Tonya Mork 8ff5899348 Widgets: Preserve classic sidebars when switching to a block theme.
When switching to a block theme, classic sidebars were orphaned and their widgets remapping to the `'wp_inactive_widgets'` sidebar . This changeset preserves the sidebars and their widgets, providing a migration path to a block theme without losing the widgets.

Classic sidebars are now:

* Stored in a new theme mod called `'wp_classic_sidebars'`;
* Restored to the `$wp_registered_sidebars` global variable when the `'widgets_init'` action fires (via a new internal function called `_wp_block_theme_register_classic_sidebars()`);
* And marked as `'inactive'` when interacting with sidebars REST API endpoint.

References:
* [https://github.com/WordPress/gutenberg/pull/45509 Gutenberg PR 45509] which adds an option for importing widgets from sidebars into template parts.

Follow-up to [50995], [6334].

Props mamaduka, audrasjb, hellofromTonya, ironprogrammer, jameskoster, joen, matveb, mukesh27, noisysocks, poena, youknowriad.
Fixes #57531.

git-svn-id: https://develop.svn.wordpress.org/trunk@55200 602fd350-edb4-49c9-b593-d223f7449a82
2023-02-03 00:13:52 +00:00
..

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.