Test::Trap::Builder(3)User Contributed Perl DocumentatioTest::Trap::Builder(3)NAMETest::Trap::Builder - Backend for building test traps
VERSION
Version 0.2.2
SYNOPSIS
package My::Test::Trap;
use Test::Trap::Builder;
my $B = Test::Trap::Builder->new;
$B->layer( $layer_name => \&layer_implementation );
$B->accessor( simple => [ $layer_name ] );
$B->multi_layer( $multi_name => @names );
$B->test( $test_name => 'trap, predicate, name', \&test_function );
DESCRIPTION
Test::Trap neither traps nor tests everything you may want to trap or
test. So, Test::Trap::Builder provides methods to write your own trap
layers, accessors, and test callbacks -- preferably for use with your
own modules (trappers).
Note that layers are methods with mangled names (names are prefixed
with "layer:"), and so inherited like any other method, while accessors
are ordinary methods. Meanwhile, test callbacks are not referenced in
the symbol table by themselves, but only in combinations with
accessors, all methods of the form ACCESSOR_TEST.
EXPORTS
Trappers should not inherit from Test::Trap::Builder, but may import a
few convenience methods for use in building the trap. Do not use them
as methods of Test::Trap::Builder-- they are intended to be methods of
trap objects. (If you inherit from another trapper, you need not, and
probably should not, import these yourself -- you should inherit these
methods like any other.)
Trappers may import any number of these methods, or all of them by way
of the ":methods" tag.
Layers should be implemented as methods, and while they need not call
any of these convenience methods in turn, that likely makes for more
readable code than any alternative. Likewise, test callbacks may use
convenience methods for more readable code.
Of course, certain convenience methods may also be useful in more
generic methods messing with trap or builder objects.
Prop [PACKAGE]
A method returning a reference to a hash, holding the PACKAGE's (by
default the caller's) tag-on properties for the (current) trap object.
Currently, Test::Trap::Builder defines the following properties:
layers
While the trap is springing, the queue of layers remaining.
Usually set by the "trap" method and consumed by the "Next" method.
teardown
While the trap is springing, the queue of teardown actions
remaining. Usually accumulated through the "Teardown" method and
invoked by the "trap" method.
code
The user code trapped. Usually set by the "trap" method and
invoked by the "Run" method.
exception
An internal exception. Usually set through the "Exception" method
and examined by the "trap" method.
on_test_failure
A callback invoked by the "TestFailure" method. Layers in
particular may want to set this.
test_accessor
The name and (optionally) the index of the accessor, the contents
of which we're currently testing. Best accessed through the
"TestAccessor" method, and usually set by the "test" and "accessor"
methods, but if you are writing your own tests or accessors
directly, you just might need to set it. Perhaps.
Be nice: Treat another module's tag-on properties as you would treat
another module's global variables. Don't use them except as
documented.
Example:
# in a layer, setting the callback for TestFailure:
$self->Prop('Test::Trap::Builder')->{on_test_failure} = \&mydiag;
DESTROY
This cleans up the tag-on properties when the trap object is destroyed.
Don't try to make a trapper that doesn't call this; it will get
confused.
If your trapper needs its own "DESTROY", make sure it calls this one as
well:
sub DESTROY {
my $self = shift;
# do your thing
$self->Test::Trap::Builder::DESTROY;
# and more things
}
Run
A terminating layer should call this method to run the user code.
Should only be called in a dynamic context in which layers are being
applied.
Next
Every non-terminating layer should call this method (or an equivalent)
to progress to the next layer. Should only be called in a dynamic
context in which layers are being applied. Note that this method need
not return, so any tear-down actions should probably be registered with
the Teardown method (see below).
Teardown SUBS
If your layer wants to clean up its setup, it may use this method to
register any number of tear-down actions, to be performed (in reverse
registration order) once the user code has been executed. Should only
be called in a dynamic context in which layers are being applied.
TestAccessor
Returns a string of the form "NAME(INDEX)", where NAME and INDEX are
the name of the accessor and the index (if any) being tested. Should
only be called in the dynamic context of test callbacks.
This is intended for diagnostics:
diag( sprintf 'Expected %s in %s; got %s',
$expected, $self->TestAccessor, dump($got),
);
TestFailure
Runs the "on_test_failure" tag-on property (if any) on the trap object.
If you are writing unregistered tests, you might want to include (some
variation of) this call:
$ok or $self->TestFailure;
Exception STRINGS
Layer implementations may run into exceptional situations, in which
they want the entire trap to fail. Unfortunately, another layer may be
trapping ordinary exceptions, so you need some kind of magic in order
to throw an untrappable exception. This is one convenient way.
Should only be called in a dynamic context in which layers are being
applied.
Note: The Exception method won't work if called from outside of the
regular control flow, like inside a DESTROY method or signal handler.
If anything like this happens, CORE::exit will be called with an exit
code of 8.
METHODS
new
Returns a singleton object. Don't expect this module to work with a
different instance object of this class.
trap TRAPPER, GLOBREF, LAYERARRAYREF, CODE
Implements a trap for the TRAPPER module, applying the layers of
LAYERARRAYREF, trapping various outcomes of the user CODE, and storing
the trap object into the scalar slot of GLOBREF.
In most cases, the trapper should conveniently export a function
calling this method.
layer NAME, CODE
Registers a layer by NAME to the calling trapper. When the layer is
applied, the CODE will be invoked on the trap object being built, with
no arguments, and should call either the Next() or Run() method or
equivalent.
output_layer NAME, GLOBREF
Registers (by NAME and to the calling trapper) a layer for trapping
output on the file handle of the GLOBREF, using NAME also as the
attribute name.
output_layer_backend NAME, [CODE]
When called with two arguments, registers (by NAME and globally) a
backend for output trap layers. When called with a single argument,
looks up and returns the backend registered by NAME (or undef).
