NAME
Test::Fatal - incredibly simple helpers for testing code with exceptions
VERSION
version 0.008
SYNOPSIS
use Test::More;
use Test::Fatal;
use System::Under::Test qw(might_die);
is(
exception { might_die; },
undef,
"the code lived",
);
isnt(
exception { might_die; },
undef,
"the code died",
);
isa_ok(
exception { might_die; },
'Exception::Whatever',
'the thrown exception',
);
DESCRIPTION
Test::Fatal is an alternative to the popular Test::Exception. It does much less, but should allow greater flexibility in testing exception-throwing code with about the same amount of typing.
It exports one routine by default: exception
.
FUNCTIONS
exception
my $exception = exception { ... };
exception
takes a bare block of code and returns the exception thrown by that block. If no exception was thrown, it returns undef.
ACHTUNG! If the block results in a false exception, such as 0 or the empty string, Test::Fatal itself will die. Since either of these cases indicates a serious problem with the system under testing, this behavior is considered a feature. If you must test for these conditions, you should use Try::Tiny's try/catch mechanism. (Try::Tiny is the underlying exception handling system of Test::Fatal.)
Note that there is no TAP assert being performed. In other words, no "ok" or "not ok" line is emitted. It's up to you to use the rest of exception
in an existing test like ok
, isa_ok
, is
, et cetera. Or you may wish to use the dies_ok
and lives_ok
wrappers, which do provide TAP output.
exception
does not alter the stack presented to the called block, meaning that if the exception returned has a stack trace, it will include some frames between the code calling exception
and the thing throwing the exception. This is considered a feature because it avoids the occasionally twitchy Sub::Uplevel
mechanism.
Achtung! This is not a great idea:
like( exception { ... }, qr/foo/, "foo appears in the exception" );
If the code in the ...
is going to throw a stack trace with the arguments to each subroutine in its call stack, the test name, "foo appears in the exception" will itself be matched by the regex. Instead, write this:
my $exception = exception { ... };
like( $exception, qr/foo/, "foo appears in the exception" );
success
try {
should_live;
} catch {
fail("boo, we died");
} success {
pass("hooray, we lived");
};
success
, exported only by request, is a Try::Tiny helper with semantics identical to finally
, but the body of the block will only be run if the try
block ran without error.
Although almost any needed exception tests can be performed with exception
, success blocks may sometimes help organize complex testing.
dies_ok
lives_ok
Exported only by request, these two functions run a given block of code, and provide TAP output indicating if it did, or did not throw an exception. These provide an easy upgrade path for replacing existing unit tests based on Test::Exception
.
RJBS does not using this except as a convenience while porting tests to use Test::Fatal's exception
routine.
use Test::More tests => 2;
use Test::Fatal qw(dies_ok lives_ok);
dies_ok { die "I failed" } 'code that fails';
lives_ok { return "I'm still alive" } 'code that does not fail';
AUTHOR
Ricardo Signes <rjbs@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2010 by Ricardo Signes.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.