Security Advisories (1)
CVE-2025-40909 (2025-05-30)

Perl threads have a working directory race condition where file operations may target unintended paths. If a directory handle is open at thread creation, the process-wide current working directory is temporarily changed in order to clone that handle for the new thread, which is visible from any third (or more) thread already running. This may lead to unintended operations such as loading code or accessing files from unexpected locations, which a local attacker may be able to exploit. The bug was introduced in commit 11a11ecf4bea72b17d250cfb43c897be1341861e and released in Perl version 5.13.6

NAME

Test2::Tools::Mock - Class/Instance mocking for Test2.

DESCRIPTION

Mocking is often an essential part of testing. This library covers some of the most common mocking needs. This plugin is heavily influenced by Mock::Quick, but with an improved API. This plugin is also intended to play well with other plugins in ways Mock::Quick would be unable to.

SYNOPSIS

my $mock = mock 'Some::Class' => (
    track => $BOOL, # Enable/Disable tracking on subs defined below

    add => [
        new_method => sub { ... },
    ],
    override => [
        replace_method => sub { ... },
    ],
    set => [
        replace_or_inject => sub { ... },
    ],

    track => $bool, # enable/disable tracking again to affect mocks made after this point
    ..., # Argument keys may be repeated
);

Some::Class->new_method();        # Calls the newly injected method
Some::Class->replace_method();    # Calls our replacement method.

$mock->override(...) # Override some more

$mock = undef; # Undoes all the mocking, restoring all original methods.

my $simple_mock = mock {} => (
    add => [
        is_active => sub { ... }
    ]
);

$simple_mock->is_active();        # Calls our newly mocked method.

EXPORTS

DEFAULT

mock

This is a one-stop shop function that delegates to one of the other methods depending on how it is used. If you are not comfortable with a function that has a lot of potential behaviors, you can use one of the other functions directly.

@mocks = mocked($object)
@mocks = mocked($class)

Check if an object or class is mocked. If it is mocked the $mock object(s) (Test2::Mock) will be returned.

$mock = mock $class => ( ... );
$mock = mock $instance => ( ... )
$mock = mock 'class', $class => ( ... )

These forms delegate to mock_class() to mock a package. The third form is to be explicit about what type of mocking you want.

$obj = mock()
$obj = mock { ... }
$obj = mock 'obj', ...;

These forms delegate to mock_obj() to create instances of anonymous packages where methods are vivified into existence as needed.

mock $mock => sub { ... }
mock $method => ( ... )

These forms go together, the first form will set $mock as the current mock build, then run the sub. Within the sub you can declare mock specifications using the second form. The first form delegates to mock_build().

The second form calls the specified method on the current build. This second form delegates to mock_do().

BY REQUEST

DEFINING MOCKS

$obj = mock_obj( ... )
$obj = mock_obj { ... } => ( ... )
$obj = mock_obj sub { ... }
$obj = mock_obj { ... } => sub { ... }

This method lets you quickly generate a blessed object. The object will be an instance of a randomly generated package name. Methods will vivify as read/write accessors as needed.

Arguments can be any method available to Test2::Mock followed by an argument. If the very first argument is a hashref then it will be blessed as your new object.

If you provide a coderef instead of key/value pairs, the coderef will be run to build the mock. (See the "BUILDING MOCKS" section).

$mock = mock_class $class => ( ... )
$mock = mock_class $instance => ( ... )
$mock = mock_class ... => sub { ... }

This will create a new instance of Test2::Mock to control the package specified. If you give it a blessed reference it will use the class of the instance.

Arguments can be any method available to Test2::Mock followed by an argument. If the very first argument is a hashref then it will be blessed as your new object.

If you provide a coderef instead of key/value pairs, the coderef will be run to build the mock. (See the "BUILDING MOCKS" section).

BUILDING MOCKS

mock_build $mock => sub { ... }

Set $mock as the current build, then run the specified code. $mock will no longer be the current build when the sub is complete.

$mock = mock_building()

Get the current building $mock object.

mock_do $method => $args

Run the specified method on the currently building object.

METHOD GENERATORS

$sub = mock_accessor $field

Generate a read/write accessor for the specified field. This will generate a sub like the following:

$sub = sub {
    my $self = shift;
    ($self->{$field}) = @_ if @_;
    return $self->{$field};
};
$sub = mock_getter $field

Generate a read only accessor for the specified field. This will generate a sub like the following:

$sub = sub {
    my $self = shift;
    return $self->{$field};
};
$sub = mock_setter $field

Generate a write accessor for the specified field. This will generate a sub like the following:

$sub = sub {
    my $self = shift;
    ($self->{$field}) = @_;
};
%pairs = mock_accessors(qw/name1 name2 name3/)

Generates several read/write accessors at once, returns key/value pairs where the key is the field name, and the value is the coderef.

%pairs = mock_getters(qw/name1 name2 name3/)

Generates several read only accessors at once, returns key/value pairs where the key is the field name, and the value is the coderef.

%pairs = mock_setters(qw/name1 name2 name3/)

Generates several write accessors at once, returns key/value pairs where the key is the field name, and the value is the coderef.

MOCK CONTROL OBJECTS

my $mock = mock(...);

Mock objects are instances of Test2::Mock. See it for their methods.

SOURCE

The source code repository for Test2-Suite can be found at https://github.com/Test-More/test-more/.

MAINTAINERS

Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>

AUTHORS

Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>

COPYRIGHT

Copyright Chad Granum <exodist@cpan.org>.

This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.

See https://dev.perl.org/licenses/