When a layer using this backend is applied, the CODE will be called on
the trap object, with the layer name and the output handle's fileno and
globref as arguments.
first_output_layer_backend SPEC
Where SPEC is empty, just returns.
Where SPEC is a string of comma-or-semicolon separated backend names,
runs through the names, returning the first implementation it finds.
Dies if no implementation is found by any of these names.
multi_layer NAME, LAYERS
Registers (by NAME) a layer that just pushes a number of other LAYERS
on the stack of layers. If any of the LAYERS is neither an anonymous
method nor the name of a layer registered to the caller or a trapper it
inherits from, an exception is raised.
layer_implementation TRAPPER, LAYERS
Returns the subroutines that implement the requested LAYERS. If any of
the LAYERS is neither an anonymous method nor the name of a layer
registered to or inherited by the TRAPPER, an exception is raised.
accessor NAMED_ARGS
Generates and registers any number of accessors according to the
NAMED_ARGS, and also generates the proper test methods for these
accessors (see below).
The following named arguments are recognized:
is_leaveby
If true, the tests methods will generate better diagnostics if the
trap was not left as specified. Also, a special did_ACCESSOR test
method will be generated (unless already present), simply passing
as long as the trap was left as specified.
is_array
If true, the simple accessor(s) will be smart about context and
arguments, returning an arrayref on no argument (in any context),
an array slice in list context (on any number of arguments), and
the element indexed by the first argument otherwise.
simple
Should be a reference to an array of accessor names. For each
name, an accessor (assuming hash based trap object with accessor
names as keys), will be generated and registered.
flexible
Should be a reference to a hash. For each pair, a name and an
implementation, an accessor is generated and registered.
test NAME, ARGSPEC, CODE
Registers a test callback by NAME and to the calling trapper.
Trappers inherit test callbacks like methods (though they are not
implemented as such; don't expect to find them in the symbol table).
Test methods of the form ACCESSOR_TEST will be made available (directly
or by inheritence) to every trapper that registers or inherits both the
accessor named ACCESSOR and the test named TEST.
(In more detail, the method will be generated in every trapper that
either (1) registers both the test and the accessor, or (2) registers
either and inherits the other.)
When the test method is called, any implicit leaveby condition will be
tested first, and if it passes (or there were none), the CODE is called
with arguments according to the words found in the ARGSPEC string:
trap
The trap object.
entirety
The ACCESSOR's return value when called without arguments.
element
The ACCESSOR's return value when called with index, if applicable
(i.e. for array accessors). Index is not applicable to scalar
accessors, so such are still called without index.
The index, when applicable, will be taken from the test method's
arguments.
predicate
What the ACCESSOR's return value should be tested against (taken
from the test method's arguments). (There may be any fixed number
of predicates.)
name
The test name (taken from the test method's arguments).
EXAMPLE
A complete example, implementing a timeout layer (depending on
Time::HiRes::ualarm being present), a simpletee layer (printing the
trapped stdout/stderr to the original file handles after the trap has
sprung), and a cmp_ok test method template:
package My::Test::Trap;
use base 'Test::Trap'; # for example
use Test::Trap::Builder;
my $B = Test::Trap::Builder->new;
# example (layer:timeout):
use Time::HiRes qw/ualarm/;
$B->layer( timeout => $_ ) for sub {
my $self = shift;
eval {
local $SIG{ALRM} = sub {
$self->{timeout} = 1; # simple truth
$SIG{ALRM} = sub {die};
die;
};
ualarm 1000, 1; # one second max, then die repeatedly!
$self->Next;
};
alarm 0;
if ($self->{timeout}) {
$self->{leaveby} = 'timeout';
delete $self->{$_} for qw/ die exit return /;
}
};
$B->accessor( is_leaveby => 1,
simple => ['timeout'],
);
# example (layer:simpletee):
$B->layer( simpletee => $_ ) for sub {
my $self = shift;
for (qw/ stdout stderr /) {
exists $self->{$_} or $self->Exception("Too late to tee $_");
}
$self->Teardown($_) for sub {
print STDOUT $self->{stdout} if exists $self->{stdout};
print STDERR $self->{stderr} if exists $self->{stderr};
};
$self->Next;
};
# no accessor for this layer
$B->multi_layer( flow => qw/ raw die exit timeout / );
$B->multi_layer( default => qw/ flow stdout stderr warn simpletee / );
$B->test_method( cmp_ok => 1, 2, \&Test::More::cmp_ok );
CAVEATS
The interface of this module is likely to remain somewhat in flux for a
while yet.
The different implementations of output trap layers have their own
caveats; see Test::Trap::Builder::Tempfile,
Test::Trap::Builder::PerlIO, Test::Trap::Builder::SystemSafe.
Multiple inheritance is not (yet?) fully supported. If one parent has
registered a test callback "X" and another has registered an accessor
"Y", the test method "Y_X" will not be generated.
Threads? No idea. It might even work correctly.
BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests directly to the author.
AUTHOR
Eirik Berg Hanssen, "<ebhanssen@allverden.no>"
COPYRIGHT & LICENSE
Copyright 2006-2012 Eirik Berg Hanssen, All Rights Reserved.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
under the same terms as Perl itself.
perl v5.16.2 2013-08-25 Test::Trap::Builder(3)