Wordpress/tests/phpunit
Pascal Birchler b58973554d Sitemaps: Add XML sitemaps functionality to WordPress.
While web crawlers are able to discover pages from links within the site and from other sites, XML sitemaps supplement this approach by allowing crawlers to quickly and comprehensively identify all URLs included in the sitemap and learn other signals about those URLs using the associated metadata.

See https://make.wordpress.org/core/2020/06/10/merge-announcement-extensible-core-sitemaps/ for more details.

This feature exposes the sitemap index via `/wp-sitemap.xml` and exposes a variety of new filters and hooks for developers to modify the behavior. Users can disable sitemaps completely by turning off search engine visibility in WordPress admin.

This change also introduces a new `esc_xml()` function to escape strings for output in XML, as well as XML support to `wp_kses_normalize_entities()`.

Props Adrian McShane, afragen, adamsilverstein, casiepa, flixos90, garrett-eclipse, joemcgill, kburgoine, kraftbj, milana_cap, pacifika, pbiron, pfefferle, Ruxandra Gradina, swissspidy, szepeviktor, tangrufus, tweetythierry.
Fixes #50117.
See #3670. See #19998.


git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@48072 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2020-06-17 15:22:49 +00:00
..
data REST API: Add additional fields to the themes controller. 2020-06-07 06:44:08 +00:00
includes Sitemaps: Add XML sitemaps functionality to WordPress. 2020-06-17 15:22:49 +00:00
tests Sitemaps: Add XML sitemaps functionality to WordPress. 2020-06-17 15:22:49 +00:00
README.txt
build.xml
multisite.xml
wp-mail-real-test.php Code Modernization: Replace `dirname( __FILE__ )` calls with `__DIR__` magic constant. 2020-02-06 06:31:22 +00:00

README.txt

The short version:

1. Create a clean MySQL database and user.  DO NOT USE AN EXISTING DATABASE or you will lose data, guaranteed.

2. Copy wp-tests-config-sample.php to wp-tests-config.php, edit it and include your database name/user/password.

3. $ svn up

4. Run the tests from the "trunk" directory:
   To execute a particular test:
      $ phpunit tests/phpunit/tests/test_case.php
   To execute all tests:
      $ phpunit

Notes:

Test cases live in the 'tests' subdirectory.  All files in that directory will be included by default.  Extend the WP_UnitTestCase class to ensure your test is run.

phpunit will initialize and install a (more or less) complete running copy of WordPress each time it is run.  This makes it possible to run functional interface and module tests against a fully working database and codebase, as opposed to pure unit tests with mock objects and stubs.  Pure unit tests may be used also, of course.

Changes to the test database will be rolled back as tests are finished, to ensure a clean start next time the tests are run.

phpunit is intended to run at the command line, not via a web server.