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karma-ng-html2js-preprocessor

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Preprocessor for converting PHP files to AngularJS 1.x and Angular 2 templates.

Rationale

Some people (like me) like to use PHP to write server side stuff. While PHP admittedly isn't the prettiest language in town (although it's come a long way), it does come with a gazillion features that make writing HTML easier. Also, a lot of existing code and libraries are simply in PHP.

When using PHP to generate AngularJS frontside code, it happens that your HTML is generated by PHP and only afterwards used as an Angular template. This can be convenient when some logic needs to be prerendered (e.g. for search engines). This little module allows you to use these templates in your unit tests.

karma-ng-php2js-preprocessor was based on karma-ng-html2js-preprocessor and shares most of its options/functionality.

Installation

The easiest way is to keep karma-ng-php2js-preprocessor as a devDependency in your package.json. Just run

$ npm install karma-ng-php2js-preprocessor --save-dev

Configuration

// karma.conf.js
module.exports = function(config) {
  config.set({
    preprocessors: {
      '**/*.php': ['ng-php2js']
    },

    files: [
      '*.js',
      '*.php',
      '*.php.ext',
      // if you want to load template files in nested directories, you must use this
      '**/*.php'
    ],

    // if you have defined plugins explicitly, add karma-ng-html2js-preprocessor
    // plugins: [
    //     <your plugins>
    //     'karma-ng-php2js-preprocessor',
    // ]

    ngPhp2JsPreprocessor: {
      // strip this from the file path
      stripPrefix: 'public/',
      stripSuffix: '.ext',
      // prepend this to the
      prependPrefix: 'served/',

      // or define a custom transform function
      // - cacheId returned is used to load template
      //   module(cacheId) will return template at filepath
      cacheIdFromPath: function(filepath) {
        // example strips 'public/' from anywhere in the path
        // module(app/templates/template.html) => app/public/templates/template.html
        var cacheId = filepath.strip('public/', '');
        return cacheId;
      },

      // - setting this option will create only a single module that contains templates
      //   from all the files, so you can load them all with module('foo')
      // - you may provide a function(htmlPath, originalPath) instead of a string
      //   if you'd like to generate modules dynamically
      //   htmlPath is a originalPath stripped and/or prepended
      //   with all provided suffixes and prefixes
      moduleName: 'foo',

      // Path to PHP binary. Defaults to `'/user/bin/php'`.
      phpBin: '/usr/bin/php'
    }
  })
}

Multiple module names

Use function if more than one module that contains templates is required.

// karma.conf.js
module.exports = function(config) {
  config.set({
    // ...

    ngHtml2JsPreprocessor: {
      // ...

      moduleName: function (htmlPath, originalPath) {
        return htmlPath.split('/')[0];
      }
    }
  })
}

If only some of the templates should be placed in the modules, return '', null or undefined for those which should not.

// karma.conf.js
module.exports = function(config) {
  config.set({
    // ...

    ngHtml2JsPreprocessor: {
      // ...

      moduleName: function (htmlPath, originalPath) {
        var module = htmlPath.split('/')[0];
        return module !== 'tpl' ? module : null;
      }
    }
  })
}

How does it work ?

This preprocessor runs PHP files against the PHP parser and converts the resulting HTML to AngularJS modules like this plugin it was based on. These modules, when loaded, put these HTML files into the $templateCache and therefore Angular won't try to fetch them from the server.

For instance this template.php...

<?php $aVariable = 'foo' ?>
<div><?php echo $aVariable ?></div>

... will be served as template.php.js:

angular.module('template.php', []).run(function($templateCache) {
  $templateCache.put('template.php', '<div>foo</div>')
})

Angular2 template caching

For using this preprocessor with Angular 2 templates use angular: 2 option ini the config file.

// karma.conf.js
module.exports = function(config) {
  config.set({
    // ...

    ngHtml2JsPreprocessor: {
      // ...

      angular: 2
    }
  })
}

The template template.php...

<?php $aVariable = 'foo' ?>
<div><?php echo $aVariable ?></div>

... will be served as template.php.js that sets the template content in the global $templateCache variable:

window.$templateCache = window.$templateCache || {}
window.$templateCache['template.php'] = '<div>foo</div>';

To use the cached templates in your Angular 2 tests use the provider for the Cached XHR implementation - CACHED_TEMPLATE_PROVIDER from angular2/platform/testing/browser. The following shows the change in karma-test-shim.js to use the cached XHR and template cache in all your tests.

// karma-test-shim.js
...
System.import('angular2/testing').then(function(testing) {
  return System.import('angular2/platform/testing/browser').then(function(providers) {
    testing.setBaseTestProviders(
      providers.TEST_BROWSER_PLATFORM_PROVIDERS,
      [providers.TEST_BROWSER_APPLICATION_PROVIDERS, providers.CACHED_TEMPLATE_PROVIDER]);
  });
}).then(function() {
...

Now when your component under test uses template.php in its templateUrl the contents of the template will be used from the template cache instead of making an XHR to fetch the contents of the template. This can be useful while writing fakeAsync tests where the component can be loaded synchronously without the need to make a XHR to get the templates.

Gotchas

Like any preprocessor the module internally receives the contents of the PHP file being parsed. Needless to say, these are simply discarded.

The preprocessor will be mostly useful during testing, since obviously for your actual project you'll use PHP to generate the templates. Having said that, in special cases it might come in handy in production.


For more information on Karma see the homepage.

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Preprocess PHP files for inclusion in Angular unit tests

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