1Mock::Sub(3)          User Contributed Perl Documentation         Mock::Sub(3)
2
3
4

NAME

6       Mock::Sub - Mock package, object and standard subroutines, with unit
7       testing in mind.
8

SYNOPSIS

10           # see EXAMPLES for a full use case and caveats
11
12           use Mock::Sub;
13
14           # disable warnings about mocking non-existent subs
15
16           use Mock::Sub no_warnings => 1
17
18           # create the parent mock object
19
20           my $mock = Mock::Sub->new;
21
22           # mock some subs...
23
24           my $foo = $mock->mock('Package::foo');
25           my $bar = $mock->mock('Package::bar');
26
27           # wait until a mocked sub is called
28
29           Package::foo();
30
31           # then...
32
33           $foo->name;         # name of sub that's mocked
34           $foo->called;       # was the sub called?
35           $foo->called_count; # how many times was it called?
36           $foo->called_with;  # array of params sent to sub
37
38           # have the mocked sub return something when it's called (list or scalar).
39
40           $foo->return_value(1, 2, {a => 1});
41           my @return = Package::foo;
42
43           # have the mocked sub perform an action
44
45           $foo->side_effect( sub { die "eval catch" if @_; } );
46
47           eval { Package::foo(1); };
48           like ($@, qr/eval catch/, "side_effect worked with params");
49
50           # extract the parameters the sub was called with (if return_value or
51           # side_effect is not used, we will return the parameters that were sent into
52           # the mocked sub (list or scalar context)
53
54           my @args = $foo->called_with;
55
56           # reset the mock object for re-use within the same scope
57
58           $foo->reset;
59
60           # restore original functionality to the sub
61
62           $foo->unmock;
63
64           # re-mock a previously unmock()ed sub
65
66           $foo->remock;
67
68           # check if a sub is mocked
69
70           my $state = $foo->mocked_state;
71
72           # mock out a CORE:: function. Be warned that this *must* be done within
73           # compile stage (BEGIN), and the function can NOT be unmocked prior
74           # to the completion of program execution
75
76           my ($mock, $caller);
77
78           BEGIN {
79               $mock = Mock::Sub->new;
80               $caller = $mock->mock('caller');
81           };
82
83           $caller->return_value(55);
84           caller(); # mocked caller() called
85

DESCRIPTION

87       Easy to use and very lightweight module for mocking out sub calls.
88       Very useful for testing areas of your own modules where getting
89       coverage may be difficult due to nothing to test against, and/or to
90       reduce test run time by eliminating the need to call subs that you
91       really don't want or need to test.
92

EXAMPLE

94       Here's a full example to get further coverage where it's difficult if
95       not impossible to test certain areas of your code (eg: you have if/else
96       statements, but they don't do anything but call other subs. You don't
97       want to test the subs that are called, nor do you want to add
98       statements to your code).
99
100       Note that if the end subroutine you're testing is NOT Object Oriented
101       (and you're importing them into your module that you're testing), you
102       have to mock them as part of your own namespace (ie. instead of
103       Other::first, you'd mock MyModule::first).
104
105          # module you're testing:
106
107           package MyPackage;
108
109           use Other;
110           use Exporter qw(import);
111           @EXPORT_OK = qw(test);
112
113           my $other = Other->new;
114
115           sub test {
116               my $arg = shift;
117
118               if ($arg == 1){
119                   # how do you test this?... there's no return etc.
120                   $other->first();
121               }
122               if ($arg == 2){
123                   $other->second();
124               }
125           }
126
127           # your test file
128
129           use MyPackage qw(test);
130           use Mock::Sub;
131           use Test::More tests => 2;
132
133           my $mock = Mock::Sub->new;
134
135           my $first = $mock->mock('Other::first');
136           my $second = $mock->mock('Other::second');
137
138           # coverage for first if() in MyPackage::test
139           test(1);
140           is ($first->called, 1, "1st if() statement covered");
141
142           # coverage for second if()
143           test(2);
144           is ($second->called, 1, "2nd if() statement covered");
145

