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Make sure all routes in your Laravel app are ok

In a typical Laravel application there are many pages that can be accessed by users. It's easy to forget to test all of them. This package makes it easy to test all GET routes in your application.

Here's a quick example:

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;

routeTesting('all GET routes')
   ->assertSuccessful();

This will test all GET routes in your application and ensure they return a 200 HTTP status code. Here's what the output looks like when you run this test in a small app.

screenshot

Instead of assertSuccessful() you can use any assertion that is available in Laravel's TestResponse class, such as assertRedirect(), assertNotFound(), assertForbidden(), etc.

You can also test specific routes:

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;

routeTesting('all blog routes')
    ->include('blog*')
    ->assertSuccessful();

If you there are routes that have route model bindings, the package will skip the test for those routes. Let's assume you have a route defined as user/{user}. Here's what the output looks like when you run the test.

screenshot

If you want to test a route with a route model binding, you can provide the model using the bind method.

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;
use App\Models\User;

routeTesting('all blog routes')
    ->bind('user', User::factory()->create())
    ->assertSuccessful();

When you run the test now, the package will use the provided model to test the route.

screenshot

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Installation

You can install the package via composer:

composer require spatie/pest-plugin-route-testing

Usage

You can use the routeTesting function to test all routes in your application.

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;

routeTesting('all routes')
    ->assertSuccessful();

This will test all GET routes in your application and ensure they return a 200 HTTP status code. Here's what the output looks like when you run this test in a small app.

screenshot

Instead of assertSuccessful() you can use any assertion that is available in Laravel's TestResponse class, such as assertRedirect(), assertNotFound(), assertForbidden(), etc.

Here's an example where we test if a redirect is working.

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;

routeTesting('redirect')
    ->include('old-section/*')
    ->assertRedirect('new-section/*');

Testing specific routes

You can test specific routes by using the include method. There is support for wildcards. Here's an example that tests all routes that start with blog.

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;

routeTesting('all blog routes')
    ->include('blog*')
    ->assertSuccessful();

You can also pass as many arguments as you want to the include method.

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;

routeTesting('all blog routes')
    ->include('blog*', 'post*')
    ->assertSuccessful();

Excluding routes

If you want to exclude routes from the test, you can use the exclude method. Here's an example that tests all routes except the ones that start with admin.

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;

routeTesting('all blog routes')
    ->exclude('admin*')
    ->assertSuccessful();

Binding route model bindings

If you there are routes that have route model bindings, the package will skip the test for those routes. Let's assume you have a route defined as user/{user}. Here's what the output looks like when you run the test.

screenshot

If you want to test a route with a route model binding, you can provide the model using the bind method.

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;
use App\Models\User;

routeTesting('all blog routes')
    ->bind('user', User::factory()->create())
    ->assertSuccessful();

When you run the test now, the package will use the provided model to test the route.

screenshot

If you don't want to display tests that are skipped because of a missing model binding, you can call ignoreRoutesWithMissingBindings().

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;

routeTesting('all blog routes')
    ->ignoreRoutesWithMissingBindings()
    ->assertSuccessful();

Executing custom code before the test

You can use the setUp method to execute code before the route test is run. Here's an example where we log in a user before running the test.

use function Spatie\RouteTesting\routeTesting;

routeTesting('all admin routes')
    ->setUp(function ()
    {
        $user = User::factory()->create();
        
        $this->actingAs($user);
        
        // optionally, you could also bind the model
        $this->bind('user', $user);
    })
    ->include('admin*')
    ->assertSuccessful();

Testing

composer test

Changelog

Please see CHANGELOG for more information on what has changed recently.

Contributing

Please see CONTRIBUTING for details.

Security Vulnerabilities

Please review our security policy on how to report security vulnerabilities.

Credits

License

The MIT License (MIT). Please see License File for more information.