NAME
Test::Deep::DateTime::RFC3339 - Test RFC3339 timestamps are within a certain tolerance
SYNOPSIS
use Test::Deep;
use Test::Deep::DateTime::RFC3339;
my $now = DateTime->now;
my $record = create_record(...);
cmp_deeply $record, { created => datetime_rfc3339($now, '00:00:05') },
'Created is within 5 seconds of current time';
DESCRIPTION
Test::Deep::DateTime::RFC3339 provides a single function, datetime_rfc3339
, which is used with Test::Deep to check that the string value gotten is an RFC3339-compliant timestamp. It can also check if the timestamp is equal to, or within optional tolerances of, an expected timestamp.
RFC3339 was chosen because it is a sane subset of ISO8601's kitchen-sink.
FUNCTIONS
datetime_rfc3339
Without arguments, the value is only checked to be a parseable RFC3339 timestamp.
Otherwise, this function takes a DateTime object or an RFC3339 timestamp string parseable by DateTime::Format::RFC3339 as the required first argument and a DateTime::Duration object or HH:MM:SS
string representing a duration as an optional second argument. The second argument is used as a ± tolerance centered on the expected datetime. If a tolerance is provided, the timestamp being tested must fall within the closed interval for the test to pass. Otherwise, the timestamp being tested must match the expected datetime.
All comparisons and date math are done in UTC, as advised by "How-DateTime-Math-Works" in DateTime. If this causes problems for you, please tell me about it via bug-Test-Deep-DateTime-RFC3339 at rt.cpan.org.
Returns a Test::Deep::DateTime::RFC3339 object, which is a Test::Deep::Cmp, but you shouldn't need to care about those internals. You can, however, reuse the returned object if desired.
Exported by default.
BUGS
Please report bugs via email to bug-Test-Deep-DateTime-RFC3339@rt.cpan.org
or via the web on rt.cpan.org.
AUTHOR
Thomas Sibley <trsibley@uw.edu>
COPYRIGHT
This software is copyright (c) 2014- by the Mullins Lab, Department of Microbiology, University of Washington.
LICENSE
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.