MOCK OBJECT METHODS

147   "new(%opts)"
148       Instantiates and returns a new "Mock::Sub" object, ready to be used to
149       start creating mocked sub objects.
150
151       Optional options:
152
153       "return_value => $scalar"
154           Set this to have all mocked subs created with this mock object
155           return anything you wish (accepts a single scalar only. See
156           "return_value()" method to return a list and for further
157           information). You can also set it in individual mocks only (see
158           "return_value()" method).
159
160       "side_effect => $cref"
161           Set this in "new()" to have the side effect passed into all child
162           mocks created with this object. See "side_effect()" method.
163
164   "mock('sub', %opts)"
165       Instantiates and returns a new mock object on each call. 'sub' is the
166       name of the subroutine to mock (requires full package name if the sub
167       isn't in "main::").
168
169       The mocked sub will return the parameters sent into the mocked sub if a
170       return value isn't set, or a side effect doesn't return anything, if
171       available. If in scalar context but a list was sent in, we'll return
172       the first parameter in the list. In list context, we simply receive the
173       parameters as they were sent in.
174
175       Optional parameters:
176
177       See "new()" for a description of the parameters. Both the
178       "return_value" and "side_effect" parameters can be set in this method
179       to individualize each mock object, and will override the global
180       configuration if set in "new()".
181
182       There's also "return_value()" and "side_effect()" methods if you want
183       to set, change or remove these values after instantiation of a child
184       sub object.
185
186   mocked_subs
187       Returns a list of all the names of the subs that are currently mocked
188       under the parent mock object.
189
190   mocked_objects
191       Returns a list of all sub objects underneath the parent mock object,
192       regardless if its sub is currently mocked or not.
193
194   mocked_state('Sub::Name')
195       Returns 1 if the sub currently under the parent mock object is mocked
196       or not, and 0 if not. Croaks if there hasn't been a child sub object
197       created with this sub name.
198

SUB OBJECT METHODS

200       These methods are for the children mocked sub objects returned from the
201       parent mock object. See "MOCK OBJECT METHODS" for methods related to
202       the parent mock object.
203
204   "unmock"
205       Restores the original functionality back to the sub, and runs "reset()"
206       on the object.
207
208   "remock"
209       Re-mocks the sub within the object after calling "unmock" on it
210       (accepts the side_effect and return_value parameters).
211
212   "called"
213       Returns true (1) if the sub being mocked has been called, and false (0)
214       if not.
215
216   "called_count"
217       Returns the number of times the mocked sub has been called.
218
219   "called_with"
220       Returns an array of the parameters sent to the subroutine. "confess()s"
221       if we're called before the mocked sub has been called.
222
223   "mocked_state"
224       Returns true (1) if the sub the object refers to is currently mocked,
225       and false (0) if not.
226
227   "name"
228       Returns the name of the sub being mocked.
229
230   "side_effect($cref)"
231       Add (or change/delete) a side effect after instantiation.
232
233       Send in a code reference containing an action you'd like the mocked sub
234       to perform.
235
236       The side effect function will receive all parameters sent into the
237       mocked sub.
238
239       You can use both "side_effect()" and "return_value()" params at the
240       same time. "side_effect" will be run first, and then "return_value".
241       Note that if "side_effect"'s last expression evaluates to any value
242       whatsoever (even false), it will return that and "return_value" will be
243       skipped.
244
245       To work around this and have the side_effect run but still get the
246       return_value thereafter, write your cref to evaluate undef as the last
247       thing it does: "sub { ...; undef; }".
248
249   "return_value"
250       Add (or change/delete) the mocked sub's return value after
251       instantiation.  Can be a scalar or list. Send in "undef" to remove
252       previously set values.
253
254   "reset"
255       Resets the functional parameters ("return_value", "side_effect"), along
256       with "called()" and "called_count()" back to undef/false. Does not
257       restore the sub back to its original state.
258

NOTES

260       This module has a backwards parent-child relationship. To use, you
261       create a mock object using "MOCK OBJECT METHODS" "new" and "mock"
262       methods, thereafter, you use the returned mocked sub object "SUB OBJECT
263       METHODS" to perform the work.
264
265       The parent mock object retains certain information and statistics of
266       the child mocked objects (and the subs themselves).
267
268       To mock CORE::GLOBAL functions, you *must* initiate within a "BEGIN"
269       block (see "SYNOPSIS" for details). It is important that if you mock a
270       CORE sub, it can't and won't be returned to its original state until
271       after the entire program process tree exists. Period.
272
273       I didn't make this a "Test::" module (although it started that way)
274       because I can see more uses than placing it into that category.
275

AUTHOR

277       Steve Bertrand, "<steveb at cpan.org>"
278

BUGS

280       Please report any bugs or requests at
281       <https://github.com/stevieb9/mock-sub/issues>
282

REPOSITORY

284       <https://github.com/stevieb9/mock-sub>
285

BUILD RESULTS

287       CPAN Testers: <http://matrix.cpantesters.org/?dist=Mock-Sub>
288

SUPPORT

290       You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.
291
292           perldoc Mock::Sub
293

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

295       Python's MagicMock module.
296
298       Copyright 2016 Steve Bertrand.
299
300       This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
301       under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published
302       by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License.
303
304       See <http://dev.perl.org/licenses/> for more information.
305
306
307
308perl v5.30.0                      2019-07-26                      Mock::Sub(3)
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