| Test-MockModule documentation | view source | Contained in the Test-MockModule distribution. |
Test::MockModule - Override subroutines in a module for unit testing
use Module::Name;
use Test::MockModule;
{
my $module = new Test::MockModule('Module::Name');
$module->mock('subroutine', sub { ... });
Module::Name::subroutine(@args); # mocked
}
Module::Name::subroutine(@args); # original subroutine
Test::MockModule lets you temporarily redefine subroutines in other packages
for the purposes of unit testing.
A Test::MockModule object is set up to mock subroutines for a given
module. The object remembers the original subroutine so it can be easily
restored. This happens automatically when all MockModule objects for the given
module go out of scope, or when you unmock() the subroutine.
Returns an object that will mock subroutines in the specified $package.
If there is no $VERSION defined in $package, the module will be
automatically loaded. You can override this behaviour by setting the no_auto
option:
my $mock = new Test::MockModule('Module::Name', no_auto => 1);
Returns the target package name for the mocked subroutines
Returns a boolean value indicating whether or not the subroutine is currently mocked
Temporarily replaces one or more subroutines in the mocked module. A subroutine can be mocked with a code reference or a scalar. A scalar will be recast as a subroutine that returns the scalar.
The following statements are equivalent:
$module->mock(purge => 'purged');
$module->mock(purge => sub { return 'purged'});
$module->mock(updated => [localtime()]);
$module->mock(updated => sub { return [localtime()]});
However, undef is a special case. If you mock a subroutine with undef it
will install an empty subroutine
$module->mock(purge => undef);
$module->mock(purge => sub { });
rather than a subroutine that returns undef:
$module->mock(purge => sub { undef });
You can call mock() for the same subroutine many times, but when you call
unmock(), the original subroutine is restored (not the last mocked
instance).
Returns the original (unmocked) subroutine
Restores the original $subroutine. You can specify a list of subroutines to
unmock() in one go.
Restores all the subroutines in the package that were mocked. This is
automatically called when all Test::MockObject objects for the given package
go out of scope.
Simon Flack <simonflk _AT_ cpan.org>
Copyright 2004 Simon Flack <simonflk _AT_ cpan.org>. All rights reserved
You may distribute under the terms of either the GNU General Public License or the Artistic License, as specified in the Perl README file.
| Test-MockModule documentation | view source | Contained in the Test-MockModule distribution. |