php-timecop


DESCRIPTION
A PHP extension providing "time travel" and "time freezing" capabilities, inspired by ruby timecop gem.
INSTALL (with package manager)
If you are using macOS, you can install php-timecop with Homebrew .
brew install homebrew/php/php71-timecop
In Fedora, you can install php-timecop from official repository as php-pecl-timecop
sudo dnf install php-pecl-timecop
In RHEL/CentOS, you can install php-timecop from Remi's RPM repository.
sudo yum install http://rpms.famillecollet.com/enterprise/remi-release-7.rpm
sudo yum install yum-utils
sudo yum-config-manager --enable remi-php71
sudo yum install php-pecl-timecop
Otherwise, you can use pecl command to install php-timecop.
pecl install timecop-beta
INSTALL (with phpize)
git clone https://github.com/hnw/php-timecop.git
cd php-timecop
phpize
./configure
make
make install
After install, add these lines to your php.ini
.
extension=timecop.so
INSTALL (on Windows, experimental)
You can download the extension DLL from PECL :: Package :: timecop
To install the extension, extract zip and copy php_timecop.dll
to the extension directory.
After install, add these lines to your php.ini
.
extension=php_timecop.dll
SYSTEM REQUIREMENTS
- OS: Windows(experimental), Linux, macOS
- PHP: 5.3.1 - 7.2.x (might work on 5.2.x and 5.3.0, but not tested enough)
- SAPI: Apache, CLI
- Other SAPIs are not tested, but there is no SAPI-dependent code.
- non-ZTS(recommended), ZTS
FEATURES
- Freeze time to a specific point.
- Travel back to a specific point in time, but allow time to continue moving forward from there.
- Scale time by a given scaling factor that will cause time to move at an accelerated pace.
- Override the following PHP stock functions and methods, which supports freezing or traveling time.
time()
mktime()
gmmktime()
date()
gmdate()
idate()
getdate()
localtime()
strtotime()
strftime()
gmstrftime()
microtime()
gettimeofday()
unixtojd()
DateTime::_construct()
DateTime::createFromFormat()
(PHP >= 5.3.0)DateTimeImmutable::_construct()
(PHP >= 5.5.0)DateTimeImmutable::createFromFormat()
(PHP >= 5.5.0)date_create()
date_create_from_format()
(PHP >= 5.3.0)date_create_immutable()
(PHP >= 5.5.0)date_create_immutable_from_format()
(PHP >= 5.5.0)
- Rewrite value of the following global variables when the time has been moved.
$_SERVER['REQUEST_TIME']
USAGE
<?php
var_dump(date("Y-m-d")); // todays date
timecop_freeze(0);
var_dump(gmdate("Y-m-d H:i:s")); // string(19) "1970-01-01 00:00:00"
var_dump(strtotime("+100000 sec")); // int(100000)
The difference between timecop_freeze()
and timecop_travel()
timecop_freeze()
is used to statically mock the concept of now. As your program executes, time()
will not change unless you make subsequent calls to timecop_freeze/travel/scale/return
. timecop_travel()
, on the other hand, computes an offset between what we currently think time()
is and the time passed in. It uses this offset to simulate the passage of time. To demonstrate, consider the following code snippets:
<?php
$new_time = mktime(12, 0, 0, 9, 1, 2008);
timecop_freeze($new_time);
sleep(10);
var_dump($new_time == time()); // bool(true)
timecop_return(); // "turn off" php-timecop
timecop_travel($new_time);
sleep(10);
var_dump($new_time == time()); // bool(false)
Timecop Scale
timecop_scale($scaling_factor)
make time move at an accelerated pace. With this function, you can emulate long-span integration test and reduce execution time of time-dependent unit test.
<?php
Timecop::freeze(new DateTime("2017-01-01 00:00:00"));
Timecop::scale(50); // time goes x50 faster
usleep(100000); // 100ms
var_dump((new DateTime())->format("c")); // string(25) "2017-01-01T00:00:05+00:00"
CHANGELOG
version 1.2.10(beta), 2017/11/23
- Fix "double free" bug on PHP 7.2.0 (#32)
version 1.2.8(beta), 2017/7/7
- Publish on PECL
- Support Windows (experimental)
version 1.2.6(beta), 2017/7/4
- Bug fixed: Calling timecop_freeze() on a fast machine sometimes fails to stop the microsecond part of current time.
- Support PHP 7.2.0+
version 1.2.4(beta), 2017/6/8
- Fix #18 (Fix date_create_from_format when using `