1DBD::Mock(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation DBD::Mock(3)
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6 DBD::Mock - Mock database driver for testing
7
9 use DBI;
10
11 # connect to your as normal, using 'Mock' as your driver name
12 my $dbh = DBI->connect( 'DBI:Mock:', '', '' )
13 || die "Cannot create handle: $DBI::errstr\n";
14
15 # create a statement handle as normal and execute with parameters
16 my $sth = $dbh->prepare( 'SELECT this, that FROM foo WHERE id = ?' );
17 $sth->execute( 15 );
18
19 # Now query the statement handle as to what has been done with it
20 my $mock_params = $sth->{mock_params};
21 print "Used statement: ", $sth->{mock_statement}, "\n",
22 "Bound parameters: ", join( ', ', @{ $params } ), "\n";
23
25 Testing with databases can be tricky. If you are developing a system
26 married to a single database then you can make some assumptions about
27 your environment and ask the user to provide relevant connection
28 information. But if you need to test a framework that uses DBI,
29 particularly a framework that uses different types of persistence
30 schemes, then it may be more useful to simply verify what the framework
31 is trying to do -- ensure the right SQL is generated and that the
32 correct parameters are bound. "DBD::Mock" makes it easy to just modify
33 your configuration (presumably held outside your code) and just use it
34 instead of "DBD::Foo" (like DBD::Pg or DBD::mysql) in your framework.
35
36 There is no distinct area where using this module makes sense. (Some
37 people may successfully argue that this is a solution looking for a
38 problem...) Indeed, if you can assume your users have something like
39 DBD::AnyData or DBD::SQLite or if you do not mind creating a dependency
40 on them then it makes far more sense to use these legitimate driver
41 implementations and test your application in the real world -- at least
42 as much of the real world as you can create in your tests...
43
44 And if your database handle exists as a package variable or something
45 else easily replaced at test-time then it may make more sense to use
46 Test::MockObject to create a fully dynamic handle. There is an
47 excellent article by chromatic about using Test::MockObject in this and
48 other ways, strongly recommended. (See "SEE ALSO" for a link)
49
50 How does it work?
51 "DBD::Mock" comprises a set of classes used by DBI to implement a
52 database driver. But instead of connecting to a datasource and
53 manipulating data found there it tracks all the calls made to the
54 database handle and any created statement handles. You can then inspect
55 them to ensure what you wanted to happen actually happened. For
56 instance, say you have a configuration file with your database
57 connection information:
58
59 [DBI]
60 dsn = DBI:Pg:dbname=myapp
61 user = foo
62 password = bar
63
64 And this file is read in at process startup and the handle stored for
65 other procedures to use:
66
67 package ObjectDirectory;
68
69 my ( $DBH );
70
71 sub run_at_startup {
72 my ( $class, $config ) = @_;
73 $config ||= read_configuration( ... );
74 my $dsn = $config->{DBI}{dsn};
75 my $user = $config->{DBI}{user};
76 my $pass = $config->{DBI}{password};
77 $DBH = DBI->connect( $dsn, $user, $pass ) || die ...;
78 }
79
80 sub get_database_handle {
81 return $DBH;
82 }
83
84 A procedure might use it like this (ignoring any error handling for the
85 moment):
86
87 package My::UserActions;
88
89 sub fetch_user {
90 my ( $class, $login ) = @_;
91 my $dbh = ObjectDirectory->get_database_handle;
