SQLite database.
In order to do that, you will need a fresh copy of the ORM, and you will have to run a composer installation in the project:
git clone git@github.com:doctrine/orm.git
cd orm
composer install
To run the testsuite against another database, copy the phpunit.xml.dist
to for example mysql.phpunit.xml
and edit the parameters. You can
take a look at the ci/github/phpunit
directory for some examples. Then run:
vendor/bin/phpunit -c mysql.phpunit.xml
If you do not provide these parameters, the test suite will use an in-memory sqlite database.
Tips for creating unit tests:
- If you put a test into the
Ticket
namespace as described above, put the testcase and all entities into the same class. Seehttps://github.com/doctrine/orm/tree/2.8.x/tests/Doctrine/Tests/ORM/Functional/Ticket/DDC2306Test.php
for an example.
Please allow us time to review your pull requests. We will give our best to review everything as fast as possible, but cannot always live up to our own expectations.
Thank you very much again for your contribution!