Test2::Hub
- NAME
- SYNOPSIS
- DESCRIPTION
- COMMON TASKS
- SENDING EVENTS
- ALTERING OR REMOVING EVENTS
- LISTENING FOR EVENTS
- POST-TEST BEHAVIORS
- SETTING THE FORMATTER
- METHODS
- THIRD PARTY META-DATA
- SOURCE
- MAINTAINERS
- AUTHORS
- COPYRIGHT
NAME
Test2::Hub - The conduit through which all events flow.
SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The hub is the place where all events get processed and handed off to the formatter. The hub also tracks test state, and provides several hooks into the event pipeline.
COMMON TASKS
SENDING EVENTS
- $hub->send($event)
The send()
method is used to issue an event to the hub. This method will
handle thread/fork sync, filters, listeners, TAP output, etc.
ALTERING OR REMOVING EVENTS
You can use either filter()
or pre_filter()
, depending on your
needs. Both have identical syntax, so only filter()
is shown here.
- $hub->filter(sub {
- my ($hub, $event) = @_;
- my $action = get_action($event);
- # No action should be taken
- return $event if $action eq 'none';
- # You want your filter to remove the event
- return undef if $action eq 'delete';
- if ($action eq 'do_it') {
- my $new_event = copy_event($event);
- ... Change your copy of the event ...
- return $new_event;
- }
- die "Should not happen";
- });
By default, filters are not inherited by child hubs. That means if you start a
subtest, the subtest will not inherit the filter. You can change this behavior
with the inherit
parameter:
- $hub->filter(sub { ... }, inherit => 1);
LISTENING FOR EVENTS
By default listeners are not inherited by child hubs. That means if you start a
subtest, the subtest will not inherit the listener. You can change this behavior
with the inherit
parameter:
- $hub->listen(sub { ... }, inherit => 1);
POST-TEST BEHAVIORS
follow_up subs are called only once, either when done_testing is called, or in an END block.
SETTING THE FORMATTER
By default an instance of Test2::Formatter::TAP is created and used.
- my $old = $hub->format(My::Formatter->new);
Setting the formatter will REPLACE any existing formatter. You may set the formatter to undef to prevent output. The old formatter will be returned if one was already set. Only one formatter is allowed at a time.
METHODS
- $hub->send($event)
This is where all events enter the hub for processing.
- $hub->process($event)
This is called by send after it does any IPC handling. You can use this to bypass the IPC process, but in general you should avoid using this.
- $old = $hub->format($formatter)
Replace the existing formatter instance with a new one. Formatters must be objects that implement a
$formatter->write($event)
method. - $sub = $hub->listen(sub { ... }, %optional_params)
You can use this to record all events AFTER they have been sent to the formatter. No changes made here will be meaningful, except possibly to other listeners.
Normally listeners are not inherited by child hubs such as subtests. You can add the
inherit => 1
parameter to allow a listener to be inherited. - $hub->unlisten($sub)
You can use this to remove a listen callback. You must pass in the coderef returned by the
listen()
method. - $sub = $hub->filter(sub { ... }, %optional_params)
- $sub = $hub->pre_filter(sub { ... }, %optional_params)
These can be used to add filters. Filters can modify, replace, or remove events before anything else can see them.
If you are not using threads, forking, or IPC then the only difference between a
filter
and apre_filter
is thatpre_filter
subs run first. When you are using threads, forking, or IPC, pre_filters happen to events before they are sent to their destination proc/thread, ordinary filters happen only in the destination hub/thread.You cannot add a regular filter to a hub if the hub was created in another process or thread. You can always add a pre_filter.
- $hub->unfilter($sub)
- $hub->pre_unfilter($sub)
These can be used to remove filters and pre_filters. The
$sub
argument is the reference returned byfilter()
orpre_filter()
. - $hub->follow_op(sub { ... })
Use this to add behaviors that are called just before the hub is finalized. The only argument to your codeblock will be a Test2::Util::Trace instance.
follow_up subs are called only once, ether when done_testing is called, or in an END block.
- $sub = $hub->add_context_acquire(sub { ... });
Add a callback that will be called every time someone tries to acquire a context. It gets a single argument, a reference of the hash of parameters being used the construct the context. This is your chance to change the parameters by directly altering the hash.
This is a very scary API function. Please do not use this unless you need to. This is here for Test::Builder and backwards compatibility. This has you directly manipulate the hash instead of returning a new one for performance reasons.
Note Using this hook could have a huge performance impact.
The coderef you provide is returned and can be used to remove the hook later.
- $hub->remove_context_acquire($sub);
This can be used to remove a context acquire hook.
- $sub = $hub->add_context_init(sub { ... });
This allows you to add callbacks that will trigger every time a new context is created for the hub. The only argument to the sub will be the Test2::API::Context instance that was created.
Note Using this hook could have a huge performance impact.
The coderef you provide is returned and can be used to remove the hook later.
- $hub->remove_context_init($sub);
This can be used to remove a context init hook.
- $sub = $hub->add_context_release(sub { ... });
This allows you to add callbacks that will trigger every time a context for this hub is released. The only argument to the sub will be the Test2::API::Context instance that was released. These will run in reverse order.
Note Using this hook could have a huge performance impact.
The coderef you provide is returned and can be used to remove the hook later.
- $hub->remove_context_release($sub);
This can be used to remove a context release hook.
- $hub->cull()
Cull any IPC events (and process them).
- $pid = $hub->pid()
Get the process id under which the hub was created.
- $tid = $hub->tid()
Get the thread id under which the hub was created.
- $hud = $hub->hid()
Get the identifier string of the hub.
- $ipc = $hub->ipc()
Get the IPC object used by the hub.
- $hub->set_no_ending($bool)
- $bool = $hub->no_ending
This can be used to disable auto-ending behavior for a hub. The auto-ending behavior is triggered by an end block and is used to cull IPC events, and output the final plan if the plan was 'no_plan'.
- $bool = $hub->active
- $hub->set_active($bool)
These are used to get/set the 'active' attribute. When true this attribute will force
hub->finalize()
to take action even if there is no plan, and no tests have been run. This flag is useful for plugins that add follow-up behaviors that need to run even if no events are seen.
STATE METHODS
- $hub->reset_state()
Reset all state to the start. This sets the test count to 0, clears the plan, removes the failures, etc.
- $num = $hub->count
Get the number of tests that have been run.
- $num = $hub->failed
Get the number of failures (Not all failures come from a test fail, so this number can be larger than the count).
- $bool = $hub->ended
True if the testing has ended. This MAY return the stack frame of the tool that ended the test, but that is not guaranteed.
- $bool = $hub->is_passing
- $hub->is_passing($bool)
Check if the overall test run is a failure. Can also be used to set the pass/fail status.
- $hub->plan($plan)
- $plan = $hub->plan
Get or set the plan. The plan must be an integer larger than 0, the string 'no_plan', or the string 'skip_all'.
- $bool = $hub->check_plan
Check if the plan and counts match, but only if the tests have ended. If tests have not ended this will return undef, otherwise it will be a true/false.
THIRD PARTY META-DATA
This object consumes Test2::Util::ExternalMeta which provides a consistent way for you to attach meta-data to instances of this class. This is useful for tools, plugins, and other extensions.
SOURCE
The source code repository for Test2 can be found at http://github.com/Test-More/test-more/.
MAINTAINERS
AUTHORS
COPYRIGHT
Copyright 2016 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.