92 my $sql = q{
93 SELECT login_name, first_name, last_name, creation_date, num_logins
94 FROM users
95 WHERE login_name = ?
96 };
97 my $sth = $dbh->prepare( $sql );
98 $sth->execute( $login );
99 my $row = $sth->fetchrow_arrayref;
100 return ( $row ) ? User->new( $row ) : undef;
101 }
102
103 So for the purposes of our tests we just want to ensure that:
104
105 1. The right SQL is being executed
106 2. The right parameters are bound
107
108 Assume whether the SQL actually works or not is irrelevant for this
109 test :-)
110
111 To do that our test might look like:
112
113 my $config = ObjectDirectory->read_configuration( ... );
114 $config->{DBI}{dsn} = 'DBI:Mock:';
115 ObjectDirectory->run_at_startup( $config );
116
117 my $login_name = 'foobar';
118 my $user = My::UserActions->fetch_user( $login_name );
119
120 # Get the handle from ObjectDirectory;
121 # this is the same handle used in the
122 # 'fetch_user()' procedure above
123 my $dbh = ObjectDirectory->get_database_handle();
124
125 # Ask the database handle for the history
126 # of all statements executed against it
127 my $history = $dbh->{mock_all_history};
128
129 # Now query that history record to
130 # see if our expectations match reality
131 is(scalar(@{$history}), 1, 'Correct number of statements executed' ;
132
133 my $login_st = $history->[0];
134 like($login_st->statement,
135 qr/SELECT login_name.*FROM users WHERE login_name = ?/sm,
136 'Correct statement generated' );
137
138 my $params = $login_st->bound_params;
139 is(scalar(@{$params}), 1, 'Correct number of parameters bound');
140 is($params->[0], $login_name, 'Correct value for parameter 1' );
141
142 # Reset the handle for future operations
143 $dbh->{mock_clear_history} = 1;
144
145 The list of properties and what they return is listed below. But in an
146 overall view:
147
148 · A database handle contains the history of all statements created
149 against it. Other properties set for the handle (e.g.,
150 'PrintError', 'RaiseError') are left alone and can be queried as
151 normal, but they do not affect anything. (A future feature may
152 track the sequence/history of these assignments but if there is no
153 demand it probably will not get implemented.)
154
155 · A statement handle contains the statement it was prepared with plus
156 all bound parameters or parameters passed via "execute()". It can
157 also contain predefined results for the statement handle to
158 'fetch', track how many fetches were called and what its current
159 record is.
160
161 A Word of Warning
162 This may be an incredibly naive implementation of a DBD. But it works
163 for me ...
164
166 Since this is a normal DBI statement handle we need to expose our
167 tracking information as properties (accessed like a hash) rather than
168 methods.
169
170 Database Driver Properties
171 mock_connect_fail
172 This is a boolean property which when set to true (1) will not
173 allow DBI to connect. This can be used to simulate a DSN error or
174 authentication failure. This can then be set back to false (0) to
175 resume normal DBI operations. Here is an example of how this works:
176
177 # install the DBD::Mock driver
178 my $drh = DBI->install_driver('Mock');
179
180 $drh->{mock_connect_fail} = 1;
181
182 # this connection will fail
183 my $dbh = DBI->connect('dbi:Mock:', '', '') || die "Cannot connect";
184
185 # this connection will throw an exception
186 my $dbh = DBI->connect('dbi:Mock:', '', '', { RaiseError => 1 });
187
188 $drh->{mock_connect_fail} = 0;
189
190 # this will work now ...
191 my $dbh = DBI->connect(...);
192
193 This feature is conceptually different from the 'mock_can_connect'
194 attribute of the $dbh in that it has a driver-wide scope, where
195 'mock_can_connect' is handle-wide scope. It also only prevents the
196 initial connection, any $dbh handles created prior to setting
197 'mock_connect_fail' to true (1) will still go on working just fine.
198
199 mock_data_sources
200 This is an ARRAY reference which holds fake data sources which are
201 returned by the Driver and Database Handle's "data_source()"
202 method.
203
204 mock_add_data_sources
205 This takes a string and adds it to the 'mock_data_sources'
206 attribute.
207
208 Database Handle Properties
209 mock_all_history
210 Returns an array reference with all history (a.k.a.
211 "DBD::Mock::StatementTrack") objects created against the database
212 handle in the order they were created. Each history object can then
213 report information about the SQL statement used to create it, the
214 bound parameters, etc..
215
216 mock_all_history_iterator
217 Returns a "DBD::Mock::StatementTrack::Iterator" object which will
218 iterate through the current set of "DBD::Mock::StatementTrack"
219 object in the history. See the DBD::Mock::StatementTrack::Iterator
220 documentation below for more information.
221
222 mock_clear_history
223 If set to a true value all previous statement history operations
224 will be erased. This includes the history of currently open
225 handles, so if you do something like:
226
227 my $dbh = get_handle( ... );
228 my $sth = $dbh->prepare( ... );
229 $dbh->{mock_clear_history} = 1;
230 $sth->execute( 'Foo' );
231
232 You will have no way to learn from the database handle that the
233 statement parameter 'Foo' was bound.
234
235 This is useful mainly to ensure you can isolate the statement
236 histories from each other. A typical sequence will look like:
237
238 set handle to framework
239 perform operations
240 analyze mock database handle
241 reset mock database handle history
242 perform more operations
243 analyze mock database handle
244 reset mock database handle history
245 ...
