1Test::Abortable(3)    User Contributed Perl Documentation   Test::Abortable(3)
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3
4

NAME

6       Test::Abortable - subtests that you can die your way out of ... but
7       survive
8

VERSION

10       version 0.002
11

OVERVIEW

13       Test::Abortable provides a simple system for catching some exceptions
14       and turning them into test events.  For example, consider the code
15       below:
16
17         use Test::More;
18         use Test::Abortable;
19
20         use My::API; # code under test
21
22         my $API = My::API->client;
23
24         subtest "collection distinction" => sub {
25           my $result = $API->do_first_thing;
26
27           is($result->documents->first->title,  "The Best Thing");
28           isnt($result->documents->last->title, "The Best Thing");
29         };
30
31         subtest "document transcendence"   => sub { ... };
32         subtest "semiotic multiplexing"    => sub { ... };
33         subtest "homoiousios type vectors" => sub { ... };
34
35         done_testing;
36
37       In this code, "$result->documents" is a collection.  It has a "first"
38       method that will throw an exception if the collection is empty.  If
39       that happens in our code, our test program will die and most of the
40       other subtests won't run.  We'd rather that we only abort the subtest.
41       We could do that in a bunch of ways, like adding:
42
43         return fail("no documents in response") if $result->documents->is_empty;
44
45       ...but this becomes less practical as the number of places that might
46       throw these kinds of exceptions grows.  To minimize code that boils
47       down to "and then stop unless it makes sense to go on," Test::Abortable
48       provides a means to communicate, via exceptions, that the running
49       subtest should be aborted, possibly with some test output, and that the
50       program should then continue.
51
52       Test::Abortable exports a "subtest" routine that behaves like the one
53       in Test::More but will handle and recover from abortable exceptions
54       (defined below).  It also exports "testeval", which behaves like a
55       block eval that only catches abortable exceptions.
56
57       For an exception to be "abortable," in this sense, it must respond to a
58       "as_test_abort_events" method.  This method must return an arrayref of
59       arrayrefs that describe the Test2 events to emit when the exception is
60       caught.  For example, the exception thrown by our sample code above
61       might have a "as_test_abort_events" method that returns:
62
63         [
64           [ Ok => (pass => 0, name => "->first called on empty collection") ],
65         ]
66
67       It's permissible to have passing Ok events, or only Diag events, or
68       multiple events, or none — although providing none might lead to some
69       serious confusion.
70
71       Right now, any exception that provides this method will be honored.  In
72       the future, a facility for only allowing abortable exceptions of a
73       given class may be added.
74

FUNCTIONS

76   subtest
77         subtest "do some stuff" => sub {
78           do_things;
79           do_stuff;
80           do_actions;
81         };
82
83       This routine looks just like Test::More's "subtest" and acts just like
84       it, too, with one difference: the code item passed in is executed in a
85       block "eval" and any exception thrown is checked for
86       "as_test_abort_events".  If there's no exception, it returns normally.
87       If there's an abortable exception, the events are sent to the test hub
88       and the subtest finishes normally.  If there's a non-abortable
89       exception, it is rethrown.
90
91   testeval
92         my $result = testeval {
93           my $x = get_the_x;
94           my $y = acquire_y;
95           return $x * $y;
96         };
97
98       "testeval" behaves like "eval", but only catches abortable exceptions.
99       If the code passed to "testeval" throws an abortable exception
100       "testeval" will return false and put the exception into $@.  Other
101       exceptions are propagated.
102

EXCEPTION IMPLEMENTATIONS

104       You don't need to use an exception class provided by Test::Abortable to
105       build abortable exceptions.  This is by design.  In fact,
106       Test::Abortable doesn't ship with any abortable exception classes at
107       all.  You should just add a "as_test_abort_events" where it's useful
108       and appropriate.
109
110       Here are two possible simple implementations of trivial abortable
111       exception classes.  First, using plain old vanilla objects:
112
113         package Abort::Test {
114           sub as_test_abort_events ($self) {
115             return [ [ Ok => (pass => 0, name => $self->{message}) ] ];
116           }
117         }
118         sub abort ($message) { die bless { message => $message }, 'Abort::Test' }
119
120       This works, but if those exceptions ever get caught somewhere else,
121       you'll be in a bunch of pain because they've got no stack trace, no
122       stringification behavior, and so on.  For a more robust but still tiny
123       implementation, you might consider failures:
124
125         use failures 'testabort';
126         sub failure::testabort::as_test_abort_events ($self) {
127           return [ [ Ok => (pass => 0, name => $self->msg) ] ];
128         }
129
130       For whatever it's worth, the author's intent is to add
131       "as_test_abort_events" methods to his code through the use of
132       application-specific Moose roles,
133

AUTHOR

135       Ricardo SIGNES <rjbs@cpan.org>
136
138       This software is copyright (c) 2016 by Ricardo SIGNES.
139
140       This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
141       the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
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145perl v5.32.1                      2021-01-27                Test::Abortable(3)
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