246
247 mock_can_connect
248 This statement allows you to simulate a downed database connection.
249 This is useful in testing how your application/tests will perform
250 in the face of some kind of catastrophic event such as a network
251 outage or database server failure. It is a simple boolean value
252 which defaults to on, and can be set like this:
253
254 # turn the database off
255 $dbh->{mock_can_connect} = 0;
256
257 # turn it back on again
258 $dbh->{mock_can_connect} = 1;
259
260 The statement handle checks this value as well, so something like
261 this will fail in the expected way:
262
263 $dbh = DBI->connect( 'DBI:Mock:', '', '' );
264 $dbh->{mock_can_connect} = 0;
265
266 # blows up!
267 my $sth = eval { $dbh->prepare( 'SELECT foo FROM bar' ) });
268 if ( $@ ) {
269 # Here, $DBI::errstr = 'No connection present'
270 }
271
272 Turning off the database after a statement prepare will fail on the
273 statement "execute()", which is hopefully what you would expect:
274
275 $dbh = DBI->connect( 'DBI:Mock:', '', '' );
276
277 # ok!
278 my $sth = eval { $dbh->prepare( 'SELECT foo FROM bar' ) });
279 $dbh->{mock_can_connect} = 0;
280
281 # blows up!
282 $sth->execute;
283
284 Similarly:
285
286 $dbh = DBI->connect( 'DBI:Mock:', '', '' );
287
288 # ok!
289 my $sth = eval { $dbh->prepare( 'SELECT foo FROM bar' ) });
290
291 # ok!
292 $sth->execute;
293
294 $dbh->{mock_can_connect} = 0;
295
296 # blows up!
297 my $row = $sth->fetchrow_arrayref;
298
299 Note: The handle attribute "Active" and the handle method "ping"
300 will behave according to the value of "mock_can_connect". So if
301 "mock_can_connect" were to be set to 0 (or off), then both "Active"
302 and "ping" would return false values (or 0).
303
304 mock_add_resultset( \@resultset | \%sql_and_resultset )
305 This stocks the database handle with a record set, allowing you to
306 seed data for your application to see if it works properly.. Each
307 recordset is a simple arrayref of arrays with the first arrayref
308 being the fieldnames used. Every time a statement handle is created
309 it asks the database handle if it has any resultsets available and
310 if so uses it.
311
312 Here is a sample usage, partially from the test suite:
313
314 my @user_results = (
315 [ 'login', 'first_name', 'last_name' ],
316 [ 'cwinters', 'Chris', 'Winters' ],
317 [ 'bflay', 'Bobby', 'Flay' ],
318 [ 'alincoln', 'Abe', 'Lincoln' ],
319 );
320 my @generic_results = (
321 [ 'foo', 'bar' ],
322 [ 'this_one', 'that_one' ],
323 [ 'this_two', 'that_two' ],
324 );
325
326 my $dbh = DBI->connect( 'DBI:Mock:', '', '' );
327 $dbh->{mock_add_resultset} = \@user_results; # add first resultset
328 $dbh->{mock_add_resultset} = \@generic_results; # add second resultset
329 my ( $sth );
330 eval {
331 $sth = $dbh->prepare( 'SELECT login, first_name, last_name FROM foo' );
332 $sth->execute();
333 };
334
335 # this will fetch rows from the first resultset...
336 my $row1 = $sth->fetchrow_arrayref;
337 my $user1 = User->new( login => $row->[0],
338 first => $row->[1],
339 last => $row->[2] );
340 is( $user1->full_name, 'Chris Winters' );
341
342 my $row2 = $sth->fetchrow_arrayref;
343 my $user2 = User->new( login => $row->[0],
344 first => $row->[1],
345 last => $row->[2] );
346 is( $user2->full_name, 'Bobby Flay' );
347 ...
348
349 my $sth_generic = $dbh->prepare( 'SELECT foo, bar FROM baz' );
350 $sth_generic->execute;
351
352 # this will fetch rows from the second resultset...
353 my $row = $sth->fetchrow_arrayref;
354
355 You can also associate a resultset with a particular SQL statement
356 instead of adding them in the order they will be fetched:
357
358 $dbh->{mock_add_resultset} = {
359 sql => 'SELECT foo, bar FROM baz',
360 results => [
361 [ 'foo', 'bar' ],
362 [ 'this_one', 'that_one' ],
363 [ 'this_two', 'that_two' ],
364 ],
365 };
366
367 This will return the given results when the statement 'SELECT foo,
368 bar FROM baz' is prepared. Note that they will be returned every
369 time the statement is prepared, not just the first. It should also
370 be noted that if you want, for some reason, to change the result
371 set bound to a particular SQL statement, all you need to do is add
372 the result set again with the same SQL statement and DBD::Mock will
373 overwrite it.
374
375 It should also be noted that the "rows" method will return the
376 number of records stocked in the result set. So if your
377 code/application makes use of the "$sth->rows" method for things
378 like UPDATE and DELETE calls you should stock the result set like
379 so:
380
381 $dbh->{mock_add_resultset} = {
382 sql => 'UPDATE foo SET baz = 1, bar = 2',
383 # this will appear to have updated 3 rows
384 results => [[ 'rows' ], [], [], []],
385 };
386
387 # or ...
388
389 $dbh->{mock_add_resultset} = {
390 sql => 'DELETE FROM foo WHERE bar = 2',
391 # this will appear to have deleted 1 row
392 results => [[ 'rows' ], []],
393 };
394
395 Now I admit this is not the most elegant way to go about this, but
396 it works for me for now, and until I can come up with a better
397 method, or someone sends me a patch ;) it will do for now.
398
399 If you want a given statement to fail, you will have to use the
400 hashref method and add a 'failure' key. That key can be handed an
401 arrayref with the error number and error string, in that order. It
402 can also be handed a hashref with two keys - errornum and
403 errorstring. If the 'failure' key has no useful value associated
404 with it, the errornum will be '1' and the errorstring will be
405 'Unknown error'.
406
407 mock_get_info
408 This attribute can be used to set up values for get_info(). It
409 takes a hashref of attribute_name/value pairs. See DBI for more
410 information on the information types and their meaning.
411
412 mock_session
413 This attribute can be used to set a current DBD::Mock::Session
414 object. For more information on this, see the DBD::Mock::Session
415 docs below. This attribute can also be used to remove the current
416 session from the $dbh simply by setting it to "undef".
417
418 mock_last_insert_id
419 This attribute is incremented each time an INSERT statement is
420 passed to "prepare" on a per-handle basis. It's starting value can
421 be set with the 'mock_start_insert_id' attribute (see below).
422
423 $dbh->{mock_start_insert_id} = 10;
424
425 my $sth = $dbh->prepare('INSERT INTO Foo (foo, bar) VALUES(?, ?)');
426
427 $sth->execute(1, 2);
428 # $dbh->{mock_last_insert_id} == 10
429
430 $sth->execute(3, 4);
431 # $dbh->{mock_last_insert_id} == 11
432
433 For more examples, please refer to the test file
434 t/025_mock_last_insert_id.t.
435
436 mock_start_insert_id
437 This attribute can be used to set a start value for the
438 'mock_last_insert_id' attribute. It can also be used to effectively
439 reset the 'mock_last_insert_id' attribute as well.
440
441 This attribute also can be used with an ARRAY ref parameter, it's
442 behavior is slightly different in that instead of incrementing the
443 value for every "prepare" it will only increment for each
444 "execute". This allows it to be used over multiple "execute" calls
445 in a single $sth. It's usage looks like this:
446
447 $dbh->{mock_start_insert_id} = [ 'Foo', 10 ];
448 $dbh->{mock_start_insert_id} = [ 'Baz', 20 ];
449
450 my $sth1 = $dbh->prepare('INSERT INTO Foo (foo, bar) VALUES(?, ?)');
451
452 my $sth2 = $dbh->prepare('INSERT INTO Baz (baz, buz) VALUES(?, ?)');
453
454 $sth1->execute(1, 2);
455 # $dbh->{mock_last_insert_id} == 10
456
457 $sth2->execute(3, 4);
458 # $dbh->{mock_last_insert_id} == 20
459
460 Note that DBD::Mock's matching of table names in 'INSERT'
461 statements is fairly simple, so if your table names are quoted in
462 the insert statement ("INSERT INTO "Foo"") then you need to quote
463 the name for "mock_start_insert_id":
464
465 $dbh->{mock_start_insert_id} = [ q{"Foo"}, 10 ];
466
467 mock_add_parser
468 DBI provides some simple parsing capabilities for 'SELECT'
469 statements to ensure that placeholders are bound properly. And
470 typically you may simply want to check after the fact that a
471 statement is syntactically correct, or at least what you expect.
472
473 But other times you may want to parse the statement as it is
474 prepared rather than after the fact. There is a hook in this mock
475 database driver for you to provide your own parsing routine or
476 object.
477
478 The syntax is simple:
479
480 $dbh->{mock_add_parser} = sub {
481 my ( $sql ) = @_;
482 unless ( $sql =~ /some regex/ ) {
483 die "does not contain secret fieldname";
484 }
485 };
486
487 You can also add more than one for a handle. They will be called in
488 order, and the first one to fail will halt the parsing process:
489
490 $dbh->{mock_add_parser} = \&parse_update_sql;
491 $dbh->{mock_add-parser} = \&parse_insert_sql;
492
493 Depending on the 'PrintError' and 'RaiseError' settings in the
494 database handle any parsing errors encountered will issue a "warn"
495 or "die". No matter what the statement handle will be "undef".
496
497 Instead of providing a subroutine reference you can use an object.
498 The only requirement is that it implements the method "parse()" and
499 takes a SQL statement as the only argument. So you should be able
500 to do something like the following (untested):
501
502 my $parser = SQL::Parser->new( 'mysql', { RaiseError => 1 } );
503 $dbh->{mock_add_parser} = $parser;
504
505 mock_data_sources & mock_add_data_sources
506 These properties will dispatch to the Driver's properties of the
507 same name.
508
509 Database Driver Methods
510 last_insert_id
511 This returns the value of "mock_last_insert_id".
512
513 In order to capture begin_work(), commit(), and rollback(), DBD::Mock
514 will create statements for them, as if you had issued them in the
515 appropriate SQL command line program. They will go through the standard
516 prepare()-execute() cycle, meaning that any custom SQL parsers will be
517 triggered and DBD::Mock::Session will need to know about these
518 statements.
519
520 begin_work
521 This will create a statement with SQL of "BEGIN WORK" and no
522 parameters.
523
524 commit
525 This will create a statement with SQL of "COMMIT" and no
526 parameters.
527
528 rollback
529 This will create a statement with SQL of "ROLLBACK" and no
530 parameters.
531
532 Statement Handle Properties
533 Active
534 Returns true if the handle is a 'SELECT' and has more records to
535 fetch, false otherwise. (From the DBI.)
536
537 mock_statement
538 The SQL statement this statement handle was "prepare"d with. So if
539 the handle were created with:
540
541 my $sth = $dbh->prepare( 'SELECT * FROM foo' );
542
543 This would return:
544
545 SELECT * FROM foo
546
547 The original statement is unmodified so if you are checking against
548 it in tests you may want to use a regex rather than a straight
549 equality check. (However if you use a phrasebook to store your SQL
550 externally you are a step ahead...)
551
552 mock_fields
553 Fields used by the statement. As said elsewhere we do no analysis
554 or parsing to find these, you need to define them beforehand. That
555 said, you do not actually need this very often.
556
557 Note that this returns the same thing as the normal statement
558 property 'FIELD'.
559
560 mock_params
561 Returns an arrayref of parameters bound to this statement in the
562 order specified by the bind type. For instance, if you created and
563 stocked a handle with:
564
565 my $sth = $dbh->prepare( 'SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id = ? AND is_active = ?' );
566 $sth->bind_param( 2, 'yes' );
567 $sth->bind_param( 1, 7783 );
568
569 This would return:
570
571 [ 7738, 'yes' ]
572
573 The same result will occur if you pass the parameters via
574 "execute()" instead:
575
576 my $sth = $dbh->prepare( 'SELECT * FROM foo WHERE id = ? AND is_active = ?' );
577 $sth->execute( 7783, 'yes' );
578
579 mock_records
580 An arrayref of arrayrefs representing the records the mock
581 statement was stocked with.
582
583 mock_num_records
584 Number of records the mock statement was stocked with; if never
585 stocked it is still 0. (Some weirdos might expect undef...)
586
587 mock_num_rows
588 This returns the same value as mock_num_records. And is what is
589 returned by the "rows" method of the statement handle.
590
591 mock_current_record_num
592 Current record the statement is on; returns 0 in the instances when
593 you have not yet called "execute()" and if you have not yet called
594 a "fetch" method after the execute.
595
596 mock_is_executed
597 Whether "execute()" has been called against the statement handle.
598 Returns 'yes' if so, 'no' if not.
599
600 mock_is_finished
601 Whether "finish()" has been called against the statement handle.
602 Returns 'yes' if so, 'no' if not.
603
604 mock_is_depleted
605 Returns 'yes' if all the records in the recordset have been
606 returned. If no "fetch()" was executed against the statement, or If
607 no return data was set this will return 'no'.
608
609 mock_my_history
610 Returns a "DBD::Mock::StatementTrack" object which tracks the
611 actions performed by this statement handle. Most of the actions are
612 separately available from the properties listed above, so you
613 should never need this.
614
616 This module can be used to emulate Apache::DBI style DBI connection
617 pooling. Just as with Apache::DBI, you must enable DBD::Mock::Pool
618 before loading DBI.
619
620 use DBD::Mock qw(Pool);
621 # followed by ...
622 use DBI;
623
624 While this may not seem to make a lot of sense in a single-process
625 testing scenario, it can be useful when testing code which assumes a
626 multi-process Apache::DBI pooled environment.
627
629 Under the hood this module does most of the work with a
630 "DBD::Mock::StatementTrack" object. This is most useful when you are
631 reviewing multiple statements at a time, otherwise you might want to
632 use the "mock_*" statement handle attributes instead.
633
634 new( %params )
635 Takes the following parameters:
636
637 · return_data: Arrayref of return data records
638
639 · fields: Arrayref of field names
640
641 · bound_params: Arrayref of bound parameters
642
643 statement (Statement attribute 'mock_statement')
644 Gets/sets the SQL statement used.
645
646 fields (Statement attribute 'mock_fields')
647 Gets/sets the fields to use for this statement.
648
649 bound_params (Statement attribute 'mock_params')
650 Gets/set the bound parameters to use for this statement.
651
652 return_data (Statement attribute 'mock_records')
653 Gets/sets the data to return when asked (that is, when someone
654 calls 'fetch' on the statement handle).
655
656 current_record_num (Statement attribute 'mock_current_record_num')
657 Gets/sets the current record number.
658
659 is_active() (Statement attribute 'Active')
660 Returns true if the statement is a SELECT and has more records to
661 fetch, false otherwise. (This is from the DBI, see the 'Active'
662 docs under 'ATTRIBUTES COMMON TO ALL HANDLES'.)
663
664 is_executed( $yes_or_no ) (Statement attribute 'mock_is_executed')
665 Sets the state of the tracker 'executed' flag.
666
667 is_finished( $yes_or_no ) (Statement attribute 'mock_is_finished')
668 If set to 'yes' tells the tracker that the statement is finished.
669 This resets the current record number to '0' and clears out the
670 array ref of returned records.
671
672 is_depleted() (Statement attribute 'mock_is_depleted')
673 Returns true if the current record number is greater than the
674 number of records set to return.
675
676 num_fields
677 Returns the number of fields set in the 'fields' parameter.
678
679 num_rows
680 Returns the number of records in the current result set.
681
682 num_params
683 Returns the number of parameters set in the 'bound_params'
684 parameter.
685
686 bound_param( $param_num, $value )
687 Sets bound parameter $param_num to $value. Returns the arrayref of
688 currently-set bound parameters. This corresponds to the
689 'bind_param' statement handle call.
690
691 bound_param_trailing( @params )
692 Pushes @params onto the list of already-set bound parameters.
693
694 mark_executed()
695 Tells the tracker that the statement has been executed and resets
696 the current record number to '0'.
697
698 next_record()
699 If the statement has been depleted (all records returned) returns
700 undef; otherwise it gets the current recordfor returning,
701 increments the current record number and returns the current
702 record.
703
704 to_string()
705 Tries to give an decent depiction of the object state for use in
706 debugging.
707
709 This object can be used to iterate through the current set of
710 "DBD::Mock::StatementTrack" objects in the history by fetching the
711 'mock_all_history_iterator' attribute from a database handle. This
712 object is very simple and is meant to be a convience to make writing
713 long test script easier. Aside from the constructor ("new") this object
714 has only one method.
715
716 next
717
718 Calling "next" will return the next "DBD::Mock::StatementTrack"
719 object in the history. If there are no more
720 "DBD::Mock::StatementTrack" objects available, then this method
721 will return false.
722
723 reset
724
725 This will reset the internal pointer to the begining of the
726 statement history.
727
729 The DBD::Mock::Session object is an alternate means of specifying the
730 SQL statements and result sets for DBD::Mock. The idea is that you can
731 specify a complete 'session' of usage, which will be verified through
732 DBD::Mock. Here is an example:
733
734 my $session = DBD::Mock::Session->new('my_session' => (
735 {
736 statement => "SELECT foo FROM bar", # as a string
737 results => [[ 'foo' ], [ 'baz' ]]
738 },
739 {
740 statement => qr/UPDATE bar SET foo \= \'bar\'/, # as a reg-exp
741 results => [[]]
742 },
743 {
744 statement => sub { # as a CODE ref
745 my ($SQL, $state) = @_;
746 return $SQL eq "SELECT foo FROM bar";
747 },
748 results => [[ 'foo' ], [ 'bar' ]]
749 },
750 {
751 # with bound parameters
752 statement => "SELECT foo FROM bar WHERE baz = ? AND borg = ?",
753 # check exact bound param value,
754 # then check it against regexp
755 bound_params => [ 10, qr/\d+/ ],
756 results => [[ 'foo' ], [ 'baz' ]]
757 }
758 ));
759
760 As you can see, a session is essentially made up a list of HASH
761 references we call 'states'. Each state has a 'statement' and a set of
762 'results'. If DBD::Mock finds a session in the 'mock_session'
763 attribute, then it will pass the current $dbh and SQL statement to that
764 DBD::Mock::Session. The SQL statement will be checked against the
765 'statement' field in the current state. If it passes, then the
766 'results' of the current state will get feed to DBD::Mock through the
767 'mock_add_resultset' attribute. We then advance to the next state in
768 the session, and wait for the next call through DBD::Mock. If at any
769 time the SQL statement does not match the current state's 'statement',
770 or the session runs out of available states, an error will be raised
771 (and propagated through the normal DBI error handling based on your
772 values for RaiseError and PrintError).
773
774 Also, as can be seen in the the session element, bound parameters can
775 also be supplied and tested. In this statement, the SQL is compared,
776 then when the statement is executed, the bound parameters are also
777 checked. The bound parameters much match in both number of parameters
778 and the parameters themselves, or an error will be raised.
779
780 As can also be seen in the example above, 'statement' fields can come
781 in many forms. The simplest is a string, which will be compared using
782 "eq" against the currently running statement. The next is a reg-exp
783 reference, this too will get compared against the currently running
784 statement. The last option is a CODE ref, this is sort of a catch-all
785 to allow for a wide range of SQL comparison approaches (including using
786 modules like SQL::Statement or SQL::Parser for detailed functional
787 comparisons). The first argument to the CODE ref will be the currently
788 active SQL statement to compare against, the second argument is a
789 reference to the current state HASH (in case you need to alter the
790 results, or store extra information). The CODE is evaluated in boolean
791 context and throws and exception if it is false.
792
793 new ($session_name, @session_states)
794
795 A $session_name can be optionally be specified, along with at least
796 one @session_states. If you don't specify a $session_name, then a
797 default one will be created for you. The @session_states must all
798 be HASH references as well, if this conditions fail, an exception
799 will be thrown.
800
801 verify_statement ($dbh, $SQL)
802
803 This will check the $SQL against the current state's 'statement'
804 value, and if it passes will add the current state's 'results' to
805 the $dbh. If for some reason the 'statement' value is bad, not of
806 the prescribed type, an exception is thrown. See above for more
807 details.
808
809 verify_bound_params ($dbh, $params)
810
811 If the 'bound_params' slot is available in the current state, this
812 will check the $params against the current state's 'bound_params'
813 value. Both number of parameters and the parameters themselves must
814 match, or an error will be raised.
815
816 reset
817
818 Calling this method will reset the state of the session object so
819 that it can be reused.
820
822 All functionality listed here is highly experimental and should be used
823 with great caution (if at all).
824
825 Error handling in mock_add_resultset
826 We have added experimental erro handling in mock_add_resultset the
827 best example is the test file t/023_statement_failure.t, but it
828 looks something like this:
829
830 $dbh->{mock_add_resultset} = {
831 sql => 'SELECT foo FROM bar',
832 results => DBD::Mock->NULL_RESULTSET,
833 failure => [ 5, 'Ooops!' ],
834 };
835
836 The 5 is the DBI error number, and 'Ooops!' is the error string
837 passed to DBI. This basically allows you to force an error
838 condition to occur when a given SQL statement is execute. We are
839 currently working on allowing more control on the 'when' and
840 'where' the error happens, look for it in future releases.
841
842 Attribute Aliasing
843 Basically this feature allows you to alias attributes to other
844 attributes. So for instance, you can alias a commonly expected
845 attribute like 'mysql_insertid' to something DBD::Mock already has
846 like 'mock_last_insert_id'. While you can also just set
847 'mysql_insertid' yourself, this functionality allows it to take
848 advantage of things like the autoincrementing of the
849 'mock_last_insert_id' attribute.
850
851 Right now this feature is highly experimental, and has been added
852 as a first attempt to automatically handle some of the DBD specific
853 attributes which are commonly used/accessed in DBI programming. The
854 functionality is off by default so as to not cause any issues with
855 backwards compatability, but can easily be turned on and off like
856 this:
857
858 # turn it on
859 $DBD::Mock::AttributeAliasing++;
860
861 # turn it off
862 $DBD::Mock::AttributeAliasing = 0;
863
864 Once this is turned on, you will need to choose a database specific
865 attribute aliasing table like so:
866
867 DBI->connect('dbi:Mock:MySQL', '', '');
868
869 The 'MySQL' in the DSN will be picked up and the MySQL specific
870 attribute aliasing will be used.
871
872 Right now only MySQL is supported by this feature, and even that
873 support is very minimal. Currently the MySQL $dbh and $sth
874 attributes 'mysql_insertid' are aliased to the $dbh attribute
875 'mock_last_insert_id'. It is possible to add more aliases though,
876 using the "DBD::Mock:_set_mock_attribute_aliases" function (see the
877 source code for details).
878
880 Odd $dbh attribute behavior
881 When writing the test suite I encountered some odd behavior with
882 some $dbh attributes. I still need to get deeper into how DBD's
883 work to understand what it is that is actually doing wrong.
884
886 Make DBD specific handlers
887 Each DBD has its own quirks and issues, it would be nice to be able
888 to handle those issues with DBD::Mock in some way. I have an number
889 of ideas already, but little time to sit down and really flesh them
890 out. If you have any suggestions or thoughts, feel free to email me
891 with them.
892
893 Enhance the DBD::Mock::StatementTrack object
894 I would like to have the DBD::Mock::StatementTrack object handle
895 more of the mock_* attributes. This would encapsulate much of the
896 mock_* behavior in one place, which would be a good thing.
897
898 I would also like to add the ability to bind a subroutine (or
899 possibly an object) to the result set, so that the results can be
900 somewhat more dynamic and allow for a more realistic interaction.
901
903 We use Devel::Cover to test the code coverage of my tests, below is the
904 Devel::Cover report on this module test suite.
905
906 ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
907 File stmt bran cond sub pod time total
908 ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
909 blib/lib/DBD/Mock.pm 92.0 86.6 77.9 95.3 0.0 100.0 89.5
910 Total 92.0 86.6 77.9 95.3 0.0 100.0 89.5
911 ---------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------ ------
912
914 DBI
915
916 DBD::NullP, which provided a good starting point
917
918 Test::MockObject, which provided the approach
919
920 Test::MockObject article -
921 <http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2002/07/10/tmo.html>
922
923 Perl Code Kata: Testing Databases -
924 <http://www.perl.com/pub/a/2005/02/10/database_kata.html>
925
927 We have created a DBD::Mock google group for discussion/questions about
928 this module.
929
930 http://groups-beta.google.com/group/DBDMock <http://groups-
931 beta.google.com/group/DBDMock>
932
934 Thanks to Ryan Gerry for his patch in RT #26604
935 Thanks to Marc Beyer for his patch in RT #16951
936 Thanks to Justin DeVuyst for the mock_connect_fail idea
937 Thanks to Thilo Planz for the code for "bind_param_inout"
938 Thanks to Shlomi Fish for help tracking down RT Bug #11515
939 Thanks to Collin Winter for the patch to fix the "begin_work()",
940 "commit()" and "rollback()" methods.
941 Thanks to Andrew McHarg <amcharg@acm.org> for "fetchall_hashref()",
942 "fetchrow_hashref()" and "selectcol_arrayref()" methods and tests.
943 Thanks to Andrew W. Gibbs for the "mock_last_insert_ids" patch and test
944 Thanks to Chas Owens for patch and test for the "mock_can_prepare",
945 "mock_can_execute", and "mock_can_fetch" features.
946
948 Copyright (C) 2004 Chris Winters <chris@cwinters.com>
949
950 Copyright (C) 2004-2007 Stevan Little <stevan@iinteractive.com>
951
952 Copyright (C) 2007 Rob Kinyon <rob.kinyon@gmail.com>
953
954 This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it
955 under the same terms as Perl itself.
956
958 Chris Winters <chris@cwinters.com>
959
960 Stevan Little <stevan@iinteractive.com>
961
962 Rob Kinyon <rob.kinyon@gmail.com>
963
964
965
966perl v5.12.0 2010-05-12 DBD::Mock(3)